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‘Statelessness impacting more on women, children’

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BY KENNETH NYANGANI

STATELESSNESS due to human trafficking, xenophobia, civil unrest and economic hardships impacts more on women and children, Mutasa North legislator Chido Madiwa (Zanu PF) has said.

She made the remarks in Vumba yesterday during a United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR)-organised workshop for parliamentarians.

The workshop is focusing on nationality and Statelessness in Zimbabwe.

Addressing journalists on the sidelines of the workshop, Madiwa said women should also be educated on the importance of having proper documentation.

“… people without State are all over. Statelessness affects children and woman more, so we should look at the issue of Statelessness with a gender lens as it impacts more on women and children,” she said

“Women experience statelessness physically due to xenophobia, civil unrest, human trafficking and economic hardships which have caused migration to other countries where people then seek refugee status.

“I am happy the government has put in place pieces of legislation to deal with Statelessness. The other challenges we are facing is that there are women, mainly in rural areas, who are not aware of the importance of having documents like identity cards and birth certificates, so they need to be educated about the importance of having such documents.”

The workshop was attended by four parliamentary portfolio committees namely Foreign Affairs and International Trade; Defence; Home Affairs; State Security; Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs as well as Women Affairs, Gender and Small and Medium
Enterprises.

The workshop objective is to reach common understanding on nationality and statelessness issues globally and also to understand the international legal safeguards on the reduction and prevention of statelessness and also to identity possible gaps in Zimbabwe’s legal, policy and administrative frameworks that could lead to statelessness.

Top judge pens three law books

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By Moses Magadza

This year I read three reviews of books written by Hon Justice Professor Oagile Bethuel Key Dingake, a former Judge of the High Court of Botswana and now with the Supreme and National Courts of Papua New Guinea.

The books are: In Pursuit of Justice, Judges, and Towards A People’s Constitution for Botswana. Chief Justice Salika, Chief Justice of the Supreme and National Courts of Papua New Guinea and Professor Crawford, Dean of Law at James Cook University, in Australia and Emeritus Professor of Law, Yash, Ghai, University of Hongkong, reviewed the books.

Recently I bought my own copies at Exclusive Books, OR International Airport, Johannesburg, South Africa.

The most recent review of his latest book: Towards A People’s Constitution for Botswana, with a foreword by Professor Emeritus Yash Ghai, one of the foremost Kenyan scholars in Constitutional Law, and former Special Representative of the UN Secretary General, in Cambodia on Human Rights, inspired me this article.

I felt provoked to pay tribute to Dingake, a remarkable African Jurist, Judge and scholar with whom I have interacted for more than a decade. My own reviews of each of the above books is forth coming. However, as a prelude, I seek to comment generally, about this legal giant who remains disarmingly humble.

In sketching in broad strokes Judge Dingake’s illustrious career at the service of the law, which all the above books are about, I am reminded of what he once wrote in one of his judgements and repeated at several fora.

He said: “Every historical epoch has its mood and the judges for that mood. It falls upon the judges of today to raise the bar on human rights discourse. To do this they need to have, hearts, brains and courage.”

The above sentiment explains why many people see in him as a judicial icon, a judge with steely determination to make an impact in the world by using law as an instrument of improving people’s welfare.

Among bodies concerned with human rights and equal rights for all, Dingake’s name often crops up. Judges cite his judgements with approval across the world.

Scholars approve his thinking whilst others cross swords with him. Many UN agencies have collated his judgements and use them as teaching materials.

In legal circles in Botswana where he is from, he is lionized as fearless and independent. Mmegi Newspaper has described him as “every person’s judge”.

Last year on the eve of his departure to PNG, one local commentator, hit the nail on the head, when he wrote a piece entitled: “No Key no Justice.”

Many lawyers I have met in the SADC Region who are familiar with Judge Dingake’s jurisprudential output say it was an apt and fitting tribute.

In feminist circles across the globe he is celebrated as a pathfinder or the Thurgood Marshall of the gender justice movement. His decision in Mmusi, is cited religiously with approval by many progressive courts has and attracted dozens of academic commentaries in refereed journals.

Many of his colleagues on the bench and in academia see him as the Lord Denning of Botswana. This sentiment is shared by Professor Evance Kalula, of the University of Cape Town.

Early this year, Professor Paula Tavrow, at the University of California, Los Angeles, in the US, compared Dingake to that stalwart of the US Supreme Court, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who is famous for being an advocate of gender equality.

In passing judgement in the Mmusi case, which won him an international gender justice award, Dingake wrote: “It seems to me that the time has now arisen for the justices of this court to assume the role of judicial midwife and assist in the birth of the new world struggling to be born. Discrimination against women has no place in our modern-day society.”

In labour law jurisprudence, he has sought to uphold the values of the core ILO conventions, which, among other things, consider the right of labour to strike, after exhausting all avenues of resolving a dispute, as sacrosanct.

He is famous for using the metaphor of a boxing ring to capture the essence of a strike in industrial relations, always cautioning that the courts must be impartial arbiters and not seek to constrain any of the participants to the “boxing match”.

Professor Webner of Keele University, in the United Kingdom, in one of his books, wrote that Judge Dingake’s judgements exude amazing intellectual depth and brilliance, and goes as far as suggesting that one of his judgements in labour law, must be made an “an annexure to the Botswana Constitution.”

Over the course of his illustrious legal and judicial career, conservative judges have often squirmed in their revolving chairs, but never succeeded to uproot his pro-human rights reasoning.

His simplicity of style, mastery of the facts and the law, comparative juris prudential output and occasional excesses in scholastic sophistry are legendary. It is on account of this sophistry that Arnold Tsunga, Director of International Commission of Jurists, Africa Division, once described Judge Dingake, as “one the most intellectually charged judges in Africa.”

Judge Dingake’s contribution to constitutional law in Botswana is legendary and many law students in Africa and beyond see him as a role model and inspiration.

Some people have suggested that his many riveting speeches on Gender Based Violence, on TB, the Law, the Media, HIV and criminal law must be turned into a book and preserved for future generations.

A Professor at the University of Cape Town, where judge Dingake is a Professor of Public Law, recently reminded me of judge Dingake’s absolute commitment to constitutionalism and the rule of law. He pointed out that Dingake has often used the constitution as a transformative instrument, not only to overturn oppressive and archaic laws, but also institutions and practices that constrained humanity from realizing the rights of minorities: women, children, refugees, prisoners and the LGBTI community.

In most of his leading constitutional law pronouncements such as in his famous cases including Diau, Nelson, Mmusi, Oatile, Bopeu, Mathabo and Khwarae, he made it clear that it is emphatically the function of the courts to define the boundaries, context and content of human tights.

I have been anxious to know where judge Dingake gets all the time to write books. The clue I got reading from some snippets online, about his life, is that his parents inculcated in him at an early stage an amazing work ethic, self- discipline and the importance of achieving targets. His parents taught him that hard work does not kill. They taught him to love every person and to eschew greediness.

His iconic brother, Michael Dingake, long- time political prisoner at Robben Island in South Africa, once wrote about judge Dingake’s aversion to greed. He said that once, whilst at the University of London doing his Masters, the judge sent him a telling postcard. It had an inscription from Dom Helder Camara, saying: “When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why the poor have no food, they call me a communist”.

It is safe to conclude that having proved against all odds that he is an intellectual colossus, who cannot be ignored or wished away – a judicial high priest and indefatigable crusader of justice – Dingake’s place in the annals of history, isassured.

– Moses Magadza is a multiple award-winning journalist and PhD studentwith research interests in how the media frames key populations.

CBZ Mi Life Accident FINAL

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TK Hollan bounces back

The cost of the world: How South Africa compares

Using digital tech for tourism development

How Slot Games Are Evolving

Top 5 Largest Data Breaches Of All Time Affected Millions Of People

10ngah is preparing for its biggest ever Black Friday sale

TEF invites applications for 2020 entrepreneurship cohort

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The Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF) Entrepreneurship Programme says applications for its 2020 sponsorship for African entrepreneurs will open on January 1.

BY BUSINESS REPORTER

Applications are made through TEFConnect, the digital networking hub for the African entrepreneurship ecosystem, created by the Foundation.

The TEF Entrepreneurship Programme will begin accepting applications for the 2020 cohort, on January 1, 2020.

Last year, the Foundation received about 216 000 applications, with 42% coming from women entrepreneurs, from every country on the continent.

“The TEF Entrepreneurship Programme is open to entrepreneurs from across Africa, either with new startup ideas or existing businesses of less than 3 years existence, operating in any sector,” reads part of a statement from TEF about the launch.

“Successful applicants will join the over 9 000 current beneficiaries, from 54 African countries, and receive business training, mentoring, a non-refundable US$5 000 of seed capital and global networking opportunities.”

The Programme is a 10-year, US$100 million commitment to identify, train, mentor and fund 10 000 young African entrepreneurs.

“The goal is to create millions of jobs and the revenue required for the sustainable development of the continent, implementing the philosophy of Africapitalism, which positions the private sector as the growth engine for Africa and emphasises the importance of creating social and economic wealth,” reads part of the TEF statement.

According to the Foundation’s 2018 Impact Report, 70% of the total number of businesses in its alumni network were still operational two years after benefitting from the Programme.

The report also identified an increase of 189% revenue generated and 197% increase in the number of additional jobs created by the beneficiaries post-graduation from the Programme, as well as a 100% commitment to the Sustainable Development Goals.

Price of blood shoots up for private patients

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BY PHYLLIS MBANJE

Private patients will now be paying
$2 160 for a unit of blood following an adjustment to the user fees using the interbank rate.

According to a leaked document from PSMI Laboratory West End Hospital, the prices of blood and its products were increased effective from December 1.

However, the National Blood Service Zimbabwe (NBSZ) said members of the public should not panic since it would still uphold its commitment to offer free blood to patients in public hospitals and would only charge private facilities at the interbank rate.

“The National Blood Service Zimbabwe wishes to advise the public that it made an adjustment to the user fees of blood using the interbank rate, which will see a unit of blood from NBSZ pegged at $2 160,” NBSZ spokesperson Esther Massundah said.

She explained that blood and blood products were still available free of charge to patients accessing treatment from non-private wards of public health institutions only as well as council hospitals in Harare and Bulawayo.

“User fees for blood and blood products will be charged for patients in all private health institutions and in private wards of public institutions, as well as for all those on medical aid cover,” Massundah said.

She added that hospitals were allowed to charge an administration fee of 5% on blood and blood products.

“While blood is donated for free, there is a value chain between its donation and transfusion to the patient, and this value chain costs US$120, an amount that the NBSZ is recovering from the user in order to continue operating as a going concern,” she said.

Massundah said as NBSZ, they were not selling blood for a profit and their financial statements were publicly available for scrutiny as testament to this.

Doctors defy Mnangagwa

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BY BLESSED MHLANGA

STRIKING public hospital doctors have defied President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s latest 48-hour moratorium which came after government reversed its earlier decision to fire them.

Information minister Monica Mutsvangwa, presenting a Cabinet briefing yesterday, said only 46 doctors returned to work after the moratorium, leaving 402 doctors still holding out in the trenches.

“The Minister of Health and Child Care updated Cabinet on the industrial action by public hospital doctors as well as City of Harare nurses. He indicated that 46 dismissed doctors had presented themselves for work at various institutions following the moratorium extended by His Excellency, the President, to the doctors who were dismissed,” she said.

Following the snub, government resolved to be tough on the doctors who had requested an extension of the moratorium and said there would be no further extensions.

“Cabinet directed that the moratorium lapsed on December 1, 2019 and would not be extended as this would negatively affect patients. Cabinet resolved that discussions on conditions of service would only be held with those doctors who are at work,” she said.

Government developed cold feet and revoked its initial attempt to charge the stirking doctors, with the Health minister Obadiah Moyo saying the 57 senior doctors who were targeted for disciplinary action had now been pardoned.

“The 57 senior doctors have been cleared because of the moratorium. Their cases no longer stand, but the fired doctors who did not report for duty and signed assumption of duty forms stand fired because with the expiry of the moratorium, we have returned to the status quo,” he said.

Government said it would be moving to build a block of flats at Parirenyatwa Group of Hospitals, Sally Mugabe Hospital (formerly Harare Central Hospital) and United Bulawayo Hospitals worth $160 million to improve the lives of doctors and their conditions of
service.

National Housing minister Daniel Garwe said work would start as soon as today as government moves to provide houses for doctors, police and civil servants who were affected by low income.

Churches nag ED for stands

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BY BLESSED MHLANGA/RICHARD MUPONDE

RELIGIOUS groups affiliated to the Indigenous Interdenominational Council of Churches (IICC) on Monday begged for stands and funding from government to construct their own places of worship and ordered main opposition leader Nelson Chamisa to endorse President Emmerson Mnangagwa publicly.

Andrew Wutaunashe, who was leading the IICC, pleaded with Mnangagwa to give the local churches support and match the funding that was received by mostly missionary churches like the Catholic, Anglican and Methodist when they set up in Zimbabwe.

“We seek two things, namely to bring this organisation to your awareness. We seek first of all that you take note of our request that we need you and your government to dignify indigenous churches,” he said.

“We are very grateful for the way you have listened to our voice and visited us, sometimes even under trees. But we are also saying that we would like government to take note that most of the churches, which are known as the traditional churches, were originally originating from foreign lands and Western-funded. Sometimes they make statements that represent where they come from.”

IICC said most of its members were homeless and Mnangagwa’s intervention would bring dignity to their congregations who worship under trees, practising open defecation.

“We feel that now you are a President, whose eyes are open to the fact that you have got leadership of the church, which comes from the indigenous people. We appeal to you and your government to also find ways of affirming us, not only emotionally or by other statements, but also helping us to have infrastructure, land and other things so that these churches can have substance,” Wutaunashe said.

“We are cognisant of your exhortation that the churches should seek to have healthy practices, perhaps not to meet under trees and so forth, but it’s not enough to ask us not to meet under trees without helping us to have the infrastructure which others who were funded from abroad may have.”

The churches also asked government to disregard the calls by the Zimbabwe Catholic Bishops Conference and the Zimbabwe Council of Churches (ZCC), which voiced concern over the deteriorating social, political and economic situation in the country.

MDC national executive member and lawyer Fadzai Mahere was quick to take a dig at Wutaunashe, saying the pronouncements for the opposition to discard their call to have dialogue on Mnangagwa’s legitimacy was anchored on a desire to amass trinkets.

“I see this church talk is all about stands and buildings, not a word about principle or integrity. Selling out on values for the proverbial 30 pieces of silver. Shameful,” she said.
Mnangagwa said he was going to listen more to the IICC because its leaders were local.

Meanwhile, MDC chairperson Thabita Khumalo has challenged Mnangagwa to deliver on his electoral promises and stop blaming Chamisa for his shortcomings.

“Firstly, Chamisa is not the president of the country. He’s the president of MDC. We are expecting deliverables from Mnangagwa because he won the election in the ConCourt. So he should deliver on the promises he made to the people than waste time blaming Chamisa,” she said.

“We want to hear when we are getting electricity. We can’t go for 18 hours without power. He should solve the issue of water. Above all, stop the victimisation of opposition MPs in Parliament and respect them and not to want to turn them into Zanu PF appendages.”

Mudenda stokes fire on MDC MPs

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BY VENERANDA LANGA

SPEAKER of the National Assembly, Jacob Mudenda yesterday announced a nine-member Privileges Committee made up of eight Zanu PF MPs and one opposition member to investigate MDC Alliance legislators for snubbing President Emmerson Mnangagwa in Parliament and walking out on him during his addresses.

The only MP that he included from the opposition in the nine-member panel was Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga (MDC), but she declined the offer and Mudenda said he would find a replacement.

The other eight are Jonathan Samukange (Mudzi South) who will chair the committee, Joseph Chirongoma (Mashonaland West senator), Omega Hungwe (Harare
Metropolitan senator), Cecil Kashiri (Magunje MP), Stars Mathe (Nkayi South MP), Levi Mayihlome (Umzingwane MP), Kindness Paradza (Makonde MP) and Alignia Samson (Proportional Representative).

“I announce the appointment of a Privileges Committee to investigate allegations of improper conduct against MDC Alliance MPs,” Mudenda said.

“On November 14, Zanu PF chief whip Pupurai Togarepi raised a matter of privilege regarding the conduct of MDC MPs, whereby since 2017, each time the President attends Parliament in his official capacity as head of State, they either do not rise for him as a matter of respect or they walk out, and Togarepi finds the behaviour of MDC Alliance MPs grossly disrespectful of the
President,” Mudenda said.

He said as chair, he ruled that there was a prima facie case of contempt of Parliament charges against the MDC Alliance MPs and accordingly, the Standing Rules and Orders Committee found it prudent to set up the Privileges Committee to investigate the opposition legislators and come up with punitive measures against them.

“The terms of reference for the Privileges Committee include that the committee will investigate the conduct of MDC Alliance MPs in consecutive instances, whereby they did not rise for His Excellency the President, walked out of Parliament when the President was addressing, and did not bother to attend Parliament whenever the President attended Parliament.

“The committee will establish whether such conduct, as outlined, constitutes contempt of Parliament, and any other incidents that may arise from the investigations and to report the findings in the National Assembly by February 28, 2020,” Mudenda said.

In declining the offer, Misihairabwi-Mushonga said: “If I am allowed, may I take the opportunity to decline on the basis that I am conflicted. I can raise the issue of conflict of interest with you, Mr Speaker.”

Mbizo MP Settlement Chikwinya (MDC Alliance) then asked the Speaker to explain why he had ignored his point of privilege that he raised last week to investigate Zanu PF legislators that have been disrupting all portfolio and thematic committees chaired by the MDA Alliance legislators.

But Mudenda quashed his point and refused to take any more point of privileges from opposition MPs.

“The terms of reference said any other incident that may arise will be looked at,” Mudenda said.

When Warren Park MP Shakespear Hamauswa (MDC Alliance) later tried to raise the issue again, Mudenda curtly responded: “I do not want to go into details. May the committee do its work. We must address the fundamental reasons causing the disruptions.”

Govt threatens Chamisa arrest

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BY MOSES MATENGA

Government has threatened to arrest MDC leader Nelson Chamisa and other opposition officials pushing for the ouster of President Emmerson Mnangagwa from power.

Information deputy minister Energy Mutodi yesterday said government would not hesitate to send to jail “criminals” instigating for the removal of government through protests and civic disobedience to sabotage the regime.

His comments followed threats of protests by the opposition over the deteriorating situation in the country.

“If anyone wants to take the law into their own hands and engage in such activities so as to discredit the government, the law will take its course and criminals will be jailed, even if they are leaders of political parties or whatever,” Mutodi said in apparent reference to the MDC leader, whose party has announced plans for what it terms the “final push”.

But Chamisa said he would remain unfazed despite the threats on his life and/or arrest.

“These threats are becoming too common and the people issuing them are just common criminals who have no interest of our country at heart,” Chamisa’s spokesperson Nkululeko Sibanda said.

“Their irresponsibility is a direct result of their incapacitation and we simply must ignore such naivety. You must remember that after ED’s (Mnangagwa) blue-eyed boys attempted to shoot the president (Chamisa), we have not received calls from the ministers, the police or anybody to try and explain the situation and that is an act of complete irresponsibility.”

He said Chamisa was “a national asset” and a threat on his life could not be treated like something normal.

“It is a threat to the security of our country because we are talking about the people’s president. When they shot at him on Sunday, it was the people of Marondera that said, ‘president, this issue must not end here. We can’t stop doing the right thing because the Zanu PF police will disrupt’,” Sibanda said.

“They said let us move on. It is not just the president who is unstoppable. Taking from Marondera, it is the people of Zimbabwe that are no longer stoppable.”

Meanwhile, MDC vice-president Tendai Biti yesterday met with diplomats accredited to Zimbabwe to brief them on the situation in the country and what transpired in Marondera on Sunday.

“We briefed them on the Marondera situation. We gave them a chronology of events. We told them there was no meeting, but it was just a tree-planting event,” Biti said.

“They wanted the facts because government said there were no gunshots. The fact of the matter is there was live ammunition. The whole story doesn’t hold water. Even if they only released teargas, as they lie, why do that?”

VALUE CREATION CHALLENGE ENTERS BOOT CAMP

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The Value Creation Challenge, a competition launched by a partnership between Old Mutual and the British Council earlier this year, enters the all-important boot camp stage on Tuesday 3 December 2019 in Harare. The objective of the competition is to drive innovative and sustainable solutions to the socio-economic challenges being experienced today.

During bootcamp stage, the top 25 shortlisted contestants will attend a two-day intensive training workshop that will prepare them on how to effectively pitch their business ideas.

Both Old Mutual Zimbabwe and the British Council are driving the nation-wide Value Creation Challenge because they believe in and support local solutions to local problems, and are proud to a platform where innovative and sustainable ideas to socio-economic challenges can be incubated.

Welcoming the group of lucky contestants drawn from Harare, Bulawayo, Mutare, Lupane and Rusape, among other cities and towns, Old Mutual Group Marketing Executive, Lillian Mbayiwa, said they are important stakeholders in the business.

We are excited to be part of this initiative that supports ideas that are creative enough to solve today’s problems. Innovation does not have to come from abroad. We know you are inventive enough through your brilliant ideas to provide local solutions,” Ms Mbayiwa said.

The participants of the boot camp run companies in their own right and have expressed what they expect to benefit from the intensive programme that will prepare them through training on pitching their business ideas to potential investors and scaling the business.

One contestant, Jeremiah Musungo of Bespoke Delights, a Harare company that produces health care products focusing on holistic wellness, said he was very excited to be among those who made it through to the boot camp. He looks forward to getting the knowledge, exposure and pitching skills.

We expect to learn skills that will help us upscale our businesses for years and years to come and be able to pitch our ideas to potential investors,” he said.

One of his partners, Paidamoyo Muzangaza, a creative entrepreneur who is into premium skin and hair care solutions added that they wanted to understand their business better.

We want to refine and align our goals and strategies for growth in 2020 through this training,” she said.

Msindazwe Ndlovu represents a Bulawayo-based company called The Noble Savage. They have been operating for the past 2 years to provide sustainable eco-friendly building material, and they are already planning to expand to Gweru and neighbouring Botswana.

He expected that the boot camp will help them holistically grow and redefine their business strategy to confront the challenges faced in the country. 

Our intention is to become part of the influencers that achieve the Vision 2020 set by the government for Zimbabwe to become a middle income country. The journey we are taking is to be part of the re-industrialisation process,” he said.

Amy Mufunda pitches her company, Lit Energy.”

The contestants will appear before a panel of judges comprising of bankers, entrepreneurs, Old Mutual and British Council officials who will test the strength of their business pitches. From there, ten will go through to the next stage that involves a six-month incubation period at the Eight2Five Innovation Hub in Harare.

At the end of the incubation period, the top ten contestants will undertake the final pitching process from which the three top pitches will win seed capital, mentorship and business space.

The boot camp is being conducted in conjunction with Hatch Idea and Stimulus Africa.