Government

Violent 2023 Polls In The Offing In Zimbabwe

Harare, Zimbabwe — There are mounting fears of violent 2023 elections after government on Tuesday announced the return of the notorious National Youth Service dubbed the ‘Green Bombers’.

The militia that made up Zimbabwe’s so-called Green Bombers, was two decades ago famed for violent election campaigns and killings during the reign of former President Robert Mugabe.

Taking to Twitter on Tuesday, Nick Mangwana, Zimbabwe’s Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Information, said ‘Cabinet has approved the re-establishment of the National Youth Service Programme.’

Claris Madhuku, a pro-democracy activist in Zimbabwe said the moves to bring back the country’s controversial National Youth Service program, ‘sparks fears that the ruling Zanu-PF may be plotting a bloody general election in 2023.’

Dubbed the Green Bombers known for the green military fatigue donned by the youths, the National Youth Service was founded by the late Zimbabwean Minister of Youth, Border Gezi in the year 2000.

Also known as the Border Gezi Youth Training, the program has served as a platform for the Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF) to indoctrinate youths and use them to unleash terror against opposition members often during elections.

Youths conscripted into the National Youth Service back in the 2000 to 2008, stand accused of committing some of the most heinous crimes during the reign of late former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe.

Zimbabwe’s Minister of Information Monica Mutsvangwa hailed the revival of the country’s National Youth Service program, saying it was “crucial in nurturing young people into becoming responsible and resilient citizens with a clear sense of national identity and respect for national values.”

Mutsvangwa also said youths graduating from the National Youth Service “will qualify for further training, assistance in starting businesses, and for enrollment for careers in the police, the army, the air force, nursing, and teaching, among others.”

But the country’s opposition Movement for Democratic Change see only evil about the initiative.

“The desperate regime presses yet another disparate note of discontent. They want violence in 2023. They want another genocide in Zimbabwe. They have an itch that needs scratching. Shame on them and their false gods,” said MDC Alliance Vice President Tendai Biti on Twitter.

Workers In Zimbabwe To Be Rewarded After Death

Harare — Faced with a restive civil service that has for long demanded to be paid in USD amid the country’s comatose economy, the Zimbabwean government has pledged to pay its workers an equivalent of 500 USD each as funeral cover upon death.

The development that has received a backlash from furious government workers like the country’s striking teachers, comes despite most civil servants having their own funeral policies, subscriptions of which are deducted from their monthly earnings.

According to the government, the 500 USD for funeral cover which comes at the courtesy of the cornered regime here, will be paid to a surviving spouse, adult children, or agreed dependent.

But, infuriated by the development, leaders of the country’s teaching union, the Amalgamated Rural Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe, Obert Masaraure, said ‘we demand USD 520 per month in our lifetime; the livelihoods of our families can’t be deferred to our graves.’

Even as government workers fumed at the development, government officials appeared adamant about the development.

“Starting immediately, government will pay an equivalent of US500 in funeral assistance for any civil servant who passes away. This is regardless of any funeral policy the member may have. The money is paid to a surviving spouse, adult children or agreed dependent,” Nick Mangwana, Zimbabwe government’s Permanent Secretary of Information, said in a statement.

Yet, the Southern African nation’s civil servants have been demanding their wages to be paid in US dollars or at a rate equivalent to the country’s local currency—the Zimbabwe dollar.

Currently, Zimbabwe’s government workers like teachers earn an equivalent of 35 USD monthly, a situation that has seen teachers countrywide downing tools claiming they have become incapacitated to keep reporting for duty.

Reacting to the announcement to reward government workers at death, Zimbabwe’s former Tourism Minister Walter Mzembi who is in exile in South Africa, said ‘an incentive for dying has been pronounced by the Zimbabwe government. Shall we say congratulations?’

Besides Mzembi, another irate Zimbabwean took to twitter lashing out at the government move to reward its dead.

“What will we do with the money when we’re dead?”, tweeted one Van Lee Chigwada.

South Africa records first positive case of Coronavirus

South Africa has just recorded its first positive case of coronavirus today.

In a statement issued by the country’s Health Minister Zweli Mkhizhe, the government confirmed its first positive case of the coronavirus in one of Africa’s populous nations and the economic hub of Southern Africa.

Minister Mkhizhe in a statement, said the confirmed coronavirus patient was a 38-year-old man from KwaZulu-Natal Province whom he said had traveled to Italy with his wife.

According to the South African Minister’s press statement, the coronavirus patient who was also in the company of his wife was part of 10 people that arrived on March first.

Based on South Africa’s press statement, the coronavirus patient was said to have consulted a doctor on March third bearing symptoms of fever, headaches, malaise, sore throat, and a cough amid reports that the same patient had been in self-isolation since arriving in South Africa.

Meanwhile, Minister Mkhizhe said South Africa’s Emergency Operating Centre had managed to track down people who had been in contact with the coronavirus patient, including the doctor who attended to him earlier on.

“We confirm that a suspected case of #COVID19 has tested positive. This is not as a failure but as a success of our health systems to be able to detect and rapidly identify cases. The case has been self-isolated at home since the onset of symptoms and is receiving treatment,” said Mkhizhe.

On the same day South Africa confirmed its first coronavirus case, the country’s National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) also came out saying they had also tested over 180 people for coronavirus, who however all tested negative for the disease.

Zimbabwe is a neighbor to South Africa which houses millions of the Southern African nation’s economic refugees. Gripped with the fear of having its people falling prey to coronavirus, the Zimbabwean government banned overseas travel yesterday.

Apart from banning overseas travel, the Zimbabwean government also recently announced that people visiting the country from areas affected by coronavirus without valid medical certificates showing they are negative will be repatriated at the port of entry.

But now, with coronavirus confirmed in neighboring South Africa, Zimbabwean citizens like 27-year old James Bhebhe are worried.

“Soon, coronavirus will be here and many will perish because I don’t think our country has the capacity to bear the burden of handling the tragic disease,” said Bhebhe who is a practicing nurse at a private clinic in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare.

Over 3,000 people have died as a result of coronavirus following the first outbreak recorded in the Chinese city of Wuhan, and there are now more than 95,700 coronavirus cases worldwide.

In Zimbabwe, more than 6,000 travelers have been screened of the disease at ports of entry like Robert Gabriel Mugabe and Victoria Falls international airports.

Across the African continent, so far, 12 coronavirus cases have been reported in Algeria, with four in Senegal, two in Egypt, one in Nigeria, one in Morocco and one in Tunisia.

Just last month, South Africa’s Department of Health said two South African citizens working in Japan for Diamond Princess cruise ship, tested positive for the coronavirus in the Asian nation.

Zimbabwe bans overseas travel amid Coronavirus fears

HARARE — Amid mounting fears for coronavirus which has killed thousands of people in China and other countries, the Zimbabwean government has with immediate effect banned overseas travel.

According to an announcement made by the Southern African nation’s President Emerson Mnangagwa, citizens here will now not be allowed to travel to countries outside the African continent.

Mr. Mnangagwa made the announcement Wednesday evening while addressing his governing party, Zimbabwe Africa National Patriotic Front (Zanu PF) politburo meeting in the capital, Harare.

He (Mnangagwa) said ‘I have now restricted travel outside Zimbabwe, in particular outside the continent.’

The President also appealed to ordinary citizens to limit travel outside the country in order to lessen exposure to the dreaded virus.

At the moment, Zimbabwe has dealt with only two suspected coronavirus cases after travelers came into the country from countries where there are confirmed cases of the disease.

But, the two suspected coronavirus cases have since tested negative, however with the suspects kept under strict medical surveillance.

Last year in December, coronavirus broke out in Wuhan City in the Hubei Province of China.

Then, the World Health Organisation was informed of pneumonia cases related to unknown causes detected in the Chinese city, which later became known as coronavirus, scientifically called COVID-19.

After the overseas travel ban announcement by President Emerson Mnangagwa, government spokesman, Nick Mangwana tweeted ‘President Mnangagwa has restricted international travel especially outside Africa, while civil servants have been banned from foreign trips as Government takes measures to minimize the risk of exposure to coronavirus.’

Apart from banning overseas travel, the Zimbabwean government recently announced that people visiting the country from areas affected by coronavirus without valid medical certificates showing they are negative will be repatriated at the port of entry.

Over 3,000 people have died due to the coronavirus following the first outbreak recorded in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

In Zimbabwe, more than 6,000 travelers have been screened of the disease at ports of entry like Robert Gabriel Mugabe and Victoria Falls International Airports.

But, reacting to the overseas travel ban news, an ordinary Zimbabwean, Tendaivanhu Madzikanda tweeted ‘you don’t want civil servants to travel yet you allow people from risk countries to come into the country. Really.’

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