Quantcast
Channel: The Chronicle
Viewing all 34186 articles
Browse latest View live

Dynamos in danger. . . Relegation fight, only three teams safe

$
0
0
Dynamos coach Lloyd Mutasa

Dynamos coach Lloyd Mutasa

Ricky Zililo, Senior Sports Reporter
ONLY the top three teams on the Castle Lager Premiership table FC Platinum, Caps United and Highlanders are guaranteed of topflight football next season, going into Week 24 fixtures today and tomorrow.

FC Platinum on 47 points, Caps United (46) and Highlanders (41) have gone past the magic number 40, which guarantees safety.

Although it may seem unthinkable that former champions Dynamos can actually face relegation, mathematically DeMbare are not safe on 35 points from 23 games.

With seven matches to go, Dynamos need to up their game to secure enough points to surpass the 40-point mark. Their form has not been consistent with their status and they need to start winning from this afternoon’s clash against second from bottom side Tsholotsho at Rufaro Stadium.

Tsholotsho presently sit on 19 points and can end the season on 40 points in the event that they win their remaining seven matches.

Dynamos are under pressure to perform following a 1-2 loss to Highlanders in their previous league encounter at Barbourfields Stadium two weeks ago.

DeMbare also suffered a morale-shattering loss to How Mine in the Chibuku Super Cup at Rufaro Stadium and will be under pressure to end the turmoil in their camp.

On the other hand, Tsholotsho ejected Caps United from the Chibuku Super Cup in Harare at the weekend and go into today’s tie with their tails wagging. Coach Lizwe Sweswe believes the pressure Dynamos are under could be good for his relegation battling side.

“What they’re going through may be good for us because they’re desperate for a win and may overdo things resulting in them making some mistakes. For us, it’s about maintaining consistency and the players now understand that they’re the main actors in this survival battle. We’re going to Rufaro with victory on our minds,” said Sweswe.

Although Sweswe is confident they’ll survive the chop, their remaining fixtures, starting with today’s game, are not easy games.

After today’s trip to Harare, Tsholotsho will host Harare City before travelling to Ngezi Platinum Stars. They then face Chapungu, Highlanders and Bulawayo City in Bulawayo, and end their season’s campaign in Zvishavane against FC Platinum.

“It’s tricky but possible. We have to show character and prove that we deserve to be in the elite league,” Sweswe said.

Mutare City, who are just a point above Tsholotsho on 20 points, also believe they can escape the chop.

Mutare City could end the season on 41 points if they win their remaining games, but just like Tsholotsho, they have to spring shockers along the way.

They are left with four away games to Chicken Inn, How Mine, Dynamos and Ngezi Platinum, as well as home ties against ZPC Kariba, Border Strikers and Harare City.

Tomorrow, Mutare City face champions Chicken Inn at White City Stadium, an encounter they’re unlikely to win. Chicken Inn beat Mutare City 3-1 in the first leg and a victory for the champions will go a long way in aiding Tsholotsho’s cause.

“We won’t be relegated. The bottom two teams will go,” said a confident Mutare City coach Taku Shariwa.

Bottom of the table Border Strikers will need a miracle to escape relegation. With just 13 points, Strikers are unlikely to collect 21 points from their remaining seven matches in which they will face FC Platinum, Hwange, Caps United, Mutare City, Triangle United, Chicken Inn and ZPC Kariba.

Their relegation fate may have already been sealed, as early their next three games are tough assignments against FC Platinum, Hwange and Caps United.

@ZililoR


EDITORIAL COMMENT: UN needs to return to ideals of its Charter

$
0
0

UN CHARTER

THE United Nations Charter enjoins member states to be bound by its principles whose noble intentions include maintaining peace and security in the world. Although it has increasingly become a toothless bulldog over the past few decades largely due to the condescending attitude of big super powers led by the United States, the UN is still a force for good in the world and has been effective in ensuring that member states stick to its founding ideals.

As world leaders gather for the 71st UN General Assembly in New York this week, the world is faced with an unprecedented refugee crisis spawned by the displacement of millions of people in troubled hot spots such as Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya.

On Monday, the world body adopted a key declaration in the midst of a growing refugee crisis whose roots lie in US and European destabilisation of fragile states. Though not legally binding, the declaration calls on countries to protect the human rights of the world’s more than 65 million refugees, increase humanitarian aid, help with resettlement, standardise responses and provide better education and employment opportunities for displaced people.

President Mugabe, who is at the UN for the General Assembly, addressed world leaders on Monday and described the adoption of the New York Declaration on Refugees and Migrants as a step in the right direction in ensuring dignity for all. He said the selfish interests of a few nations are the root cause of the large-scale displacement of people the world over. “Over the past year we have witnessed harrowing images of refugees risking their lives to flee the dire realities in their countries of origin. We have been equally shocked at the hostile reception refugees have often been subjected to,” President Mugabe said.

“Against this background, we are pleased at the convening of this important meeting that allows us to explore a collective blueprint for dealing with large movements of refugees and migrants. We are also pleased that the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants highlights the importance of addressing the root cause of the large movements.”

He went on: “We have noted that a large portion of refugees that have landed on European shores originated from countries in armed conflict such as Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and Syria.

“We therefore are convinced that a return to the UN Charter ideals of saving succeeding generations from the scourge of war and refraining from using armed force is critical in addressing the root cause of large movements of refugees.”

He said the predilection to military force by some countries had needlessly created a refugee crisis.

“More often than not, member states have been too keen to resort to force without exhausting peaceful means. This hegemonic military doctrine and adventurism, fuelled by a desire to achieve the narrow national interests of a powerful few, is the root of the proliferation of armed conflicts which have spawned so many refugees today.”

We concur with the President that the refugee crisis has been caused by the interventionist policies of the US, Britain, France and other Western powers in the Middle East and other fragile states.

We call on the UN to rein in these powerful countries and ensure that the world body returns to the ideals of its Charter. Article 1 of the UN Charter calls on member states to maintain international peace and security, to take effective collective measures for the prevention and removal of threats to the peace, and for the suppression of acts of aggression or other breaches of the peace, and to bring about by peaceful means, and in conformity with the principles of justice and international law, adjustment or settlement of international disputes or situations which might lead to a breach of the peace.

Critically, Article 2 enjoins all UN members to refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the United Nations.

We feel if the UN should find ways of calling its members to order and impress on powerful nations to refrain from using military force to resolve conflict. Clearly, their military adventures have backfired spectacularly as they have left a trail of failed states and caused a refugee crisis which is straining their economies as well.

The dehumanisation of refugees in their adopted countries is frustrating them to the extent that some of them are venting and resorting to extreme measures to express their disgust. Displaced people in countries such as Germany, France, UK and the US are profiled and treated as terrorists yet they are fleeing anarchy and chaos engineered by the foreign policies of their host nations.

The Western powers need to pull out of Syria, Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan and leave these countries to determine their internal affairs so that the refugee crisis and the growing threat of terrorism can be curbed.

US hails Zim on refugees

$
0
0
 US Ambassador to Zimbabwe, Harry K Thomas Jr

US Ambassador to Zimbabwe, Harry K Thomas Jr

Lloyd Gumbo, Harare Bureau
THE United States has hailed Zimbabwe for welcoming refugees displaced from their countries due to conflicts in their countries, whose roots lie in American and European destabilisation of fragile states.

In a video posted on the US Embassy Facebook page on Monday, US Ambassador to Zimbabwe, Harry K Thomas Jr said: “To date, Zimbabwe has welcomed more than 9 000 refugees and we thank the Government of Zimbabwe for honouring its international commitments by providing a safe place for refugees.”

He made the remarks while announcing that US President Barack Obama was expected to host a summit on the refugee crisis on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly meeting yesterday.

President Mugabe attended the United Nations Summit for Refugees and Migrants on Monday where the leaders adopted a New York declaration that calls on countries to protect the human rights of the world’s more than 65 million refugees, increase humanitarian aid, help with resettlement, standardise responses and provide better education and employment opportunities for displaced people.

Ambassador Thomas Jr said, the goal of the Summit was to expand a humanitarian safety net and create more long-term opportunities for refugees.

“Displaced from their homes, families and communities, these are people who have experienced terrible loss, face uncertain futures and look to the rest of the world, to us for support and hope,” he said.

Addressing the world leaders at the UN meeting on Monday, President Mugabe said selfish interests of a few nations were the root cause of the large-scale displacement of people the world over.

He said the adoption of the New York Declaration on Refugees and Migrants was a step in the right direction in ensuring dignity for all.

President Mugabe said, “Over the past year, we’ve witnessed harrowing images of refugees risking their lives to flee the dire realities in their countries of origin. We’ve been equally shocked at the hostile reception refugees have often been subjected to.

“Against this background, we’re pleased at the convening of this important meeting that allows us to explore a collective blueprint for dealing with large movements of refugees and migrants. We’re also pleased that the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants, highlights the importance of addressing the root cause of the large movements.

“We’ve noted that a large portion of refugees that have landed on European shores originated from countries in armed conflict such as Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and Syria.

“We therefore are convinced that a return to the UN Charter ideals of saving succeeding generations from the scourge of war and refraining from using armed force is critical in addressing the root cause of large movements of refugees.”

He said the predilection to military force by some countries had needlessly created a refugee crisis.

“More often than not, Member States have been too keen to resort to force without exhausting peaceful means. This hegemonic military doctrine and adventurism, fuelled by a desire to achieve the narrow national interests of a powerful few, is the root of the proliferation of armed conflicts which have spawned so many refugees today.”

“We’ve a collective responsibility to change the narrative on migrants and migration in our countries. Many countries owe their success in business and scientific prowess to the invaluable contributions of migrants and refugees.

“We commend those states that have, despite their own limitations, opened their borders to migrant communities. We, in Zimbabwe have hosted many refugees from conflict-affected countries. We call for a balanced focus on the humanitarian plight of migrants and refugees world over,” said President Mugabe who is in New York for the 71st UN General Assembly.

He is accompanied by First Lady Dr Grace Mugabe, Foreign Affairs Minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi and, Tourism and Hospitality Industry Minister Dr Walter Mzembi and other senior Government officials.

Police fight crime through music

$
0
0
Shantani Afro Jazz Band

Shantani Afro Jazz Band

Tobias Mandoreba in Hwange, Showbiz Correspondent
THE usually quiet Hwange town is expected to roar into life on September 30 as the Colliery Stadium reverberates in dance and music during the CID Matabeleland North Business Against Crime musical concert.

The show would be held in conjunction with the local Crime Consultative Committee and is the second in the province after a similar one was held at Chinotimba Stadium in Victoria Falls in July, which was a success.The gigs aim to raise stakeholder awareness on the need to partner Zimbabwe Republic Police in combating crime.

Tickets for the show are pegged at $2 and $1 for adults and children respectively.

Popular musician Martin Sibanda and his Ndolwane Super Sounds are the main attraction at the show and will share the stage with the likes of Hwange based outfits, Chibuku Road to Fame Matabeleland North representatives Shantani Afro Jazz Band, Marasha Moto Express Band and Jambezi based Kwejani Band.

From Victoria Falls a lot will be expected from the likes of Zimdancehall sensation Ray “Muffiaking” Karipache and Chicken Bus.

In an interview, district chairperson for the Crime Consultative Committee James Sibanda said:

“All the logistics are now in place to host this fundraising musical show here in Hwange and it is coming at the backdrop of an exciting show in Victoria Falls at the end of July. A number of musical groups are expected to dish out lots of entertainment to music lovers to the community whose support I can say is commendable in this drive.” he said.

Ndolwane Super Sounds band manager Thandazani Nyoni promised fans a show to remember.

“As Ndolwane we have always made sure we give best performances during live shows and this one is no exception. I am urging fans to come in numbers and enjoy a show to remember,” he said.

Marasha Moto Express Band leader Rangarirai Pedzisai also promised music fans a show to remember.“We are more than geared for this show as we want to prove to revellers that our growing popularity in the town and province is no fluke” he said.

@tobymandox

Byo deputy mayor, 4 councillors suspended. . . ‘Tyson’ wields axe at BCC

$
0
0
Cde Kasukuwere

Cde Kasukuwere

Vusumuzi Dube, Chronicle Reporter
THE deputy mayor of Bulawayo, Councillor Gift Banda, and four other councillors were yesterday suspended by the Minister of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing, Cde Saviour Kasukuwere, over a raft of allegations involving underhand dealings and rampant corruption.

In a move aimed at weeding out the rot within the Bulawayo City Council, Cde Kasukuwere suspended Clr Banda together with Clrs Charles Moyo (Ward nine), Mzama Dube (Ward 25), Reuben Matengu (Ward 21) and James Sithole (Ward seven) during a meeting he held with city fathers in council chambers.

The suspensions came in the wake of revelations that the local authority is owed more than $500 000 in illegal land deals  involving councillors who have been accummulating vast tracts of land at the expense of the people.

An independent tribunal will be constituted in the next two weeks to look into the five suspended councillors’ matter.

There were also reports that the BCC was under the control of a clique of so-called powerful councillors with no respect for management and staff and who resort to threats to push through their decisions.

Clr Banda has been in the eye of a storm regarding a number of corruption allegations including the purchase of a piece of land at Ascot Race Course for the construction of town houses.

He bought the 3,5 hectares of land for a paltry $130 000 in a move which raised eyebrows and the ire of residents associations and pressure groups.

Sources at the local authority alleged the land was supposed to cost about three times more.

Cde Kasukuwere revealed that only five out of the city’s 29 councillors were cleared of corruption allegations.

The councillors who came out clean include the Mayor, Clr Martin Moyo (Ward three), Clr Monica Lubimbi (Ward 29), Clr Concilia Mlalazi (Ward 18) and Clr Lot Siziba (Ward 13).

The other 24 councillors are expected to appear before a tribunal on a date to be announced.

According to Cde Kasukuwere, councillors owed the local authority over $500 000 in illegal land deals indicating that the five who were suspended were just a tip of the iceberg.

“The report shows that most councillors in Bulawayo have come in to accumulate stands at the expense of the people they serve.

“It seems councillors think that they have the right to every property that is available.

“Councillors have been allocated land for housing, public convenience, open space, agricultural land, commercial space, school and crèche stands, flea market stands and brick moulding zones. To make matters worse, most councillors have not made an effort to pay for the land resulting in councillors owing over half a million dollars on the property they have acquired,” said Cde Kasukuwere.

He said an investigation team had also uncovered irregularities within the tendering system (inclusive of the Terracotta deal for the rehabilitation of Egodini bus terminus) where contracts are changed to suit the contractor not the city.

The Minister said he had been forced to intervene as previous attempts to warn councillors had proved fruitless.

“Council has awarded a tender that is talking of 40, 55 and 99 year leases whereas the Management of Urban State lands recommends nine and the

Government itself does not give leases in urban areas for more than 40 years. A 99-year lease is three generations or 18 councils.

“I will be leaving my officials to deal with the specific issues. They will help the BCC to come up with a recovery matrix. I’ve been watching Bulawayo but when a council does not operate within the parameters of our laws, then it’s my constitutional duty to intervene and that is why I’m here today,” said Cde Kasukuwere.

He said they will be approaching the Law Society of Zimbabwe which will provide names of lawyers who will sit in the independent tribunal to look into the five councillors’ matter.

The tribunal will be announced in the next two weeks.

“I must warn the other councillors that we’re not saying they’re not corrupt but these five are just the top five. The others will still have to defend their cases but we won’t be necessarily suspending them.

“Council management should also be warned that the report is clear on their corrupt activities but I cannot deal with them directly, it’s now up to the councillors to deal with them because my mandate is to deal with councillors and management falls under them,” said Cde Kasukuwere.

The Minister bemoaned the fact that the BCC had its last audit carried out in 2012 indicating that this was not surprising as it was clear that the local authority had a lot to hide.

He immediately ordered the local authority to bring their audit to date or face the wrath of the law.

“There’s an element of conspiracy in council. Although councillors recuse themselves from meetings, their influence is still present resulting in wrong decisions being made.

“Some councillors have been threatened and no action is taken by the mayor implying that he may also be under threat.

“Council appears to be under the control of a clique of so-called powerful councillors with the others simply rubber stamping bad decisions. Councillors don’t have respect for management and the staff of council and resort to threats,” fumed Cde Kasukuwere.

The Bulawayo Progressive Residents Association (BPRA) initially raised the red flag over the rate at which councillors were allegedly grabbing land in the city leading to the government sending an investigation team to get to the bottom of the matter.

The team was expected to investigate circumstances surrounding the sale of the Ascot Race Course piece of land to Clr Banda.

Clr Banda was also in the eye of a storm regarding the upgrading of the Egodini bus terminus amid allegations that the deputy mayor was linked to the company- Terracotta- which had been awarded the $60 million project.

Two other councillors, Sithole and Charles Moyo were also accused of corruptly purchasing land for town houses at Parklands worth $184 000 and $112 000 respectively.

Byo City goalie boob gives Triangle victory

$
0
0
Bulawayo City’s Morris Kadzola (right) tussle for the ball against Triangle’s Marvelous Mukumba during a soccer league match at Barbourfields Stadium yesterday. Picture by Dennis Mudzamiri

Bulawayo City’s Morris Kadzola (right) tussle for the ball against Triangle’s Marvelous Mukumba during a soccer league match at Barbourfields Stadium yesterday. Picture by Dennis Mudzamiri

Sikhumbuzo Moyo, Senior Sports Reporter
Bulawayo City 1-2 Triangle United

EXPERIENCED goalkeeper Ndodana Sibanda gifted visiting Triangle United a priceless second goal that saw the Lowveld side collecting their first set of maximum points after 450 minutes of league football.

Not even nine minutes of added time by referee Hardly Ndazi could help City find the equalizer, which they deserved.

The long added on time was because Triangle goalkeeper Ronald Mudimu went down “injured” on numerous occasions, apparently to waste time, but the Hwange referee was not fooled.

However Amakhosi will feel hard done by the second goal, which came three minutes after the visitors had shot into the lead through a beauty by Junior Chirambauriwo in the 27th minute. A cross from the right by Guthrie Zhokinyu was initially blocked by a City defender, but the ball rolled onto the path of Hardlife Muvundi, who hit a tame shot straight at Sibanda, who seemed to have the ball covered. However, the ball somehow slipped through his hands and rolled into the nets, leaving the few Bulawayo City fans at Barbourfields Stadium stunned.

City could have surged ahead in the 13th minute had veteran striker Mkhokheli Dube not slipped as he went for the kill inside the box with goalkeeper Mudimu on the other side of action.

City continued dominating play but could not convert their dominance into goals and were duly punished.

“We started slowly, missed our chances and got punished,” said stand-in City coach Try Ncube after the match.

Triangle took the lead against the run of play when Chirambauriwo found possession on the penalty spot and hit the ball with the outside of his left foot. The ball seemed to be going wide only for it to fly into the top left corner of the net with Sibanda static.

The strike was almost in the mould of former Real Madrid left-back Roberto Carlos’ trademark shots.

Three minutes later, it was 2-0 to the visitors through a scrambled Muvundi goal.

Coach Try then pulled out Felix Kuswatuka for Mkhululi Moyo in a bid to add some punch upfront and Moyo could have pulled one back three minutes before the break, but he reacted slowly to a good cross.

In the second half, City pulled out the ineffective Nyasha Mukumbi for youngster Lewis Ncube and the former Highlanders’ junior immediately made an impact. It was one of his passes that found a well positioned Dube inside the 12 yard box to coolly convert.

“We scored at the right time but we still continued to miss chances which could have given us the points we needed. We remain disappointed,” said Try.

A relieved Triangle United coach David Mandigora gave credit to his players for a well fought victory.

“I am a relieved man; we had gone for four games without a win but we are now back. I’m happy for the players as well as the supporters, they can afford a smile now,” said Mandigora.

Panic as soldier tries to bomb shopping mall

$
0
0
The shopping complex in Queenspark West suburb, Bulawayo

The shopping complex in Queenspark West suburb, Bulawayo

Pamela Shumba, Senior Reporter
A SOLDIER has been arrested after he went berserk and attempted to blow up a shopping complex in Queenspark West suburb, Bulawayo using dangerous explosives following an altercation with shop attendants.

Admire Mangeya sent shoppers, imbibers, vendors and workers at the shopping complex running for their lives at about 4PM on Tuesday after he set the explosives in protest over a spilt glass of beer.

He was immediately apprehended by the police who recovered the explosives.

Witnesses, who could not identify the type of explosives, said an army bomb squad told them that if they had detonated, they would have razed the entire complex.

When The Chronicle visited Mangeya’s rented home in Queenspark West yesterday morning, police officers and officials from the Zimbabwe National Army One Infantry Brigade were searching his house for explosives.

The exercise took more than an hour during which a handcuffed Mangeya and his wife, only identified as Mai Craig, were assisting detectives with the search.

Shop attendants at Regal Supermarket at the shopping complex told The Chronicle that Mangeya lost his marbles after one of them spilled his glass of beer while he was playing pool with friends.

“We usually have a problem with people who come to our shop to play pool. They cheat by using old coins as tokens. Mangeya and his friends were playing the game and my aunt, Ms Rumbidzai Mukerekete, approached them and told them to notify her before they punch tokens into the machine.

“She accidentally spilled Mangeya’s drink and he became angry and violent, threatening to beat us up. He shouted obscenities at the top of his voice. He eventually calmed down after some shoppers spoke to him and we reimbursed him $1 for his drink and promised to buy his water glass,” said Miss Mary Shumba, one of the workers at Regal Supermarket.

She said Mangeya went away but later came back with some explosives that he connected to electric cables while he was sitting at the entrance to the shop.

“Initially we thought it was a joke but we realised that he was serious after he left the explosives at the door and stood at a distance.

“People started screaming for help and fled from the shops. After the explosives failed to detonate at the expected time, he ran back to reset them.

“Fortunately there were police officers nearby who quickly apprehended him and took away the explosives,” said a terrified Ms Shumba.

She added that Mangeya was arrested and taken to Queenspark Police Station.

A visibly traumatised Ms Mukerekete was sobbing yesterday and struggled to narrate “the terrifying incident” to this newspaper.

Bulawayo police spokesperson Inspector Precious Simango yesterday declined to comment, referring questions to the ZNA.

ZNA public relations officer Lieutenant Colonel Alphios Makotore yesterday said he could not comment as he had had not received information about the incident.

“I can’t help you because I’m in a meeting,” said Lt Col Makotore.

All set for the Midlands Music Awards. . . YaFM to broadcast it live

$
0
0
DJ Stavo

DJ Stavo

ALL is set for the third edition of the Midlands Music Awards (MMA), which will be held at the Cathedral hall in Gweru tomorrow.

The red carpet event, which will run under the theme “Celebrating Arts, Culture and Music Excellence in Midlands province” will be broadcast live on the Zvishavane-based YaFM.

Entertainment will be provided by Harare-based Mathias Mhere, Daniel Mhere, Takura, DJ Stavo, Guluva 7, Shingi Mangoma, Oskid, Pastor Olinda and Good Child among others.

Last year’s edition saw Mathias walking away with two gongs for Best Gospel Music Award and Album of the Year Award. The late Blessing “Tasarina” Chibaya who died two years ago in a car crash received a posthumous award for the Best Jazz Musician of the Year.

Organiser of the MMA, Mavis Koslek said they have managed to reach out to artistes from Kwekwe, Zvishavane and Shurugwi in this year’s edition.

“This year we’ve musicians from Zvishavane, Kwekwe and Shurugwi participating in the event. Even though we didn’t get a response from Mberengwa, Mvuma and Gokwe, we’re hoping to see musicians from those areas rising,” said Koslek.

The nominees are:

Best Producer
Josh “JaeMac” Makoni
Prince “Oskid” Tapfuma
Comfort “Sky” Chimedza
Swizz E Productions
Themba (DJ Themba Remember) Kuzvikonda

Best Music Video
Jehovah Tshuvah – Pastor Olinda
Zino Irema – Takura
You & I – Goodchild
Ndai (Money) – Ur Highness
Ishe Wemadzishe – Knowledge Khanye

Best Single
Zino Irema – Takura
Delilah – Goodchild
Mwedzi Muchena – DJ Stavo ft Oliver Mtukudzi
Ready to Go – FYP ft QuaZor

Best Hiphop Music
TupAc Shakur – Afriken
Colour of Dreams – Guluva Se7en
Singles Collection – Crystalefire
Lazarus – Ur Highness
Chibhachura – Di Truth

Best Jazz Music
Kushingirira – Valentyne
Tichasvika Chete – Samukoko
Sentimental – Brandon Mvura
Pentimento – Brandon Mvura

Best Newcomer
Heavy Rain – Daniel Mhere
Jehovah Tshuvah – Pastor Olinda
Pentimento & Sentimental – Brandon Mvura
Singles Collection – Drudaman T
Uringirozi – Junior Tee

Best Club DJ
Dj Crocx
Dj Masty
Dj Brian
Dj G Freshy
Dj Silver

Best Dancehall Music
Singles Collection – Tiny Trigger
10 outter 10 – Giantau Int.
Chamanginga – Zizoe
Kuonesana – Legion
Last Numb3r – Magaivha

Best House Music
Mwedzi Muchena – DJ Stavo ft Oliver Mutukudzi
Best Reggae/Chigiyo Music
Singles Collection – Chaki & The Specialist

Best Collaboration
Mwedzi Muchena – DJ Stavo ft Oliver Mutukudzi
Kushingirira – Valentyne ft Prince K Musarurwa
Ndakanya – Brandon Mvura ft Edith WeUtonga & Claire
Daza to Topola – Guluva Se7en ft Cal_vin
Lazarus – Ur Highness ft Roki

Best AfroPop Music
Singles Collection – Goodchild
Monumental – Brandon Mvura & Serah K
The Future Vol 1 – The Future Crew

Best Traditional Gospel Music
Hwamanda – Albert Chawa Israel
Double Double – Mathias Mhere
Ishe Wemadzishe – Knowledge Khanye & Psalmville Voices
Anenyasha – Attalia Parehwa
Heavy Rain – Daniel Mhere

Best Contemporary Gospel Music
Jehovah Tshuvah – Pastor Olinda
His Grace – Wellaz (ft Will Young)
Mabasa Makuru – Nybal
Happy Birthday – EECF Praise Team
Inguva Chete – Panganai Sithole

Lifetime Achievement Award
Anthony Mukanga a.k.a Tony G | Baseline Studios.

Best Radio DJ/Personality
DJ Chilli – Power FM Zimbabwe
Ruvarangu Tichareva – YaFm
DJ Tony G – ZiFM Stereo
Gogo Beau – YaFm


Bring the bond notes: Industry

$
0
0
Mr Busisa Moyo

Mr Busisa Moyo

Patrick Chitumba, Midlands Bureau Chief
INDUSTRY captains have expressed readiness to receive bond notes saying they are confident the strategy will have a positive impact on the economy.

Addressing members of the Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI) Midlands Chapter in Gweru yesterday, the industry body’s national president, Mr Busisa Moyo, urged Zimbabweans to embrace the new notes, which are due to circulate in the market by end of next month.

Last week the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) announced that an equivalent of $75 million worth of bond notes will be in circulation by December this year in denominations of $2 and $5 notes.

Mr Moyo said the transacting public should have faith in the Government, which has allayed fears of abuse of the facility and suspicions of a return of the dreaded Zimbabwean dollar era.

“The bond will be functional notes and are a welcome development to business. Perception is negative because the people are fearful of going back to the local currency,” said Mr Moyo.

“However, from a functional point, the notes are good like the bond coins, which have been widely accepted. Up to now there has been an unrestrained use of bond coins and they are very useful when it comes to change.”

The CZI head and chief executive officer of United Refineries Limited said the coming in of bond notes would see industry being able to price their products in smaller demoninations like 85c, for instance, with customers walking away with 15c change.

He said the country was currently stuck with the old United States dollars, which he said were being rejected in other countries.

Mr Moyo said he visited South Africa and was disappointed when the US dollars he had were rejected for being dirty.

“We are using dirty old notes, which are not accepted anywhere. The ones we use here are dirty and we have an opportunity of using the bonds coins and notes in the country, with which we can pay toll fees and buy tomatoes,” he said.

Mr Moyo said the bond notes would not be forced on people, as government said, adding that anyone who is not willing to use them was free not to.

“We take comfort in the promise by the Government that there would be a board to run the bond notes. The notes are not compulsory. One can chose to refuse them. For business we should be okay and we welcome the use of the bond notes as long as they are accepted by the people,” he said.

The bond note facility is backed by a $200 million loan secured from Afreximbank. The Government has adopted the approach as part of measures to incentivise production in the economy through a five percent export incentives facility payable in bond notes.

This means the level of circulation of bond notes will be tied to exports. The move is also part of a broad strategy to curb capital flight and externalisation, which has dogged Zimbabwe’s foreign currency reserves since dollarisation in 2009.

@pchitumba1

EDITORIAL COMMENT: Corrupt Bulawayo City councillors must face the music

$
0
0
Minister Kasukuwere

Minister Kasukuwere

Until the 2013 elections, Bulawayo had a history of being run by arguably the country’s cleanest and most responsible councils.

Whereas their counterparts in Harare, Mutare and Gweru were often found to be corrupt and unprofessional in their stewardship of council affairs, those in Bulawayo were always upright. While councils in Harare, Gweru and Mutare were spending millions building mansions for their executive mayors in the 1990s, Bulawayo City Council was judicious to realise that such spending was an unnecessary drain on its revenue.  Whereas some councillors in Harare were personally grabbing council-owned houses from elderly widows and orphans in Glen Norah, Highfield and other high density suburbs some three years ago, Bulawayo councillors were happy to let residents renting council homes live peacefully.

Whereas Harare City Council was, soon after dollarisation in 2009, approving five-figure salaries for their town clerk, little Gwanda Town Council doing likewise, Bulawayo City Council had their top officials on more modest four-figure perks.

It was no surprise therefore that the city of Bulawayo performed well on good governance rankings.

But the crop of councillors that was elected in 2013 has brought much corruption, bad governance and accompanying disrepute to the City of Kings and Queens. Of the 29 councillors in the city, only five were recently found to be diligent servants of the people, untainted by corruption. The rest have been in a race to acquire land and other properties cheaply and corruptly while service delivery continues to suffer.

The Government had to intervene a few months ago, the first time it has done so in Bulawayo. Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Minister Saviour Kasukuwere sent a team to investigate the goings-on in the city and came up with a report. He was in the city on Tuesday and announced the Government’s decision to suspend five councillors — Gift Banda, Charles Moyo, Mzama Dube, Rueben Matengu and James Sithole.

Minister Kasukuwere revealed that the councilors owe council more than $662 299 emanating from land deals hence the decision to suspend the quintet. In addition, a small group of councillors was railroading key decisions with no regard to their colleagues and council staff. The Government would constitute an independent tribunal in the next two weeks to look into the rot.

“The report shows that most councillors in Bulawayo have come in to accumulate stands at the expense of the people they serve,” said Minister Kasukuwere.

“It seems like councillors think that they have the right to every property that is available.  Councillors have been allocated land for housing, public convenience, open space, agricultural land, commercial space, school and crèche stands, flea market stands and brick moulding zones. To make matters worse, most councillors have not made an effort to pay for the land resulting in council owing over half a million dollars on the property they have acquired.”

He said the Government was unhappy with BCC awarding leases of up to 99 years yet the average length of leases in urban areas is 40 years and shorter. Looking at the five councillors who have been suspended, it is very easy to identify who the real architect of the shady deals is and Minister Kasukuwere has done a good thing sanctioning them. We applaud the Affirmative Action Group (AAG) and Bulawayo Progressive Residents’ Association (BPRA) for blowing the whistle on the corruption at council.

They raised concern over Clr Banda’s acquisition of 3,5 hectares of prime land near Ascot Racecourse for a measly $130 000. Also, they raised issues with the acquisition of two blocks of land in Parklands — 3,7ha and 2,3ha at $184 000 and $112 000 respectively by Clrs James Sithole and Charles Moyo. AAG actually went to the High Court last year seeking an order to have the council dissolved over graft allegations. The empowerment lobby withdrew the case this year but they had already made a loud statement on bad governance at City Hall.

We wait to see the tribunal appointed and given the mandate to look into the matters concerning the suspended five.  We most fervently hope that stronger punishment would be meted on the five for putting self-interest first ahead of leading council for the betterment of residents and ratepayers.

There is a likelihood that Clrs Banda, Sithole and Moyo used their influence over fellow councillors and council officials to rubber stamp the acquisitions, which is immoral and smacks of corruption.

Residents demand that the Government reverses the deal involving Clr Banda at Ascot Racecourse where reports say development has started. If it is established, as many believe, that he bought that piece of land at below market price and in an unprocedural manner, Bulawayo residents would be justified to demand that council repossesses it.  The Parklands stands must be returned to council as well because they were obtained illegitimately.

The murky Ascot and Parklands land grab is actually a part of the dozens that the five councillors may have taken over under opaque circumstances over the past three years. If criminality is established, police should move in to investigate and the corrupt face the music.

The point must be hammered home that councillors and other elected persons are in those offices to deliver service diligently to the electorate, not to abuse that mandate to enrich themselves while those who put them in those positions have sewer lines bursting in their homes, drive on potholed road and have irregular water supplies.

Looters paradise. . . Residents welcome city fathers’ suspensions

$
0
0

city_hall

Nqobile Tshili, Chronicle Correspondent
BULAWAYO residents yesterday welcomed the suspension of five local councillors including the deputy mayor councillor Gift Banda on corruption allegations.

They said the country was struggling economically partly due to corrupt public officials who bleed the economy without being accountable.

On Tuesday, the Minister of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Cde Saviour Kasukuwere suspended Clr Banda and four others Charles Moyo (Ward nine), Mzama Dube (Ward 25), Reuben Matengu (Ward 21) and James Sithole (Ward seven).

Yesterday, Bulawayo United Residents Association chairperson Mr Winos Dube said rate payers were happy that action had at last been taken against allegedly corrupt officials adding that the public deserved accountable leaders.

Mr Dube said the Government should do more to deal with corruption.

“Something has to be done and action should be taken. If we deal with corruption, Zimbabwe can be great again,” said Mr Dube.

Affirmative Action Group vice-president Mr Sam Ncube said the suspension of some city fathers confirms that the concerns they have been raising as an organisation about corruption at the Bulawayo City Council were not misplaced.

“From an organisation point of view there is no smoke without fire. When we were talking about these things people thought we hated some people but we don’t hate anyone. We’re only representing our constituency. We’ve to do things the right way. We need to protect Bulawayo,” he said.

Bulawayo Progressive Residents Association coordinator Mr Rodrick Fayayo said the organisation would take a wait and see attitude, but added that the process must not be politicised.

He said authorities should guard against using the processes for political mileage as this  involves a Zanu-PF minister and MDC-T councillors.

“Our thinking is that this is a process. We will wait until they go to the tribunal and the evidence is presented then we can comment. We think that it’s okay that steps are being taken. But we don’t want the processes to be politicised. This is a corruption issue and it should be dealt with on those grounds,” said Mr Fayayo.

Last year the AAG asked Cde Kasukuwere to suspend Clr Banda following his land deals.

The pressure group further alleged that $8,749,914 worth of BCC tenders were tainted by serious irregularities due to massive corruption, nepotism, negligence through collusion of Bulawayo City Council officials.

“For example, a tender for rehabilitation of filter beds and clarifiers to Tzicalle Brothers had been officially awarded to Consolidated Engineers and Merchants (CEM), at a cost of $4,5 million. The previous contractor, that is CEM was paid the money but did no work, only for the same tender to be awarded to Tzicalle Brothers at a cost of $2,5 million. The net effect of this corruption and negligence is that in the last five years Bulawayo water has remained brownish and not safe for consumption,” AAG said.

@nqotshili

Bob Nyabinde dates Byo

$
0
0
Bob Nyabinde

Bob Nyabinde

Raymond Jaravaza, Showbiz Correspondent
WITH 14 years of experience on the microphone, musician Bob “The Headmaster” Nyabinde has mastered the art of keeping himself relevant in the industry by customising his performances to suit the needs of his fans.

It’s been over a year since he held a public show in Bulawayo and “The Headmaster” is announcing a return with a gig he terms “a one-on-one session with the City of Kings fans” at Cape to Cape tomorrow night.

“The Bulawayo show is not the typical gig where I prepare a playlist for the night. It’s more of an interactive show with my fans, playing their choice of songs and creating a relaxed atmosphere for everyone,” said Nyabinde.

While most people had written off “The Headmaster” as a spent force, Nyabinde, whose compositions are social commentaries based on various social issues such as education, insists music still runs in his blood.

His latest single Mombe Yemavhu was released in December last year.

“I’m now more into private functions compared to public gigs. Most people in Bulawayo don’t even know that I was in the city four months ago playing at a private function. My show on Friday at Cape to Cairo will be the first public event in over a year. It’ll be the first time playing my latest single to Bulawayo fans,” he said.

He is bringing a complement of six band members for the four hour show.

Nyabinde, a former headmaster who served at a number of schools in the Midlands Province, arrived on the local music scene with Pane Nyaya in 2002.

Jazz lovers would remember the album Pane Nyaya because of the hit song Chabuda Hapana, a track which dominated the airwaves and became an anthem.

In 2004 he followed up with a second album, Ndiratidze, an equally brilliant piece of work which reaffirmed and concretised his status as a jazz maestro.

Nyabinde was to release his third album Teerera in 2006 before somewhat taking a sabbatical.

Akbay guns for 3 points. . . Bosso take on Harare City

$
0
0
Erol Akbay

Erol Akbay

Takudzwa Chitsiga, Harare Bureau
HIGHLANDERS coach Elroy Akbay has declared war on Harare City when the two sides clash in a Castle    Lager Premier Soccer League match at Rufaro this afternoon.

Akbay believes collecting maximum points away to Harare City will boost his player’s confidence as well as enhance their chances of clinching the championship in his first year in charge of the Bulawayo giants.

Highlanders are third on the championship race and will have an advantage of remaining in the race where they are left with CAPS United and FC Platinum.

Bosso are confident after they managed to eliminate Mutare City who had earlier collect four points from them in the league in the Chibuku Super Cup on  Sunday.

Akbay said they will take the game as a cup final as they cannot afford to drop points at this stage of the race and are aiming at nothing short of three points.

“The match is very crucial for us as we need to maintain our winning form so that we grow much more confident.

“The good thing is we have a health squad, everyone is ready for selection and we have been playing good football so I don’t see anything stopping us.

“We will treat them with respect but, we will not give away three point easily, we want to remain in the race and I believe we need to do just that.

“They are a good side but we have been working hard for the past two weeks especially for the league matches,” said Akbay.

Highlanders’ fine run begun some four matches ago when they last tasted defeat at the hands of ZPC Kariba at Nyamhunga.

Bosso’s fine run started in week 20 when they won 2-0 against neighbours How Mine before posting a 2-1 victory over Border Strikers and their confidence increased when they beat bitter rivals Dynamos by an identical 2-1 at Barbourfileds. They went on to progress in the Chibuku Supper Cup where they beat Mutare City for the first time this season.

Harare City on the other hand need redemption after they were defeated by Chapungu in their last League match at Ascot.

A 4-0 drubbing of Border Strikers in the Chibuku Super Cup may, however, come as a morale booster for Moses Chunga’s side. The Sunshine Boys are without several players and will have to shift to rookie players in a makeshift team.

Chunga will miss the services of Martin Vengesai and Farai Madhanhanga through suspension while Tanaka Ruzvidzo, Munyaradzi Diro-Nyenye, Crispen Dickson and Arnold Chivheya are all out injured.

‘No God of war’ – Pope Francis

$
0
0
Pope Francis

Pope Francis

Assisi — Pope Francis denounced those who wage war in the name of God on Tuesday, as he met faith leaders and conflict victims to discuss growing religious fanaticism and escalating violence around the world.

“The world is at war, the world is suffering,” the Argentine pontiff said ahead of the meeting, which came as fighting resumed in Syria and US authorities investigated an attack possibly linked to the Islamic State group. “There is no God of war,” he said, calling on “all men and women of good will, of any religion, to pray for peace”.

The annual World Day of Prayer event, established by John Paul II 30 years ago and held in the medieval town of Assisi in central Italy, aims to combat extremism dressed up as religion and the persecution of people for their faiths.

The pope also reminded Western countries that while they had suffered a string of deadly jihadist attacks, there were parts of the world where cities were being flattened by fighting, prisoners were being tortured and families were starving to death.

“We are frightened . . . by some terrorist acts,” he said during morning mass at the Vatican, “[but] this is nothing compared to what is happening in those countries, in those lands where day and night bombs fall.”

“As we pray today, it would be good if we all felt shame, shame that humans, our brothers and sisters, are capable of doing this.”

The pope held one-on-one talks with faith leaders, including the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, the Orthodox Patriarch of Constantinople Bartholomew I, and Din Syamsuddin, chairman of Muhammadiyah, Indonesia’s second largest Islamic organisation.

Rabbi David Rosen, from the American Jewish Committee and Koei Morikawa, the Supreme Head of the Tendai Japanese school of Mahayana Buddhism, also met Francis.

The 79-year-old pope had arrived amid tight security in Assisi for lunch with the leaders and a group of  refugees, including Syrians and Palestinians, an  Eritrean, two Nigerian women and a 23-year-old from Mali who fled crisis-torn Libya for Sicily by boat.

The meal was rounded off with a cake sporting 25 candles to celebrate Bartholomew I’s 25 years as Patriarch, Italian media said.

About 500 representatives from different religious traditions have been taking part in a series of round- tables with lay people in the town since  Sunday, covering topics from religious violence to climate change and the migration crisis.

It is the pope’s second visit in as many months to the picturesque hillside town, where his name-sake Saint Francis of Assisi was born and found God, renouncing his wealth for a life of poverty and becoming an emissary of peace.

The head of the world’s 1.2 billion Roman Catholics, who took the papal name Francis in homage to the famous Christian friar and his devotion to peace and forgiveness, has insisted violence committed in the name of religion has nothing to do with God.

During a trip to Poland in August he said “the world is at war”, but driven by greed for “interests, money, resources, not religion. All religions want peace, it’s the others who want war”, he said, warning against equating Islam with terrorism, insisting there were fundamentalist Catholics too. — AFP

Hope Gwayi-Shangani Dam. . . SA consortium interested in completing project

$
0
0
Minister of State for Matabeleland North Provincial Affairs Cain  Mathema (third from right) shows the dam site to Vice President Phelekezela Mphoko (centre) and investors Mr Koketso Molefi, Mr Felix Maziya (partly obscurred) and Hwange District Administrator Miss Nokukhanya Jubane (right)

Minister of State for Matabeleland North Provincial Affairs Cain Mathema (third from right) shows the dam site to Vice President Phelekezela Mphoko (centre) and investors Mr Koketso Molefi, Mr Felix Maziya (partly obscurred) and Hwange District Administrator Miss Nokukhanya Jubane (right)

Leonard Ncube in Gwayi
A CONSORTIUM of South African investors has expressed interest in completing the construction of Gwayi-Shangani Dam which has remained in limbo for years due to lack of funding.

Vice President Phelekezela Mphoko met the prospective contractors on a visit to the dam site in Gwayi yesterday.

VP Mphoko said the project was critical to the Matabeleland region and the country as a whole as it would create a greenbelt as well as feed into Bulawayo’s industrial growth.

“Last time I came here I was very disappointed because nothing had happened. As I inquired, what I was told is a long story while the Zimbabwe National Water Authority has its own approach,” he said.

VP Mphoko said Government was committed to making sure the project is completed.

“The history of this dam dates back to 1912 but nothing has happened to date. There was a trial by Malaysians and they failed. Then came the

Chinese and nothing happened and they are still on the ground. Dams all over the country have come up yet this one is in limbo.

“We are looking for investors and if you people can come on board from South Africa we really thank you because our people and animals need water,” he said.

VP Mphoko said the time for bickering was over and Government needs serious investors.

“We don’t want promises. We need water. If you are capable of doing this project we can talk about how you will recoup your money. We need this water as soon as possible,” he said.

The VP said the project would involve all players such as Zinwa.

The Minister of State for Matabeleland North Provincial Affairs Cain Mathema, who accompanied the VP alongside senior Government officials and heads of departments, said the dam was critical in turning the province into a commercial green zone.

“There will be a need for a lot of piping and pumps to pump water all the way to Bulawayo. There will be a greenbelt with irrigation schemes as we want to turn the province into a commercial farming area.

“All the people in the province were brought to stay here by whites so they live on subsistence farming but now we want our people to be producers. We hope we will work together,” he said.

The investors Kinfedi, Hamon Pvt Ltd and Thaga Engineering, all from South Africa, are interested in the project that is currently being spearheaded by China International Water and Electric (CIWE), a company contracted by Government to construct the dam but has failed to get the ball rolling due to lack of funding.

Local consultants Mr Duke Thubelihle Ncube and Mr Darryn Nyatanga, both of GBI Ltd, identified the investors and took them to VP Mphoko’s office.

Speaking on behalf of the investors, Mr Felix Maziya, chief executive of Kinfedi, said they have Italian partners who have a commendable track record and ready to start work.

“Kingfedi is an enabler to local partners and we look into challenges the region is facing in terms of infrastructure and we are bringing in strong players who have the capacity to develop the area.

“We have Italian partners CMC who are the 3rd largest construction company in the world and have a hefty balance sheet. Our other partner is Allied International which is among the top five world piping manufacturers. ,” he said.

CMC di Ravenna was the main contractor in the building of Mazvikadei Dam in Mashonaland West, as well as bigger dam projects in Algeria, Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa and Tanzania.

Hamon Pvt Ltd managing director Mrs Shirly Koketso said they were ready to start work.

“We have always had intentions to work in Zimbabwe as we are into power stations and construction. Duke brought us to the VP where we discussed about the project and we are prepared to work with you as we seek funding and partners,” she said.

Close to $90 million is reportedly required to complete the project, which is part of the solution to Bulawayo’s perennial water problems and robust agricultural development in the province.

The project is a major component of the long-awaited National Matabeleland Zambezi Water Project (NMZWP).

No work is being done on site as of now.

@ncubeleon


Senior magistrate arrested in gold war

$
0
0

court 2

Patrick Chitumba, Midlands Bureau Chief
A SENIOR magistrate and three other villagers have been arrested for public violence after they were involved in skirmishes at a village in Gokwe North over the control of a gold claim.

Collen Chiruma (42) and three alleged accomplices Reward Muriya (34), Murazvo Murindi (24) and Daniel Mutasa (26) appeared before Midlands Provincial Magistrate Mrs Phathekile Msipa yesterday each facing a count of public violence.

They pleaded not guilty and were remanded out of custody on $100 bail each to October 5.

Mrs Msipa ordered them not to visit the mine in dispute, Gazemba 257, in Gokwe North until the matter is finalised.

They were also ordered not to interfere with police investigations and state witnesses.

The ownership of the mine is in dispute with Brian James Zijena and the magistrate allegedly both claiming ownership.

Prosecutor, Miss Gracious Rongayi said on Tuesday at around 2PM, Chiruma and his accomplices arrived at Gazemba 257 mine, in Gokwe North driving a Toyota Land Cruiser with a group of people following behind their vehicle.

The magistrate as well as Muriya, Murindi and Mutasa, the court heard, disembarked from their vehicle before Mutasa proceeded to the mine shaft.

He allegedly seized a jack hammer and other mining tools which were being used for mining operations by Gazemba mine workers.

“During that time, Muriya and Murindi started attacking the mine workers by throwing stones at them injuring one mine worker in the process,” said Miss Rongayi.

The prosecutor said Chiruma started taking photographs of the commotion at the mine.

She said the commotion lasted for about 15 minutes before Brian James Zijena fired two warning shots in the air to put an end to the commotion.

The magistrate and his alleged accomplices were apprehended by members of the public.

“The quartet was then handed over to the police,” said Miss Rongayi. —  @pchitumba1

Nigerian troops in fierce battle against Boko Haram in north east

$
0
0
A student who escaped when Boko Haram rebels stormed a school and abducted schoolgirls, identifies her schoolmates from a video released by the Islamist rebel group at the Government House in Maiduguri, Borno State. — File photo

A student who escaped when Boko Haram rebels stormed a school and abducted schoolgirls, identifies her schoolmates from a video released by the Islamist rebel group at the Government House in Maiduguri, Borno State. — File photo

Fierce clashes have been reported and claims of casualties as Nigeria’s military backed up by a multinational force battled Boko Haram fighters for control of a town in the country’s northeast.

 

The fighting on Tuesday and Wednesday around the town of Malam Fatori in Borno state, near the border with Niger and Chad, was the latest in the area which has changed hands many times in Boko Haram’s seven-year armed campaign that has killed more than 20,000 people and displaced more than two million in Nigeria.

Nigerian army spokesman Sani Kukasheka Usman said government and troops from the Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF) captured Malam Fatori on Tuesday and killed several Boko Haram members.

But, Boko Haram fighters regrouped and counterattacked, according to the Associated Press news agency. On Wednesday, Reuters news agency quoted Usman, the Nigerian army’s spokesman, as saying the “operation is continuing”.

Al Jazeera’s Ahmed Idris, reporting from the capital Abuja, said government troops had ousted the armed group’s fighters from areas around Mallam Fatori on Tuesday, but then retreated when Boko Haram regrouped with reinforcements and mounted new attacks.

“Although there is so much propaganda on both sides, the army came clean this time around saying that it has lost its position before and it has withdrawn tactically to vantage positions to try to take back the town,” Idris said. “Meanwhile, fighting is ongoing in that particular area,” he added. Boko Haram also claimed to have killed 40 troops involved in the operation, our correspondent said.

Amaq, a site affiliated to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS), said that its fighters had attacked an army convoy in the Malam Fatori area on Monday killing 40 troops, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors the group’s announcements.
Boko Haram pledged loyalty to ISIL last year.

The armed group controlled a swath of land in northeast Nigeria around the size of Belgium in the early part of last year, but has been pushed out of most of that territory by the Nigerian army, aided by MNJTF troops from neighbouring Cameroon, Niger and Chad.

Boko Haram have nevertheless continued to carry out suicide bombings in the northeast and in neighbouring countries.

The UN Children’s Fund estimated in a recent report on Boko Haram violence that 475 000 children across the Lake Chad region — which borders Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger — will suffer from acute malnutrition this year.

An estimated 38 children have been used to carry out suicide attacks in the Lake Chad basin so far this year, bringing to 86 the total number of children used in suicide attacks since 2014, the report said.

Meanwhile, Nigeria would welcome United Nations representatives as intermediaries in any talks with Boko Haram on the release of about 200 schoolgirls kidnapped from the northeastern village of Chibok in 2014, President Muhammadu Buhari said yesterday.

Nigeria would “welcome intermediaries such as UN outfits, to step in”, Buhari told United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon at a meeting on sidelines of the annual UN General Assembly, in New York, a statement issued by the president’s office said. — Al Jazeera.

Humpty Dumpty’s great fall

$
0
0
Evan Mawarire

Evan Mawarire

Spectrum, Joram Nyathi
There is precious little to be done for those who live in denial, are obsessed with Zimbabwe’s “chaotic land grab”. Others are beginning to see, belatedly, begrudgingly.

 

This week The Telegraph (UK) carried a story headlined “Chinese take over former white owned farms”. It turns out they have been allocated a mere five farms in Mashonaland Central to produce tobacco.

Then comes this: “While Zimbabwe’s land reform process has empowered around 60 000 small scale black tobacco farmers, who grow lower grades of tobacco, many of the bigger farms distributed among Mugabe’s cronies haven’t fared so well.”

Of course they can’t miss an opportunity to aim a jab at President Mugabe. But it’s being acknowledged as a “process”, not chaos. It’s being acknowledged that the process “has empowered” people – even if it’s reduced to 60 000 plus Mugabe’s cronies against less than 6 000 white farmers.

It’s easy to appreciate the sanctions and anger against President Mugabe and his evil regime. Opportunists can gorge themselves mad on that anger.

The national flag

Let’s just say someone slept on duty. That allowed dark and sinister forces to seize our national flag which was then used to denigrate the name of Zimbabwe. The hope is that such sacrilege shall not be repeated without bitter consequences.

This is the point, Evan Mawarire and his #ThisFlag movement did not launch themselves from some cave where they could not be seen.
They did not start in a foreign land. It all began here in the land of our ancestors, the land of our liberation heroes who gave us the flag as a solemn symbol of our nationhood.

We use the national flag on solemn occasions to remind us of where we came from, how this independence came about and to remind ourselves of who we are.

Sometimes citizens are permitted to don the national flag in a patriotic spirit – in support of national teams or as a form of identity among nations.

We say Kirsty Coventry flew the national flag high at the Olympics because out there she is a Zimbabwean ambassador, she is doing the nation great honour.

We say the same of Charles Manyuchi the boxer. They don’t have to lift the flag, but when they engage in an activity which brings honour to the nation we say proudly that they are flying high the national flag.

But we are a nation that quickly forgets its roots, the pangs of birth, the sacrifices thousands of our sons and daughters made before we could pull down the Union Jack and hoist the Zimbabwean flag in April 1980. We are a nation given to worshipping and honouring dubious foreign gods.

So when Evan Mawarire draped himself in the national flag as a cloak to mask his nefarious designs, people flocked to him like the promised messiah. He was called pastor, is stilled referred to as such.

A pastor from hell abusing the national flag for pecuniary gain and cheap popularity. We self-hating Zimbabweans found in this daylight charlatan something worth of celebration.

Soon cheap imitations of the national flag sprouted like weed, sold at street corners for a few American coins. And the Americans rewarded Evan Mawarire with a Visa and a dream, all expenses paid one-way ticket to America where he could continue his pastoral attacks on Zimbabwe.

Overnight the phrase “police brutality” became a bestseller of biblical verses which local media instantly amplified to heaven. (Never mind that as you read this America is burning in South Carolina where white police officers shot and killed an unarmed, disabled black man and are teargassing sympathetic protesting fellow blacks. Here, after months of so-called deadly protests, media are struggling to locate a single person shot, let alone killed, by police. In paradisal America you don’t require a searchlight to find a dead black body).

Strange as it might seem, it took African Americans in the US, not native Zimbabweans, to deflate Mawarire’s balloon and bring him crashing down to Earth.

Pretending that his life in Zimbabwe was terminally endangered, Mawarire went to the US intending to organise the mother of all demonstrations which would put Zimbabwe under the UN spotlight, if supine Sadc couldn’t do it in Mbabane.

He wanted to achieve singlehanded what the MDCs in their variegated shades and permutations have failed to achieve since 2000 – bringing Zimbabwe under UN sanctions and possibly manufacturing an alibi for a US-led military invasion of the country.

The venue and occasion of course was the UN General Assembly in New York this week, in the full glare of America’s globalised media arsenal.

There was a lot of anticipation and gloating back home – Mawarire’s star was at its zenith.

Enter the December 12 Movement

As he was being serenaded by his white hosts, one doubts that Mawarire ever imagined that a majority of blacks were disgusted by his antics, that whites themselves regard people like him with haughty contempt, for such can be used and dumped afterwards.

When the moment arrived for his star to shine, Mawarire found he only had a straw of 19 equally contemptible black souls.

In brutal Zimbabwe he would have easily blamed the police for blocking his followers; in free America democracy was at his full service.

Massed against them was a multitude of African Americans. Their bold placards said it loudly: “Mugabe is right. Zimbabwe will never be a colony again.”

The “holy” pastor draped in a Zimbabwean flag was pleading for his country to be recolonised by white America but was being openly rebuked, and told that would never happen.

Mawarire couldn’t find a manhole to dive into, that is if he has any sense of shame. (But then he must persevere. He has eaten the white man’s money and he must know that there is no free lunch in the white world, especially for a misguided black man trying to sell his own birthright).

And persevering he is to justify the filthy lucre he is getting. Mawarire boasted that he met Nigerian billionaire Aliko Dangote, the man exploring various investment opportunities in Zimbabwe.

For a man who laments about the state of his country’s economy, normal people would expect him to try and persuade the Nigerian businessman to put a fraction of his fortune into our economy.

Not the “holy” pastor. He claims he told Dangote to keep away from Zimbabwe because there, government ministers have an uncanny talent for looting investors’ money.

Dangote must have been surprised, but then in a democracy everyone is allowed to expose themselves, which is how Mawarire got himself noticed by the Americans.

Ever so diligent, Mawarire visited the World Bank on a similar mission, as if that institution needs persuading.

But there is logic to the pastor’’s madness. He has a family to feed. If he can eat on the people’s behalf the better. Mawarire is being sponsored to denigrate his country and has no qualms receiving money for it.

What he resents is anybody or institution with money giving it to Zimbabwe. That reduces the size of the cake for the pastor.

Mawarire is, however, walking a familiar path. It has become the business of opposition leaders to campaign against foreign investment in Zimbabwe while they are ready to receive foreign cash into their pockets.

They will fight land reform and other black economic empowerment policies so long as they can get money to fund their political projects.

But Mawarire’s failed demonstration in New York has an important lesson. Zimbabweans are a gullible people ready to be taken for a ride by even the shallowest pretenders.

To think that for more than a week the nation saw a phenomenon in Evan Mawarire and the media swallowed his humbug hook, line and sinker without anybody taking a step back to say we have been here before: Baba Jukwa!

And this is worth repeating for the benefit of the opposition. Elections are not won on social media. So long as they continue to believe Zanu-PF is rigging elections by mobilising its supporters to register in readiness to vote in the next elections, they are doomed.

Mawarire went to America riding on a crest of media hero, believing he would get a hero’s welcome. He fell like Humpty Dumpty in the middle of New York.

‘We are playing for ourselves’

$
0
0
Richard Chihoro

Richard Chihoro

Sports Reporter
DYNAMOS team manager Richard Chihoro says they are not playing for anyone, but themselves, when they face FC Platinum in a Castle Lager Premiership tie at Mandava tomorrow.

Chihoro said the Glamour Boys were looking at winning their remaining six league matches, including tomorrow’s game.

“We are playing for ourselves. We want to finish in a very good position and remember we are ten points behind FC Platinum if we win we would be seven points behind them with five games to go and this is football and no one knows what will happen,” said Chihoro.

“We are ready for FC Platinum and morale is high and everyone is raring to go.

“We are taking each game as it comes but would want to win all our remaining matches.”

He said FC Platinum were likely to come out fighting with intensity after they dropped points in their last game.

Dynamos lost 0-1 to FC Platinum at Rufaro in the reverse fixture in coach Lloyd Mutasa’s first game after the departure of Portuguese gaffer Paulo Silva.

“They will be at home, they are hungry for points and want to win the league. But we are also looking for points.

“Last season we finished on second position so we really want to finish in a strong position even if we fail to lift the trophy,” said Chihoro.

Meanwhile, Chibuku Super Cup quarter-finalists will know their next round opponents on Tuesday when the draw is conducted in Gweru.

Defending champions Harare City, newboys Ngezi Platinum, league pacesetters FC Platinum, Bulawayo sides Highlanders and How Mine, Triangle, Tsholotsho and ZPC Kariba are the last eight teams in the competition.

The Chibuku Super Cup will resume on the weekend of September 30 to October 2.

The semi-finals will be staged on the weekend of October 21 to 23 while the team which will represent the country in the Confederation Cup next year will be known on November 5 when the last two teams battle for supremacy.

ZPC Kariba coach Sunday Chidzambwa said he is ready for any side left in the draw.

“If a team progresses, it means they are good team and Cup games are all about luck on that day. I would love to win the Chibuku Super Cup but if I had my way I would love to win both and the League Cup.”

Fixtures

Tomorrow: Chapungu v Bulawayo City (Ascot), FC Platinum v Dynamos (Mandava).

Sunday: Highlanders v Ngezi Platinum (Babourfields, SS), Hwange v Border Strikers (Colliery), Caps United v How Mine (National Sports Stadium), Mutare City v ZPC Kariba (Sakubva), Triangle v Chicken Inn (Gibbo).

Bosso move closer

$
0
0
Ariel Sibanda makes a crucial save to deny Harare City from the penalty spot

Ariel Sibanda makes a crucial save to deny Harare City from the penalty spot

Eddie Chikamhi, Harare Bureau
Harare City 0 – 1 Highlanders FC
HIGHLANDERS coach Erol Akbay believes their victory over Harare City at Rufaro yesterday could provoke his team’s charges to go and for broke and try and win the Castle Lager Premiership title for the first time in 10 years.
The race cracked wide open yesterday after midfielder Allen Gahadzikwa scored the only goal of the match on the hour mark to lift Bosso to within four points of log leaders FC Platinum.

Goalkeeper Ariel Sibanda was the other hero as he made a crucial save to deny Harare City from the penalty spot after referee Brighton Chimene had awarded a hotly-contested penalty.

But with the win, Highlanders took advantage of the slip-up by the leading pack of FC Platinum and Caps United, who had dropped points in their matches the previous day, to take their points tally to 44.

And with six games remaining in the season, and 18 points to play for, Akbay yesterday said it was game on and was confident Highlanders will have a big say in the destiny of this year’s championship.

The Bulawayo giants last won the league title back in 2006 with Methembe Ndlovu as coach and are desperate to end the barren run.

Akbay was in high spirits after the match yesterday with the renewed hopes of a strong finish.

“They (FC Platinum and Caps United) dropped the points and that means we have moved two points closer to these guys and that will give them more pressure to win every game and motivation for us to win also every game.

“We have six games to go now and there is a difference of four points, it’s not too much. That means if you have a chance you have to go for it and we want to go for the championship, yes.

“This game is good motivation. To win the next game again is very important,” said Akbay.

Highlanders are enjoying a purple patch and have gained more ground in the last month following an impressive run of four successive wins over How Mine, Border Strikers, Dynamos and Harare City.

Remarkably, this was not only Highlanders’ first win over Harare City at Rufaro since 2012 when the Sunshine Boys came to the big stage but it was also the first time they had scored them at the venue.

It needed mid-season signing Gahadzikwa to break the jinx for Bosso when he beat the Harare City defenders to an aerial ball and planted a powerful header from a good cross by rookie forward Prince Dube.

Earlier in the game, the supporters were treated to some interesting duels with the sides playing good which tested both goalkeepers Tafadzwa Dube and Sibanda.

Highlanders nearly punished the hosts when City goalkeeper Dube failed to deal with a high cross from rightback Tendai Ngulube but the hosts responded with a swift counter attack.

Warriors midfielder, Raphael Manuvire, should count himself unlucky after his pile-driver crashed against the basement of the upright post and from the rebound rookie striker Jerry Chipangura somehow misdirected his shot wide.

Highlanders supporters rained missiles onto the pitch after the referee adjudged their captain Erick Mudzingwa handled the ball in an attempt to clear the lines.

The decision was met with protests from the visitors and poetic justice was delivered as goalkeeper Sibanda dived to his right and blocked William Manondo’s spot kick.

Sibanda made another frantic save, injuring himself in the process, when he stretched full length and tipped the ball over the bar after Ronald Chitiyo had unleashed a fierce volley at the edge of the box.

Akbay said they are aiming to maintain the pressure on the top two teams by winning their next assignment at home against Tonderai Ndiraya’s Ngezi Platinum.

Harare City coach Moses Chunga was disappointed by his side’s performance, especially coming from a big win in the Chibuku Super Cup where they hammered struggling newboys Border Strikers 4-0 in their last match.

“It’s disappointing the way we played. I think in first half we controlled the game but our execution in front of goal wasn’t that good.

“It’s always disappointing to lose but as I have said we had 10 players (unavailable for selection) but I don’t mourn about that.

“We have to find a solution, that’s the name of the game,” said Chunga.

Teams

Harare City: T Dube, T Chimwemwe, H Chimutimunzeve (D. Mawere, 73rd min), H Chapusha, J Tigere, W Manondo, J Jam, R Manuvire (G Kufandada, 64th min), T Tumba, R Chitiyo, J Chipangura (K Kumwala, 64th min)

Highlanders: A Sibanda, T Ngulube, H Moyo, P Muduhwa, T Ndlovu, S Munawa (K Nadolo, 48th min), E Mudzingwa, A Gahadzikwa, R Kutsanzira, N Ndlovu (G Nyoni, 38th min), P Dube (R Matema, 88th min)

 

Viewing all 34186 articles
Browse latest View live