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Dealing with time wasters

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SUCCESS LIFE: Jonah Nyoni

“If you understand that wasted time is a wasted life, you will start running away from television, you will begin to run away from movies, you will run away from games like criminal case and candy crush.” Sunday Adelaga

Wasted time is worse than wasted money. We usually say time is money. There are many ways we waste time. Failure is created by small accumulative activities, and so is success. Success takes those small bricks every day. Most people need to learn how to manage their minute, their hour which will lead to the whole day.

When we start off our year, most people will be excited and they look forward to a greater and productive year. It is sad that by the 15th of January most people will have defaulted to their usual routine that leads to a mediocre life. Your daily ritual becomes your reality. What are some of the things that waste our time?

People

We live with people who eat into time. These might be our trusted friends, family, and even foes. Any person who is in your life should add one of the three: Happiness, value or money. If they cannot, assess what they are bringing.

Life is too short and valuable to waste your time with people who waste their own lives. Never waste your time with people who drain your energy or people who bring you down. Simply get them off your life or get off their lives. Accept reality, and stop wasting time with some people.

Pleasure

Life should be exciting and worth living for, however, pleasure should also have boundaries. It is easy to be involved in pleasure adding activities, but at times they lead to a bankrupt life.
There is also negative pleasure, this includes things such as drugs, illicit parties and alcohol. They give temporary pleasure, yet they have long term effects on our body and brain.

Wrong focus

We go through a lot in life. At times there are self-created problems and self-inflicted pains.
We can’t change our past, but we can do something now to change our future. When you never graduate from your past, you are paralysing your future. Remember, no one is exempted from failure and mistakes and you should never bury ourselves in those negative experiences. A wrong focus leads to a painful life. Tony Robbins says: “Where focus goes, energy goes.”

Internet and social media

The internet and social media are good tools that we use, but the same tool can be very addictive. In addition, social media has its social ills that could damage our morals. Checking text messages might seem small, but in the end, it corrodes your time. Whatsapp is very enticing and people love to chat and gossip, but most of those things don’t add value to one’s life. We love surfing the internet and constantly checking and reading emails. All those add to our time lost.

Being a “yes” person

In life we should learn that the word “no” is not as negative as we assume. We have said yes to things that we cannot accomplish. I realise that, the more I say no to some activities the better I can manage my time. The big problem is that we want to please people. Margaret Thatcher once said: “If you set out to be liked, you would be prepared to compromise on anything at any time, and you should achieve nothing.” Don’t be a people pleasure. Do what you love, and love what you do.

Pursuing the wrong things

At times we enroll for a wrong course that does not fit with our purpose or mould. At times our parents choose what we should study at university and we spend our lives investing in the wrong craft. Yes, that might give us money, but might not give us fulfillment. At times we waste time on jobs that drain us, keep us grouchy and grounded. Choose your life and live your life! Stop wasting your time and get into your grind!

Jonah Nyoni is an author, success coach and certified leadership/business trainer. He is the author of Inspiration for Success and Success Within Reach.

Zanu PF youths bash thief to death

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By SIMBARASHE SITHOLE

THREE Zanu PF youths were arraigned before Bindura Magistrates Courts yesterday facing charges of beating a suspected thief to death.

Zivanai Nyazvigodi (38), Alexio Kurai Gondo (26) and Naison Tandaude(31), all from Simoona Farm, were ordered by the High Court to answer to an assault charge after they were initially charged with murder.

The trio pleaded not guilty to the charge before magistrate Moreblessing Makati, who remanded them out of custody to Tuesday for trial.

Prosecutor Vincent Marunya alleged that on May 8 in 2008, and at Simoona Farm, police released the now deceased Nicholas Muringanidze after he had been arrested for stealing an electric motor.

On the same day, when the Zanu PF youths heard that the deceased had been released they teamed up with another suspect, who is still at large and went to Muringanidze’s homestead where they introduced themselves as Zanu PF youths before taking him to a disused house which they used as their headquarters.

The quartet ordered him to lie down and took turns to assault him on his buttocks until he admitted to the offence, leading to the recovery of the missing electric motor.

After assaulting him they took him back to the police station, but Maringanidze eventually died on October 7 of that year from injuries he had sustained.

‘Clip Information minister’s powers’

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BY VENERANDA LANGA

MEDIA practitioners yesterday said Information minister’s powers over the Zimbabwe Media Commission (ZMC) should be limited and that any laws that seek to criminalise journalism must be done away with.

This came up during a public hearing at the Parliament of Zimbabwe on the ZMC Bill conducted by the Prince Dubeko Sibanda-led Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Information and Media.

The objective of the ZMC Bill is to protect the rights to freedom of expression and the freedom of the media as granted under section 61 of the Constitution. It will also extensively amend the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act by repealing all provisions relating to the regulation and control of the media.

Voluntary Media Council of Zimbabwe executive director Loughty Dube said the Bill was full of clauses which allowed the Information Minister to intervene in the operations of ZMC, which, therefore, meant that those clauses must be done away with.

Section 2 (e) of the Bill states, “any other form of dissemination of information which may be prescribed by the Minister”. This is a very dangerous statement. Section 7 (1) (a) and (b) says the Minister of Information and the Minister of Finance are responsible for appointment of the chief executive officer. This is against corporate governance principles,” Dube said.

Dube also said the Bill should broaden the definition of “media practitioner” so that it is clear whether it wants to cover citizen journalists, camera persons or any other newsroom staffers who are not necessarily journalists.

Douglas Machongonye, who claimed to be a political analyst suggested that journalists must be given stiff prison sentences if they publish defamatory statements. But his suggestions were quashed by different media practitioners, who said one of the main reasons why media laws were being aligned to the Constitution was to ensure that journalism is decriminalised.

Media lawyer Chris Mhike said: “Bills are supposed to ensure media reforms and higher standards in reforming media policy. Calling for stiffer penalties on journalists is wrong and we cannot have such laws in a democracy as they are draconian. This is the 21st Century and not the 16th Century and if we criminalise journalism, people will be thrown into prison for minor crimes. The ZMC is not a law enforcement agency; it ought to be there to promote media freedom.”

He said section 9 of the Bill copies from the Commission of Inquiry Act and has draconian implications which give power to the ZMC to prohibit a person from participating in an inquiry.

“Empowering the Commission to prohibit a particular person from participating in an inquiry is not in line with democratic practices,” Mhike said.

Media Alliance of Zimbabwe programmes manager Nigel Nyamutumbu said the Bill should reflect the issue of co-regulation of the media in order to avoid the mistakes made in the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act.

Media Institute of Southern Africa Zimbabwe legal expert Kuda Hove said the powers to ensure the rights of access to information were enjoyed should be vested within the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission and not the ZMC because access to information also included non-media information.

AB Communications chief executive Susan Makore said the gender aspect must be included in the leadership of ZMC.

She said the Bill must clearly state the objectives of the Media Development Fund — whether it will bail out struggling media houses, improve media training standards or establish community initiatives.

Different journalists also quashed the involvement of the police in commissions of inquiry saying this would be tantamount to criminalising journalism.

Cop in court for malicious damage to property, theft

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By Harriet Chikandiwa

A 27-YEAR-OLD police officer appeared before a Harare magistrate on Thursday facing charges of malicious damage to property and theft of US$220.

Fidelis Katsande appeared before Harare magistrate Francis Mapfumo, who remanded him out of custody to November 5.

It is alleged that on June 19 this year, the complainant, Shupikai Round (35), a commuter omnibus operator, was driving along Mbuya Nehanda Street when he came across two Harare City Council trucks carrying Zimbabwe Republic Police officers and municipal cops pursuing vendors.

Katsande and his three alleged accomplices disembarked from one of the trucks and allegedly blocked the complainant’s commuter omnibus before smashing the kombi’s passenger window to force him to stop.

It’s the State case that Round continued driving his vehicle and Katsande and his accomplice continued to smash the vehicle’s side windows, leading to the damage on six side windows and the rear screen.

Round was taken into police custody and Katsande allegedly extorted $400 from him.

After Round was released from custody, he discovered that his phone was missing.

He alleged that Katsande and his accomplice took his cell phone when they were effecting his arrest.

When Round was making a follow-up of his vehicle at VID Belvedere depot, he also discovered that Katsande and his accomplice had allegedly taken US$220 and a jacket, leading him to file a police report.

Delight Mauto represented the State.

ED redeploys envoy Suka-Mafudze to Malawi

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BY FARAI MATIASHE

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa has re-deployed former Zimbabwean Ambassador to Sudan, Hilda Suka-Mafudze to Malawi.

In a Government Gazette, Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet, Misheck Sibanda, confirmed Suka-Mafudze’s redeployment to Malawi.

“It is hereby notified that His Excellency, the President, has, in terms of the sections 110(20)(i) and 204 of the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No.20) Act 2013, appointed Ms Hilda Suka-Mafudze as ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary to the Republic of Malawi,” he wrote.

Foreign Affairs permanent secretary James Manzou told NewsDay Weekender yesterday that Suka-Mafudze had already left Sudan and was now in Harare waiting for redeployment processes.

“She is waiting to pay a courtesy call on the principal (Mnangagwa). Remember, she was is Sudan and is now in Harare waiting for deployment. This is a regular process,” he said.

Suka-Mafudze served as MDC legislator for Mhondoro constituency from 2000 to 2005.

Under the inclusive government, she became one of the five people from the MDC who were given ambassadorial roles.

2 Karoi men commit suicide

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BY NHAU MANGIRAZI

A KAROI man died on Tuesday afternoon after throwing himself in front of a moving haulage truck, while a soldier hung himself after discovering that his wife was having an affair.

The man, only identified as Breaker, threw himself in front of an oncoming vehicle along the farming town’s Chirundu-Harare Highway after complaining that he was failing to cope with economic hardships.

“The driver tried to avoid him and applied brakes, but it was too late as the deceased threw himself into the path of the moving truck,” a witness Wellington Matenga said.

Another witness said the deceased had previously complained that he was undergoing mental torture due to the harsh economic climate.

Said Ratidzai Mubaya: “He used to say it and we thought it was a joke.”

The deceased was reportedly married and had three children.

‘‘He was always complaining that life was becoming tough daily as he was not getting enough money for his family,” another town dweller Thomas Kadura also said.

His body was taken to Karoi District Hospital for a post-mortem.

Meanwhile, a 27-year-old soldier based at Inkomo Barracks committed suicide after allegedly coming across some text messages exposing an affair by his wife.

Paul Maguramhinga hanged himself on Saturday last week.

According to neighbours, the deceased dumped his first wife and moved in with his second wife in Karoi’s Chiedza high-density suburb.

The second wife reportedly moved out of the family house and he suspected she was in an adulterous relationship.

“They had an altercation after he found text messages on his second wife’s phone that showed that she was having an affair with another man,” a neighbour who refused to be named said.
The soldier then hanged himself after the couple failed to resolve the issue.

Mashonaland West acting police spokesperson Inspector Ian Kohwera confirmed the incident.

ACF bosses meet Mnangagwa

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BY BLESSED MHLANGA

AFRICAN Chrome Fields (ACF) executives recently met President Emmerson Mnangagwa and Mines minister Winston Chitando to discuss the company’s investments in the country following reports that it was disinvesting from Zimbabwe.

Company spokesperson and project liaison director Ashruf Kaka said ACF was confident that their investment in the country was safe and dismissed reports that they were disinvesting from their $250 million chrome mining and smelting plant in Chenyika near Kwekwe.

“ACF is here to stay in Zimbabwe and any suggestions of disinvestment are clearly untrue. I met President Mnangagwa personally as well as Minister Chitando with the view of giving them the assurance that ACF is here to stay and remains invested in Zimbabwe. We are committed to contributing to the growth of the economy and enriching the people of this country,” Kaka said.

Facing depressed chrome prices on the international market, ACF had, however, scaled down operations to ensure profitability.

“In the recent past, the chrome prices were severely depressed and this, coupled with the current economic conditions in Zimbabwe, placed ACF in an invidious position. Like other mining operators, ACF was required to rationalise their operations and adapt to the trying circumstances,” Kaka said.

“We reduced operations to an extent and continue to attend to the necessary care and maintenance of the remainder of the operating plants so that we can upscale when the economic conditions improve.”

The company is also in talks with the Minerals Marketing Corporation of Zimbabwe (MMCZ) over renewal of its export licence, which is key to its continued stay in the country.
Kaka said he was engaging MMCZ, but declined to give more details.

“ACF prefers to deal with issues between parties at the correct forum and through the correct channels, which certainly excludes ventilating disagreements or agreements between the parties in the media,” he said.

MMCZ general manager Tongai Muzenda said work was in progress to clear issues with ACF and discussions were cordial and progressive.

Since opening the mine five years ago, ACF has set up six sites incorporating 15 spiral plants, as well as constructing permanent infrastructure such as roads, dams and boreholes along the Great Dyke.

Congress ghost haunts MDC Byo province

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By NQOBANI NDLOVU

THE MDC Bulawayo province is still haunted by ghosts of its provincial congress, with some party members now raising fears that the chaos that accompanied it will cost the party in future by-elections or the 2023 general elections in the city.

The party’s national leadership has failed to douse factional flames in Bulawayo, where a section of disgruntled party members are demanding a re-run of the provincial congress, citing voter fraud.

Just last week, the national leadership was in Bulawayo to try and address the divisions, but without success.

A member of the MDC’s Magwegwe district executive committee Nicholas Moyo Godlwayo last week petitioned the party leadership to address the simmering tensions in the city to avert electoral drubbing in 2023 or in by-elections.

“What happened during the Bulawayo congress does not reflect the MDC as a party that so religiously believes in devolution of power as the best governance system that unites a nation.
The leadership that was purportedly elected does not, in any way, bring happiness to the people of Bulawayo,” Godlwayo wrote in his petition.

“Instead, it is exclusive than inclusive and the MDC can never win the 2023 elections in Bulawayo or any by-election which can happen before then. It is a certainty that anything otherwise will cost us dearly as a party come the 2023 plebiscite or any by-election which may happen before then.”

Infighting was blamed for the party’s loss of the Cowdray Park council seat to Zanu PF in a recent by-election.

MDC Bulawayo chairperson James Sithole yesterday told Southern Eye that the provincial executive “was doing everything within its powers to unite” warring factions.

“We have heard those concerns, but as a leadership we have started a process to address those issues that have been raised. We have also gone further to include members who lost elections into the provincial executive structures,” Sithole said.

“We want inclusivity; we are stronger together. We realise the importance of coming together to make a big change. We are a rainbow party and the only relationship that binds us together is to be members of the MDC. We all have a common agenda to remove Zanu PF from power through peaceful means.”

Peri-urban settlements owe Gweru $4m

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BY stephen chadenga

GWERU City Council (GCC) is owed over $4 million in unpaid bills by peri-urban settlements captured in the local authority’s master plan, but within the jurisdiction of Vungu Rural District Council (Vungu RDC), a recent forensic audit carried by external auditors has shown.

The audit, which is yet to be made public, shows that the city was working on modalities of co-operation with Vungu RDC to recover the money.

“Peri-urban settlements owed Gweru City Council $4 098 972,48 in respect of water and services fees, which the co-operation (between Gweru Council and Vungu RDC) should manage sustainably,” read part of the report.

“GCC and Vungu RDC were at an advanced stage (of finalising) the agreement of co-operation on peri-urban housing development schemes for land within Vungu RDC, bordering GCC which are within GCC’s master plan.”

Early this year, Gweru indicated that the rapid expansion of peri-urban settlements was heavily impacting on provision of water and sewer services.

Mayor, Josiah Makombe said the mushrooming peri-urban settlements were putting pressure mainly on water and sewer infrastructure and attributed this to the absence of an operational master plan.

He noted that there was need for council to come up with a long-term plan to address the expansion and growth of the city, given the growing population and infrastructure capacity.

Makombe, however, indicated that in future the local authority should ensure that the development of new residential stands should fit well into the council’s master plan.

Artist need support, recognition: Maxim

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BY PRECIOUS CHIDA

ZIMBABWEAN artist-cum-curator, Georgina Maxim-Masamvu, believes having a partner who has the same talent as she does, over the years, made her a stronger and more vibrant in the arts.

Maxim is married to artist Misheck Masamvu.

She is also a co-founder and co-director of Village Unhu, an art studio which has been providing space, workshops, residency programmes and exhibitions for artists since 2010.

She told NewsDay Weekender Life & Style yesterday that while pursuing her dream in art, she received backlash from people who thought getting married to a fellow artist would not make her one because they did not know she was already a creative.

“My worst moment in life was when people continuously said that being married to an artist was not going to make me one even though they didn’t know that when we met I was already regarding painting as my point of study. However, I have managed to confidently exhibit my work all the time. I have been helped to realise it’s possible and I am grateful,” she said.

“It’s really a blessing and the encouragement is amazing. Our children are definitely growing up knowing that the possibilities to become anything are endless.”

Maxim recently christened her work: “Dhunge mutunge” after an age-old stitching method which she has adopted to transform used garments into gigantic stories of stitches, memory, and healing which she is currently exhibiting at the Zimbabwe Pavilion at the Venice Biennale in Italy.

She said she avoided using a machine to sew and represent her impulse perceiving stitches and hand movements as her unique mode of expression.

Her art, she noted, has not allowed her to point out her best achievements since she became a professional artist in 2000 as she continues to create better things compared to her previous works.

“It has been so difficult to point out my biggest achievements because it looks as if there is still much more to be best. Why? Each time I work something new comes that is better than the one before. It’s as if it continues to feed and grow,” she said.

The 39-year-old art enthusiast said besides being a visual art creator, she is a fashion freak who loves dressing interestingly and also loves bringing her art into cooking in her spare time.

Maxim said although Zimbabwe is full of many skilled artists, there is need to recognise and make them known to develop the arts sector.

“The Zimbabwean visual arts sector is thriving with a lot of passionate artists. The need to work is there. The need to release is there, but the support for the process remains missing. There is too much talent here and all it is asking for is to be recognised and made known as part of the culture and development of the arts. I, however, applaud all those artists who continue to want to make sense even when the conditions don’t allow,” she said.

Maxim’s works have been collected in countries such as the United Kingdom, Netherlands, Brazil, Australia and South Africa.