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Big week for DeMbare

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Tonderai Ndiraya

BY MUNYARADZI MADZOKERE

Harare football giants Dynamos are set to go a gear up in the off-season player transfer market as they seek to conclude their transfer business this week, ahead of the start of their preseason training next week.

So far, the Harare giants have signed former captain Partson Jaure, who featured for Manica Diamonds last year, Nkosi Mhlanga from Yadah as well as two unheralded young players Tanaka Chidhobha and Lennox Mutsetse.

The club has come under criticism from their hard-to-please fans over the signings they have made so far, with all except Jaure, unknown quantities.

They did the same at the start of the season last year when they went for unknown players, and what followed was a disastrous campaign which saw them eventually finishing on ninth position in the league. The fans do not want a repeat of that.

But this week could as well define Dynamos’ season amid speculation that the club has secured the services of Young Warriors and Herentals midfielder Juan Mutudza.

Other players linked with the Harare giants include Chapungu pacey forward Ian Nyoni, Triangle’s Trevor Mavhunga, Arthur Musiyiwa from Bulawayo Chiefs as well as Black Rhinos Soccer Star of the Year finalist Wellington Taderera.

Warriors and ZPC Kariba defender Ian Nekati is also believed to be under Dynamos’ radar.

“We have not signed any other player save for the four that have been announced. But what I can say is this is the defining week for the club in which we are looking to conclude all our transfer business,” Dynamos chairman Isaiah Mupfurutsa told NewsDay Sport.

“We have been engaging the players who are within the club regarding their future and now we are
looking outside for players that the coach has recommended. So this week, we are going a gear up and by the start of pre-season training on January 20, we would have brought everyone that we need at the club,” he said.

Mupfurutsa was not at liberty to reveal the names of the players that the coach has recommended, but he emphasised that the club was keen to sign young players.

“At Dynamos, we believe in nurturing and developing players, so we want to bring young players who have a lot of years in their careers. That way, we can market and benefit from them when they move to bigger leagues. We can only sign an old player if they are incredibly talented like what we did with Partson Jaure. We know he is easily one of the best defender in the league at the moment.”

“Otherwise, we pride ourselves in having uncovered young players like Emmanuel Jalayi, Jarrison Selemani and Tinotenda Muringai who were virtually unknown last year. That is the direction we want to go as a club,” Mupfurutsa said.

The club will be looking to bring in a striker to replace Evans Katema, who is believed to be on his way to Zambia, while Edward Sadomba retired at the end of the season last year.

A number of players are also set to be off-loaded as the club seeks to build a team that will compete for honours this year

Coach Tonderai Ndiraya has something to build on considering the potential shown by most of the young players last season.

ZSE ready to receive ETF, ETN listing application

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BY MTHANDAZO NYONI

THE Zimbabwe Stock Exchange (ZSE) is now able to receive applications for listing of exchange traded funds (ETFs) and exchange traded notes (ETNs) following the approval of the Securities and Exchange rules 2019.

In a statement on Friday, the local bourse said the approval was granted by the Securities and Exchange Commission of Zimbabwe in terms of section 65(3) of the Securities and Exchange Act (Chapter 24:25).

These are the Securities and Exchange (Zimbabwe Stock Exchange Listings Requirements) (Amendment) rules 2019 and the Securities and Exchange (Zimbabwe Stock Exchange Market Making) rules 2019.

“The listing rules amendment incorporates exchange traded products listings requirements, which means ZSE is now able to receive applications for listing of exchange traded funds and exchange traded notes. The ZSE is also now able to process applications for prospective market makers,” the local bourse said.

ETNs, according to Investopedia, are structured products that are issued as senior debt notes, while ETFs represent a stake in an underlying commodity.

ETNs are more like bonds in that they are unsecured.

ETFs provide investments into a fund that holds the assets it tracks, like stocks, bonds or gold.

One of the benefits of ETFs is that they can offer lower operating costs than traditional open-end funds, flexible trading, greater transparency, and better tax efficiency in taxable accounts.

Since ETNs trade on major exchanges like stocks, investors can buy and sell them and make money from the difference between the purchase and sale prices, minus any fees.

Courts tighten noose on machete gangs

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BY SILAS NKALA / Richard Muponde / Precious Chida

Chief Justice Luke Malaba has announced the setting up of special courts to deal with the marauding machete gangs wreaking havoc in most parts of the country, warning that the courts would not have mercy on those who terrorise communities.

Machete gangs have been unleashing a reign of terror, especially in mining areas where they go about killing and maiming people before robbing them of gold and other valuables.

Speaking during the official opening of the 2020 legal year at the Constitutional Court yesterday, Chief Justice Malaba said the institution mandated to protect citizens could not just sit back and watch a few rogue elements terrorise the entire nation for their selfish benefits.

“As we speak, the country is gripped by another spate of violence perpetrated by the so-called machete gangs. May I assure the nation that the courts stand ready to decisively deal with those accused of these offences, in accordance with the law. Special courts to specifically try the cases have been set up in all affected areas across the country,” he said.

“We hear stories of callous murders of ordinary Zimbabweans and law enforcement agents. Citizens’ right of free of movement, freedom to conduct their affairs without fear and freedom of association are being violated with impunity by these gangsters. Courts must demonstrate to the public that they are possessed of real capacity to enforce the law and punish crime,” he said.

According to statistics, machete gangs have killed over 100 people in gold wars.

Last week, 47 machete gang members were arrested, while two of them were shot by the police after they stormed a police base in Gokwe North to rescue their colleagues, who had been nabbed for robbing a mine of gold ore.

Officially opening the 2020 legal year at the Bulawayo High Court yesterday, Deputy Chief Justice Elizabeth Gwaunza also spoke strongly against the machete gangs.

Justice Gwaunza called on all stakeholders in the administration of justice to make concerted efforts to end the scourge.

Soldier, civilians in copper cables heist

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Witness Mpofu, a soldier, was on Sunday allegedly caught stealing copper cables in Chegutu

BY Brenna Matendere

A Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA) member was on Sunday night arrested in Chegutu by National Railways of Zimbabwe (NRZ) security guards after he was caught red-handed stealing copper cables while three other people were nabbed the same day in Gweru on similar charges.

NRZ spokesperson Nyasha Maravanyika confirmed the developments and revealed that there was strong suspicion that powerful politicians were behind syndicates of copper cable thieves since habitual culprits normally mysteriously end up scot-free.

“I can confirm that our security guards in Chegutu and Gweru on Sunday night arrested thieves who were digging up underground copper cables which are used for signal communication for our personnel in trains along the railway lines. In Chegutu, the person arrested was a soldier and he is Corporal Witness Mpofu. As for Gweru, the culprits were ordinary civilians who reside in that city,” he said.

Mpofu, whose force number was recorded as 80127F of Pomona Barracks, resides in Pfupajena suburb in Chegutu.

He was allegedly caught digging up copper cables at the 390km peg between Bedford and Mupfure siding on the NRZ map.

Those arrested in Gweru were identified as Johannes Tsikira of Mkoba 10 Gweru, Owen Phiri (29) and Elfat Ncube (35) both of Mkoba 9. They were found digging up the copper cables at Dabuka NRZ Station.

Midlands provincial police spokesperson Inspector Joel Goko yesterday said he was travelling to Bulawayo so was unable to give details of the incident.

Maravanyika said the value of the stolen cables in Chegutu and Gweru would be evaluated in Bulawayo.

“The trend we are seeing is that in most of the cases, the people who are arrested are the same on different occasions, which means they will be repeat offenders,” he said.

“This raises suspicion that powerful politicians and businesspeople must be behind the syndicates which is why they find their way out of custody after we hand them over to the police.”

Meanwhile, police in Chegutu on Sunday morning arrested Obert Mugati (33) and Tendai Sekai Ndimi (33) after their vehicle was found carrying rolls of copper conductors weighing 550kg.

National police spokesperson Chief Superintendent Blessmore Chishaka said two other occupants of the Nissan Caravan commuter omnibus escaped. He said the conductors were stolen from Unki Mine in Shurugwi.

SA-based Zimbo donates 60 pre-fabricated clinics

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BY Nkululeko Sibanda

TOUCHED by Zimbabwe’s ailing health delivery system, a South African-based Zimbabwean businessman has pledged to rescue the situation by donating pre-fabricated clinics in Bulawayo and other parts of the country.

The businessman, Timothy Mncube told Southern Eye from his South African base that he was ready to donate up to 60 pre-fabricated clinic units to bring Zimbabwe’s health delivery service closer to people.

“I have decided to donate clinic structures to some parts of Zimbabwe, about 60 of them, because I have realised there is need for these centres out there,” Mncube said.

“I have resolved to work with the people because there is need to heed the cries of the people in the countryside, mostly. So those units are coming very soon and I believe they will go a long way in alleviating some of the challenges that people in Zimbabwe have of accessing healthcare.”

Emphasising that his donation was a personal contribution and was not driven by any political office desires, he said the health centres would be accessible to all Zimbabweans regardless of political affiliation.

According to Mncube, one of the units would be set up in Bulawayo’s Emganwini suburb, where there had been plans to construct a clinic. The plan fell through due to unavailability of resources.

“I would like one of the centres to be installed in Emganwini suburb of Bulawayo. There are people who wanted to construct a clinic there, but there were no funds to do that. I believe this facility will come in handy and close that gap created by the unavailability of the clinic,” he added.

Mncube said there was need for the Health and Child Care ministry to deploy personnel to the clinics he would set up.

He added that he would prefer “nurses from the locality be deployed to the clinics as they are able to converse with the patients in their language, reducing the amount of time spent on an individual patient”.

Mncube recently contributed immensely towards the construction of the Nketa 9 Police Station, which was handed over to the community a few weeks ago.

No festive joy for hoteliers

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BY FIDELITY MHLANGA

ZIMBABWE hotel occupancies during the just-ended festive season were subdued as the harsh economic situation in the country took a huge toll on people’s holiday spending.

Hospitality Association of Zimbabwe (HAZ) president Clive Chinwada said locals usually dominate festive season bookings, and as such, occupancies in Victoria Falls were down to 70% from above 80% last year.

Only Victoria Falls had a solid foreign footprint during this period, especially after Christmas because of the Victoria Falls Carnival.

Hotel facilities in Vumba, Manicaland, and Kariba in Mashonaland West had their occupancies tumbling by 2%.

“Performance was varied across destinations and most of the resorts were busy as is always the case during the festive season. The Eastern Highlands, specifically Nyanga, averaged 80% from December 22, 2019 to January 2, 2020.
Vumba and Kariba slightly dropped by about 2%,” Chinwada said.

The HAZ president said the festive season is driven by domestic tourism, and under the current economic circumstances, demand was subdued.

He said the declining consumer spending and fuel shortages played a key role in subduing hotel occupancies.

“General decline in the ability to spend (is) because of the economic situation. Fuel shortages (also had an imapct) as most of these destinations are drive-in destinations. Even though the fuel situation improved during the holiday itself, travellers generally plan well ahead and any uncertainty could lead to cancellation of travel plans,” Chinwada said.

Tourism players have, in the past, pleaded with Treasury to review the 15% value-added tax on foreign accommodation, the 2% intermediated transactional tax and duty exemption for car rental owners in order to make the country a cheaper tourist destination.

In order for the sector to achieve its set priorities, the 2020 national budget provided some duty exemptions for tourist sector equipment such as luxury buses, which have assisted the sector by providing an investment window to aid the recovery of the sector.

Tourism is recognised as one of the pillars anchoring Zimbabwe’s economic growth and job creation strategies alongside agriculture, mining and manufacturing.

The sector has continued on a positive trajectory as evidenced by tourist arrivals that grew from 1,8 million in 2013 to 2,5 million in 2018.

It is expected that tourist arrivals will rise marginally in 2019 regardless of the prevailing macro-economic environment.

Beitbridge border congestion man-made: Travellers

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BY Rex Mphisa

PUBLIC bus operators and other stakeholders have asked immigration officials in both Zimbabwe and South Africa to investigate allegations that congestion, delays and confusion that recently dogged the Beitbridge border were man-made to fleece travellers of their money.

Desperate travellers, some who spent close to two days in queues that at one time stretched for close to 10 kilometres, ended up bribing their way to get served faster.

Thousands of Zimbabweans, Malawians, Zambians and South African nationals returning to their bases across the Limpopo River were from New Year’s Day caught up at Beitbridge, where queues to cross the border stretched for close to 10 kilometres as immigration officials reportedly maintained artificial bottlenecks.

Gate passes that are ordinarily issued freely to motorists entering South Africa were being sold for as much as R50 by bogus agents.

Regional immigration manager for Beitbridge, Nqobile Ncube, said he was not aware of the allegations.

“Late last week, we saw the crowd was increasing and started releasing more vehicles to South Africa. We were communicating and each time we would release cars as they signalled,” he said.

Travellers singled out a shift headed by one official (name withheld) as the most corrupt.

“The bottleneck was on the South African side. Immigration officers were slow and deliberately took their time because people ended up offering large amounts of cash bribes just to be cleared into South Africa. This has always been happening, but this year the act was stepped up,” said a cross-border bus driver who plies the Lusaka-Johannesburg route.

“For us to have our passports processed, we collected money from our passengers asking each to put R200 per passport. We took the passports inside for processing even without the bearers,” the driver, who asked not to be named, said.

“An investigation must be made because this is an international border. Why has it become difficult this year?
Considering we are going towards a one-stop border post the process should be (smoother),” said another driver.

“Although queues were on the Zimbabwean side, the real bottleneck was on the South African side where the immigration officers often talked to bus crews to arrange their corrupt deals,” the driver said.

In some cases, gate passes were sold to motorists as officials deployed runners into the crowds of stranded travellers to search for potential clients.

Bearing witness to unusual childhoods

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BETWEEN THE LINES: Panashe Chigumadze

Title: Township Girls: The Cross-Over Generation
Editors: Nomsa Mwamuka, Farai Mpisaunga Mpofu and Wadzanai Garwe
Publisher: Jacana Media (2019)

IN the 1970s, as thousands of young “comrades” crossed over from Mozambique and Zambia to claim a Zimbabwe for all, a small group of black children began crossing over into Rhodesia’s historically white schools and later, suburbs.

Many of these were the children of the teachers, nurses, businesspeople and other professionals who formed part of the emerging black middle class mostly living in Rhodesia’s townships.

Stepping in to bear witness to these under-explored lives is the book under review, a collection of 30 women’s accounts of black girlhood in transition.

To have a collection of black women’s life stories, written and edited by themselves, is incredibly important for our archive. While the pioneering generation of women writers in Zimbabwe, such as Yvonne Vera, Tsitsi Dangarembga, J Nozipo Maraire and Kristina Rungano produced seminal women-centred novels and poetry, the space for black women’s writing has been left relatively open.

That many of the essays and poems in this collection are prefaced with accounts of the doubts and trepidation the contributors experienced as they put their stories to paper provides some hint as to why: Of course, one obvious reason for their nervousness is that, for many of the contributors, these are their first published works.

Beyond experience, or the lack thereof, with writing, part of the difficulty in telling such life stories is that the contributors must grapple with the complexities of their unusual childhoods of relative privilege under oppression.

As they reflect on girlhood in Zimbabwe’s townships, historical hotbeds for the national movements as guns rattled in the countryside, the contributors reveal a wide array of political consciousnesses: Those whose families “believed in everything white”; those whose families shipped them off to rural homesteads every holiday to ensure they retained a ken of their culture and traditions; those who were part of the nationalist movements; those whose families financially supported the comrades; and those who voted for the dubious Bishop Abel Muzorewa, who would become Prime Minister of the ill-fated Zimbabwe–Rhodesia in 1979, for less than a year.

Out of the personal struggles the “cross-over girls” had with consciousness spring out contributions such as Nomsa Mwamuka’s A Hybrid Heritage and Conflicted Identity, Debra Patterson’s Embracing My Culture and Farai Mpisaunga Mpofu’s Two Worlds & Everything in Between. While one contributor, Tambu Muzenda, triumphantly pulls off a part-Shona, part-English essay in Kunaka Kunonakira Anoda Zvonaka Nemworo Chigariro, the “two-worldedness” of cross-over life has many contributors detailing the struggle to shirk off the accents that shroud their English — and conversely struggling with the English accents that shroud their Shona and Ndebele. For some, there is the outright loss of their mother tongue, which continues to be felt in adulthood.

While the experiences of the “cross-over girls” in white Rhodesia (including the cataloguing of the various micro- and macro-aggressions they faced) is of importance, what is perhaps more significant are their reflections on their experiences within the black community. On her time at the University of Zimbabwe, Mwamuka writes that it was “no longer a battleground of racial identity, class dynamics reigned, the tussle between the petite bourgeois nose brigades and the SRBs, those with a ‘strong rural background’.”

Mwamuka recounts a growing sense of reflexivity and political consciousness over the years, so that by the time she arrives at university she is positively influenced by “more purpose-driven determined people from diverse and varied backgrounds” on campus.

Mpofu, however, is far less reflexive. She concludes her contribution with a bullet-point paragraph titled The Special One, detailing the reasons “why I know I was living an extraordinary life, a charmed life, in which one had a certain sense of entitlement”. Without any retrospective questioning, one of her bullet points states: “It was expected, acknowledged and accepted that you would do better, and go further than the rest.”

The inter-class relations within African communities reflected in Township Girls are interesting for at least two reasons. The first is that our society is so small there is a wide range of “class” inside each family. For example, the path for generational wealth within an African family might have been set by how many cows there were to sell to send a particular number of children to school. Your grandmother may have been the unfortunate girl in her family, so you are a cross-border trader while your cousin, the grandson of the fortunate son in the family, is now a third-generation university graduate.

Where, for example, Garwe writes that “father had excelled at school and thus education had been a stepping stone to the external world”, one is inclined to wonder about the circumstances of the children of the aunts and uncles who may not have found “stepping stones” of their own.

The second reason is that “class status” is extremely precarious. Many Zimbabwean children, including me, would have been brought up on the precautionary tales of vana vemabusinessman who grew up spoilt and stuck up, only to find themselves floundering once their parents’ wealth disappeared for one or other reason, including death.

In the “post”-settler colony, many of our African families are a generation away from poverty, and without access to the real foundations of wealth, such as land, can be borne back into poverty within a generation. This of course was compounded by the Zimbabwean crisis.

Continually extolling the virtues of hard work and striving ingrained in them by their parents, the cross-over girls certainly challenge this cautionary narrative. In their adult years, their biographies — ranging from full-time motherhood to professional careers in local and international institutions such as the African Union, the Southern African Development Community and the Peabody and British Academy of Film and Television Arts (Bafta) Awards — are general evidence that many have been able to maintain their middle- and upper-class stations.

Nonetheless, further reflections on the challenges of maintaining generational wealth, whether while in Zimbabwe or in the diaspora — as Isabella Matambanadzo hints at when she mentions how her “father’s business had undergone severe shocks” in the 1990s — would have enriched the collection. It is interesting that despite an economy where the vast majority of people do not survive on salaries, but on income from kukiyakiya, many of the contributors to Township Girls emphasise their continued belief in middle class striving, hard work and education, as guarantors of success.

An answer might be found in the conclusion to Hadebe’s contribution. Despite the pain and humiliation suffered at the altar of the integrationist project of the transitional years, many of the contributors end their stories with gratitude for their childhoods, with few, if any, truly questioning that period, and the social, cultural and economic forces that came together to shape their unusual “cross-over” experience.

Township Girls provides a significant first step in documenting some of the good, bad and ugly wrapped up in the under-explored social and cultural histories of Zimbabwe’s transition. The more we document these stories, the greater our ability to reflect on, and demand more of, our world-views in the past, present and future. — Johannesburg Review of Books

4 Chiredzi teachers write Zimsec exams for spouses

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By Garikai Mafirakureva

FOUR Chiredzi South teachers at Chingele Secondary School who allegedly wrote public examinations for their wives and girlfriends during last November’s Zimbabwe Schools Examination Council (Zimsec) examinations have been suspended, Southern Eye has established.

Zimsec spokesperson Nicky Dlamini confirmed that the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education, through the Public Service Commission, suspended the teachers following a recommendation by the examinations body.

This was after investigations by a team from Zimsec in Harare found out that the schoolhead Mike Maluleke allegedly connived with his deputy Checkson Tsumele, mathematics teacher Roddington Sithole and English teacher Misheck Mahungu to write the examinations on behalf of their girlfriends at home.

“Four teachers (head, deputy and two senior teachers) were involved in improper association with schoolchildren and former schoolchildren. These four were writing examinations for the eight candidates while one teacher was writing for his second wife. Combined Science paper 3 ( practical paper) examination was written in more than two hours and no proper supervision was in place, and candidates were even discussing answers in the examination,” Dlamini said.

“New teachers must be deployed at the school if Zimsec centre status is to be maintained, otherwise the council will revoke the centre status. A resident monitor should also be deployed during each examination session so as to superintend the smooth running of examinations at the centre.”

Dlamini added that nine candidates will have all their results for the November session nullified according to the Zimsec policy and combined science results for the whole school have also been cancelled.

Editorial Comment: Corruption, executive grandeur bleeding councils

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Editorial Comment

IN yesterday’s edition of NewsDay there were two stories involving two urban centres — Harare and Chitungwiza. The stories centred on issues to do with alleged abuse of public funds. In the case of Harare, we were told that council executives at Town House secretly awarded themselves hefty pay hikes in the region of 300%. This saw some getting salaries well over $30 000 at a time the lowest paid worker at Harare City Council is taking home a measly $222.

In Harare’s dormitory town of Chitungwiza, the council’s human resources (HR) boss was reportedly leaving large, having been awarded probably one of the most lucrative perks this country has ever heard of. The mouth-watering benefits read like the biblical beatitudes, except that these are to do with the many exciting perks and allowances drawn since 2014 by the now suspended Chitungwiza HR boss.

The situation in these two councils may just be a tip of a huge iceberg to what could be weighing down many of the country’s local authorities. What is quite perturbing is how all this is happening when year-in and year-out councils institute audits and draw up budgets that are supposedly meant to meet the mandated 70:30 service and wage ratio. How Harare and Chitungwiza municipalities hope to meet this ratio when they are allowing such obscene salary hikes bamboozles even the most unsophisticated ratepayer.

Is it any wonder that ratepayers across the country are being subjected to the most poor, if not dehumanising service given the council bosses’ apparent penchant for opulence? And in all this glaring mismanagement of public funds, where are the councillors?

It appears as if the councillors are mere figureheads, who have little to no power or say in how the councils’ monies are used. If these councillors are ceremonial, then why should the country’s citizens be abused by being asked to vote for people who have no say in how the voters’ hard-earned monies paid for services are used?

There is serious need for the country to revisit the issue of how our councils are run because executives appear to be having a field day abusing ratepayers’ monies for self-aggrandisement.

While it is fact that most local authorities are run by the opposition MDC, we wonder if the MDC is having any say in how these councils are being run in terms of revenue collections and expenditure. If they have a say then they are completely failing the ratepayers. But if they cannot control those administering the councils’ revenues and expenditure, then the country is in serious trouble and it needs to revisit how its local authorities are being managed. As it is, they are merely serving as feeding troughs for a privileged few fat cats.