Scotland snubs Zimbabwe, Ireland on course

Southern Times

By Southern Times Writer

3 September 2010

WINDHOEK – Cricket Scotland has refused to travel to Zimbabwe for an International Cricket Council (ICC) International Cup tie while Ireland has agreed to play in Zimbabwe.

Scotland was due in Zimbabwe early October but they revealed this week that their players would not travel as a result of government advice about the volatile political climate in Zimbabwe.

‘It is hugely unfortunate that Cricket Scotland has been put in an impossible no-win situation in regard to the potential tour to Zimbabwe,’ said Cricket Scotland chief executive Roddy Smith.

He said following advice from security and government officials, Cricket Scotland had agreed to move the match to Zimbabwe after it was originally scheduled for a neutral African country.

But Scottish officials have now informed the ICC of their decision to pull out of the trip.

‘Our board has taken cognisance of all the advice and recommendations from Government and the ICC, and can only take what we believe is correct course of action.

Both the UK and Scottish Governments were clear in their advice to us.  Although accepting that this decision will not be welcomed by some key partners, we felt that as a responsible governing body we could not, and would not, contravene the direct and unequivocal advice from Government,’ said Smith.

The organisation published advice from the UK Government which stated that there ‘has not yet been sufficient progress in Zimbabwe on the fundamental issues of political reform and of re-establishing the rule of law to justify sports tours by British teams and the positive signal that would send’.

Scotland’s turn-around decision will not however affect Cricket Ireland who travels to Zimbabwe later this month for a series of games.

The four-day Intercontinental Cup game and three One-Day internationals were originally scheduled to be played in South Africa, but will now take place in Harare. Ireland will arrive on September 18.

The ICC is said to have contacted Cricket Ireland (CI)in May this year to inform them Zimbabwe believed it was no longer justifiable to play home matches anywhere other than Zimbabwe and asked if Ireland would consider coming to Harare.

Said CI CEO Warren Deutrom, ‘In 2008, the advice was that we should not travel from a safety and security perspective. From a political perspective, playing cricket in Zimbabwe was not something that CI would have even contemplated at that stage.

However, when we received the message from the ICC, and there was certainly no diktat from them, it was simply a reasonable question about what is the situation with your governments and would you be able to go back and check. We received information from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and Department of Foreign Affairs in June that they had no objection to us going.’

However, since June, the FCO in London has changed its stance, leading to this week’s u-turn by Scotland.

Deutrom was not surprised by their decision, but the DFA still have no objections, the Ireland will go ahead.

‘CI had made entirely its own decision on this. Of course we had to take the ICC’s own views or what the international cricketing fraternity is doing, with India and Sri Lanka’s recent tours there.

Clearly, that movement towards normalisation, certainly of cricketing structures in Zimbabwe, and of course the movements towards normalisation of political structures, meant it was something that we were duty bound to investigate ourselves,’ Deutrom said.

Ireland players, management and officials have met with Zimbabwe sports minister David Coltart in Belfast earlier last month.

Meanwhile, South Africa will continue with their series against crisis-torn Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates from October to November, Cricket South Africa Chief Executive Officer Gerald Majola has said.
Following match-fixing scandal that has rocked Pakistan’s tour of England, Cricket SA said it had received numerous queries about the status of the tour.

‘The tour of Pakistan is part of the ICC Future Tours’ program, which we have to honour, unless instructed otherwise by the ICC. As such, the tour will go ahead as planned,’ Majola said in a statement.

‘We will not comment on the scandal itself, as we don’t want to compromise any processes currently in place to deal with this matter.’

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Feisty Coltart ‘boots’ ZTA out of football

Daily News

3 September 2010

HARARE – Sports minister David Coltart has ordered the Zimbabwe Football Association (Zifa) to cut ties with non-sports actors such as the Zimbabwe Tourism Authority (ZTA), in the aftermath of the Brazil/Zimbabwe friendly match debacle, marked by allegations of shady commercial arrangements.
The minister’s letter, coming after spirited attempts by Harare businessman Phillip Chiyangwa to promote a high-profile international friendly between Zimbabwe and World Cup quarter finalists Ghana, effectively shuts out non-football agents from involvement in the game.

Zifa, still reeling from salacious allegations over the misappropriation of funds as caused by suspended chief executive Henrietta Rushwaya’s conduct and exposed by Kentaro’s cash demands after the ZTA-organised match, has been given a hand by Coltart’s intervention, as it seeks to clean up its act.

“I have raised similar concerns in the past with Zifa. The last Zifa board on a number of occasions sidelined the SRC (Sports and Recreation Commission), which was very unhealthy for sports,” Coltart told the Daily News.

“There was a very close relationship between Zifa and the ZTA, which I found unusual,” the feisty minister said.

Crucially, Coltart argues that Zifa needs to forge “closer ties” with associations such as the SRC instead of “loose alliances” with non-commissioned organisations like the ZTA and individual promoters, including Chiyangwa.

“I had deep concerns about the way Zifa was run. In this regard, I wrote to Mr (Cuthbert) Dube (Zifa board president) to say we need to have a special indaba to look into the financing of football. Zifa have replied, saying they are happy to have a preliminary meeting with us. I hope this will open a new chapter in our relationship with Zifa,” he said.

Kentaro, a Switzerland-based sports management firm also representing Brazil’s Samba Boys, worked with the government in staging the historic match, but it is now threatening to sue Zifa over unpaid “gate takings” and television rights revenue totaling US$650 000.

While Dube claimed he had not seen Coltart’s letter, attempts to secure Karikoga Kaseke on the latest development were fruitless.As Coltart and Dube’s new board rails at Rushwaya, and Kaseke’s ZTA, other regulatory bodies such as the Public Works ministry and SRC are also coming hard on the beleaguered football governing body with demands for unpaid dues.

In a July 28 letter, George Mlilo, the Public Works permanent secretary, issued a “formal demand” to his Tourism and Hospitality counterpart Sylvester Maunganidze for a US$10 000 stadium hire fee, while the SRC is also baying for its mandatory six percent of gate takings from the match.

In the dispatch, sources said, the SRC quotes a figure of US$650 000 as total revenue from the match.

While the new Zifa board is distancing itself from the June 2 Brazil-Warriors fiasco and Kaseke’s ZTA is accusing Kentaro of tampering with the “final contract” over match rights, the flurry of demand letters and Zifa’s inability to pay the SRC funds, for instance, also strengthens fears of the mishandling of such by the characters involved.

Also on July 28, Dube’s board told Kentaro by letter that Rushwaya did not represent Zifa when she entered into the controversy-ridden contract with them.

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Warriors dump Legea

Newsday

By Simba Rushwaya

3 September 2010

The Warriors have at last dumped technical supplier Legea in favour of major sports brand Puma ahead of their 2012 Africa Cup of Nations Group A qualifier against Liberia in Monrovia on Sunday.

The new kit was presented at a function last night at a local hotel to launch the 2012 Afcon campaign, bringing to an end Legea’s marriage with the national association, which has always been under question.

The function was attended by the Minister of Education, Sport, Art and Culture David Coltart, Zifa board members, Sports and Recreation Commission director- general Charles Nhemachena among others.

The Warriors had earlier practised against Motor Action at Motor Action Sports Club where Denmark-based winger Quincy Antipas got an injury scare after sustaining an ankle injury after colliding with another player.

Antipas and Clemence Matawu, who is based in Poland, will have to pass late fitness tests before caretaker coach Norman Mapeza names his final squad this afternoon.

Mapeza said: “We will hear what the team doctors will say about the players.

Some of them have minor knocks. Like you saw, Quincy was injured and we don’t know the extent of the injury while Clemence will have to pass fitness tests.”

Besides the two injury scares, the rest of the players who took part in the practice match came out unscathed.

The Warriors leave this evening for Monrovia where they will battle with Liberia in the first match of the 2012 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers.
Meanwhile, Liberia’s senior football team has dropped three key players ahead of its African Cup of Nations qualifier against Zimbabwe on Sunday.

Lone Star’s Hungarian coach Bertalan Bicskei dismissed Dulee Johnson (AIK Sonia Sweden), Dioh Williams (AGF Aarhus Denmark) and Francis Doe (Al Ahly Egypt) from his team yesterday for breaking camping regulations.

The trio, according to Bicskei, didn’t spend the night at the team hotel in Monrovia, and it was during a routine check at 2:00am that he realised the three players were out on their own.

Liberia FA flew in 15 overseas-based players for the Group A encounter.

All the expelled players have denied leaving camp, but Bicskei is sticking to his stance and prevented the players from training with the rest of the team yesterday morning.

Johnson, one of the long-serving players of the Lone Star, and Doe have had repeated cases of indiscipline in the past and their expulsion didn’t come as a surprise to many football fans.

In a news conference yesterday morning, Liberia Football Association President Musa Bility disclosed that the players will be returning to their respective teams in the coming days.

He said the Lone Star put in place a rigorous code of conduct to restrain all the players, and acknowledged that the FA has endorsed the decision of Bicskei.

Bility was locked in a meeting with the affected players after the news conference and though details of the meeting were not disclosed to the media, as things stand, a void has been already been created in the squad.

At the same time, midfielder- cum-striker James Koko Lomell has been selected as one of the replacements for the controversial trio.

Also midfielder Marcus Marcauley was one of six locally based players that was in camp, but was only there as a back-up.

According to reports, the final player that has been called in is the left-footed forward Dweh Allison who is leaving Premier Club FC AK on a free transfer to Invincible Eleven.

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No school fees hike: Coltart

Chronicle

2 September 2010

Chronicle Reporter

THIRD term school fees at Government schools will not change from those paid during the second term, Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, David Coltart said yesterday.

In an interview, Minister Coltart reiterated that teachers’ incentives would remain in place until the Government is able to pay decent salaries.
The fees for Government schools are pegged at US$5 and US$10 for primary schools in high density and low-density suburbs respectively.
Parents with children attending secondary school in high-density suburbs are expected to pay US$10 while those in low-density areas will have to pay US$20.
However, in a bid to ensure that their children get proper education, parents have agreed to pay teachers incentives, which vary with schools.
“Fees for Government schools will not change. They are going to remain the same. Non-governmental schools vary according to institutions but those with intention of hiking the fees first have to apply to the permanent secretary (in the his ministry) for approval,” said Minister Coltart.
“The teachers’ incentives will continue in the meantime. We cannot remove them because we cannot pay the teachers a proper salary. Until we are able to pay the teachers, it is not possible for us to scrap the incentives.”
A number of private schools in Bulawayo have maintained the fees that they were charging during the second term. The few that hiked the fees added about US$50 on top of the money charged last term.
Parents with children attending Christian Brothers College are still paying US$1 090 while those with children at Dominican Convent High School are still forking out US$1 200.
Masiyephambili College raised its fees from US$800 to US$850.
Meanwhile, teachers yesterday said they will report for duty when schools open next week, although they are disappointed with the way the Government is handling the issue of their salaries.
Teachers earn about US$150 per month. In an interview, Zimbabwe Teachers’ Association (Zimta) president, Mrs Tendai Chikowore, who is also the chairperson of the Apex Council, a body that represents all civil servants, said they were still lobbying the Government to come back to the negotiating table.
“We have written to the Government to bring them to the negotiating table. We have also approached the chairperson of the Joint Negotiating Council (Dr Nelson Sambureni) to push for the meeting but nothing has happened,” said Mrs Chikowore.
“We were mandated by the teachers before the schools closed to meet the Government and present our grievances but the Government seems not to take us seriously.
“There are no plans for mass action when schools open because we have not met to discuss the way forward.
“However, what I must say is that the teachers are not happy with their salaries and the way the Government is handling the matter.”

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Cricket Ireland deny pressure to move tour to Zimbabwe

The Irish Times

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

By Emmet Riordan

CRICKET IRELAND chief executive Warren Deutrom has denied that outside influences had any bearing on the decision of the national team to travel to Zimbabwe later this month for a series of games against the African nation.

The four-day Intercontinental Cup game and three One-Day Internationals were originally scheduled to be played in South Africa, but will now take place in Harare. The Ireland team will depart on September 17th.

The International Cricket Council (ICC) contacted Cricket Ireland (CI) at the beginning of May to inform them Zimbabwe believed it was no longer justifiable to play home matches anywhere other than Zimbabwe, and asked if Ireland would consider travelling to play the games.

At the time, CI, which governs the game on an all-island basis, contacted the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) in Dublin and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in London to seek advice on the safety and security implications of making the trip.

“Back in 2008, the advice was that we shouldn’t travel from a safety and security perspective,” said Deutrom.

“From a political perspective, playing cricket in Zimbabwe wasn’t something that Cricket Ireland would have even contemplated at that stage.

“However, when we received the message from the ICC, and there was certainly no diktat from them, it was simply a reasonable question about what is the situation with your governments and would you be able to go back and check.

“We received information from the FCO and the DFA in June that they had no objection to us going.”

Since then, however, the FCO in London have changed their stance, leading to the announcement yesterday that Scotland have abandoned their trip to Zimbabwe later this year.

Deutrom was not surprised by their decision, but as the Department of Foreign Affairs still have no objections, the Ireland trip will go ahead.

“Cricket Ireland had made entirely its own decision on this. Of course we had to take the ICC’s own views, or what the international cricketing fraternity is doing, with India and Sri Lanka’s recent tours there.

“Clearly, that movement towards normalisation, certainly of cricketing structures in Zimbabwe, and of course the movement towards normalisation of political structures, meant it was something that we were duty bound to investigate ourselves,” he said.

As part of that process, Ireland players, team management and officials met Zimbabwe sports minister David Coltart, a co-founder of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which has formed the Unity government with president Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party.

The meeting in Belfast was held earlier this month, and Deutrom believes concerns over both the rehabilitation of the game in Zimbabwe and safety issues for the travelling party were addressed satisfactorily by Coltart.

“There were a number of questions at the meeting relating to safety and security on the ground, relating to the situation with hotels and hospitals. I raised all of these with the minister and asked him to explain his views on that,” said Deutrom.

“He also talked about the situation in the country and his own views about how he feels Zimbabwe is very similar to that in South Africa in the early 90s, when South Africa’s sporting teams were readmitted to international competition while the apartheid regime was still in power.”

The trip will see Ireland coach Phil Simmons return to Zimbabwe for the first time since he was sacked by the country in 2005.

Simmons has taken legal action against Cricket Zimbabwe in a bid to recover the $400,000 (€315,000) in salary he was due in the remaining two years of his contract.

Deutrom was quick to point out everything possible has been done to make Simmons’ return as stress-free as possible.

“He obviously had some concerns, Phil’s previous position was that he certainly had no intention of going back to Zimbabwe,” said Deutrom.

“I’m guessing this has come a little bit earlier than he would have wanted, but we’ve made sure he has as much comfort in terms of his decision to go.

“I’ve spoken to him about this and he does genuinely believe that the situation has moved on significantly from when he was there, even from the situation two years ago.”

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After Robert Mugabe

Guardian

By Blessing-Miles Tendi

1 September 2010

The president’s health is in the spotlight – and it is hardline generals who are set to determine the face of Zimbabwe’s future

During August, Robert Mugabe was pictured walking unsteadily and requiring the assistance of aides when going up and downstairs at various summits. The images sent long-running speculation in Zimbabwe about the state of Mugabe’s health – he is said to have a form of cancer – into overdrive. Mugabe appeared healthy at the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) Heads of State Summit in Swaziland this week, but his characteristically sprightly demeanour was absent.

Mugabe’s health has been a closely guarded secret for decades. He has made a point of displaying power through the appearance of good health and youthfulness. Rich and deeply dyed hair, an enviable physique for a man of his age, Botox treatments and pristine dress are some of Mugabe’s many expressions of power. He cannot appear to be unhealthy or ageing, because that is a sign of weakness, and weakness encourages ambitious, younger and better-looking political vultures to strike.

Over the past year I have posed questions about Mugabe’s health to three MDC ministers in his cabinet: the energy and power development minister, Elton Mangoma, regional integration and international co-operation minister, Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga and minister of education, sports and culture, David Coltart. All three ministers have spoken in glowing terms of the 86-year-old’s remarkable sharpness of mind. However, they are not as forthcoming on the subject of Mugabe’s physical health. “He is an old man,” was their refrain.

The views of informed sources and the images of a frail Mugabe lend credence to reports that he is losing his physical powers. It is time to start thinking seriously about a post-Mugabe Zimbabwe.

It is unlikely that Mugabe will be able to unilaterally handpick and impose a successor in his Zanu-PF because the party is rife with factionalism surrounding two powerful party figures: the minister of defence, Emmerson Mnangagwa, and the most senior living guerrilla figure from Zimbabwe’s liberation war, retired military general Solomon Mujuru. Mugabe has to negotiate a compromise successor with these factions, lest Zanu-PF fall apart. But after years of avoiding the succession issue while internal fissures have deepened, Mugabe may be unable to manage and settle the matter effectively in his lifetime. If this happens, military generals are likely to have the most influence over Zimbabwe’s future.

Many of these generals are hardliners who have actively supported the seizure of white-owned commercial farms since 2000 and controversially waged political violence to prop up Mugabe and Zanu-PF after they lost the March 2008 elections. The military generals fear prosecution for their grave human rights violations since 1980 and have amassed breathtaking quantities of ill-gotten wealth they risk losing in a post-Mugabe era. They have a fervent interest in guaranteeing that the post-Mugabe political scene will be sympathetic to them.

This leads us to four possible scenarios. The first is that the generals negotiate immunity from prosecution and loss of wealth in exchange for not blocking a democratic transition. A second scenario is that they stage an outright military coup that would see them take direct command of Zimbabwe, shielding themselves from prosecution and securing their economic interests. A return to constitutional rule would probably see the installation of a civilian leader chosen from the Zanu-PF party, which the generals are strongly aligned with.

A third scenario is that the military will intervene by backing one of the Zanu-PF faction leaders, and move to enforce party discipline in order to prevent defeat at the hands of the opposition MDC parties in the next elections. A fourth is that the rival factional loyalties in Zanu-PF are also present in the military. This last would paralyse the party and the military amid self destructive and violent infighting that would spell the end for Mugabe’s once-dominant political party.

The great leader seemingly appears healthy and unflappable in public. But all is not well with Mugabe, and we must ready ourselves for his departure.

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Speech to Christian Educator’s Conference : “The role of Christian educators in producing sound leadership in Zimbabwe”

Speech to Christian Educator’s Conference – Gateway Primary School

1 September 2010

By Senator David Coltart

I am delighted to be able to address the opening of your Conference for the second year running. I often say to colleagues that I don’t know how long I will be in this particular job, but one has to make use of every opportunity, and so I am pleased that I am still in this position this year.

I’m always amazed by Providence. None of us should be amazed, but I find myself continually amazed. And I was amazed again this morning through John Bell’s address to us, because of course John and I have not collaborated in any way in what we were going to say this morning and yet the Lord has used his words as the perfect foundation for what I’m going to be speaking to you as I open this conference.

The topic that I intend addressing you on is the role of Christian educators in producing sound leadership in our country. And just as John was talking about the role that we play in bringing shalom in many different other spheres, you will see, I hope, as I speak, the role that we have as Christian educators in the realm of leadership in our nation: in the realm of political leadership, in the realm of church leadership, and of course in the realm of educational leadership.

Although Evangelical Christian schools in Zimbabwe constitute a tiny minority of schools, I believe that they are playing a vital role as we seek to stabilise and re-energise the education sector in Zimbabwe, which is in a state, as many of you know, of extreme crisis. And I think that one of the most important roles as we consider the theme of this conference, The Race Marked Out for Us – the race collectively marked out for us as Zimbabweans and specifically as Zimbabwean Christian educators – is the role that Christian educators need to play in producing sound leaders in our nation.

One of my abiding concerns in Zimbabwe is the development of good leaders. Having been in office now for 18 months, I am more convinced than ever that Zimbabwe suffers from a severe leadership deficit – not just at the political level, but I stress also within our churches and within our schools. There’s no doubt that our education system is still, despite the horrors that have befallen our education sector, one of the best in Africa. It is that education system which still produces children with some of the highest literacy rates, it is still the system that produces great scientists. If you speak for example to the deans of South African universities, they will tell you that our education system still to this day consistently generates a much better quality of secondary graduates than South Africa is producing. If you travel the world you will find that Zimbabwe is producing top rate accountants, economists, doctors, lawyers and others.

And yet why is it, we have to ask, that that education system has produced at the same time such a leadership deficit? I think that this question is even more alarming when one considers the major role that Christians have played in the education sector of our country in the last 100 years. How can it be, friends, that these institutions spread throughout the nation, these institutions that have produced such brilliant scientists and economists and the like, have produced a succession of leaders who have taken our country into two civil wars, caused the death of hundreds of thousands of people, and leaders who have all but destroyed what should be Africa’s richest country per capita?

In short, friends, as we look out to this race that is marked out for us – as we look to the future – we have to recognise that it does not matter how well we educate our children in the sciences and in the arts if we do not develop a new generation of God-fearing leaders. If we don’t fulfil this task as Christian educators, then Zimbabwe, friends, is doomed to repeat the mistakes that have been made repeatedly in our nation in the past 100 years. In short, I would argue that the primary role of Christian educators is to produce sound leaders for the future of our nation.

What needs to be done? I recognise that what I’m doing this morning is lobbing a few grenades into your midst, and I will then retreat to the sanctity of my office and leave you with the problem! My purpose today, however, is simply to highlight this concern. I recognise that in a short opening address such as this I cannot hope to adequately address the solutions to this problem besetting our nation. All I want to do, however, is to leave you with a few thoughts regarding what needs to be done within our Christian educational institutions.

The first message that we as educators, I believe, have to convey to this coming generation of children – to this coming generation of future leaders – is the following. We need to convey to them that the highest office in any school, in any church, in any business, in any nation is but the penultimate authority. Allow me to read in depth a quote from a magnificent book that I’ve just read regarding Dietrich Bonheoffer. For those of you who do not know Dietrich Bonheoffer, he was a great man of God, a German Christian, an Evangelical Christian, who stood up to Hitler, and just weeks before the end of the Second World War was assassinated by the Nazi regime. A few weeks after the Nazis came to power in 1933, Dietrich Bonheoffer delivered a sermon in Berlin, and he said these words:

“Only when a man sees that office is a penultimate authority in the face of an ultimate indescribable authority, in the face of the authority of God, has the real situation been reached. And before this authority, the individual knows himself to be completely alone. The individual is responsible before God. And this solitude of man’s position before God, this subjection to an ultimate authority, is destroyed when the authority of the Leader or of the office is seen as ultimate authority… Alone before God, man becomes what he is, free and committed in responsibility at the same time.”

“The fearful danger of the present time is that above the cry for authority, be it of the Leader or of an office, we forget that man stands alone before the ultimate authority and that anyone who lays violent hands on man here is infringing eternal laws and taking upon himself superhuman authority which will eventually crush him. The eternal law that the individual stands alone before God takes fearful vengeance where it is attacked and distorted. Thus the Leader points to the office, but Leader and office together point to the final authority itself, before which Reich or state are penultimate authorities.”

“Leaders or offices which set themselves up as gods mock God and the individual who stands alone before him, and must perish.”

How does that apply to us as Christian educators? I believe that we need to constantly teach about the sovereignty and the omnipotence of God, and, importantly, of God’s judgement. It seems to me that the terrible things that have happened in our nation have happened because a succession of leaders, going back 100 years, have believed that they themselves are supreme and immune, that their office is not a penultimate authority, but a supreme authority answerable to no one. And it is the role of Christian educators to inculcate in our children that this is not the case, that we serve a mighty, fearful, jealous God, who knows everything, sees everything, and importantly who desires justice – and that is a fundamental characteristic of  God’s personality. Tied to this is the need for us to teach our children to fear God more than they fear man. I’m always amazed that in this deeply religious country of Zimbabwe how many people appear to fear man rather than God, and how that interacts with the first problem – how that fear of man exacerbates the delusion experienced by leaders in this country that they are omnipotent.

The second challenge for us, the second mandate given us as Christian leaders, I believe, is the need for us in Christian education to concentrate more on the historical personality of Jesus, and in particular the leadership qualities of the Lord Jesus. So often we concentrate on highfaluting doctrine and forget about the God-man that John was speaking about: A man who was physically present in the world, who lived, who breathed, who led other men and women. Because the Lord Jesus, as we study the historical reality of his life, was quite a remarkable leader, and my fear is that we simply do not devote sufficient time in analysing and then replicating his leadership style and example. Let me give you a few examples of what I mean.

Firstly, the notion – obviously, perhaps – of servant leadership. The Lord Jesus did not see leadership as an opportunity to lord it over others, but as an opportunity to serve. There were some obvious examples of that, such as the washing of  feet, but his entire ministry spoke of someone who constantly thought about the interests of his subordinates, not himself; who disregarded the interests of more powerful people to benefit the interests of the weak and the poor and those subordinate. In Zimbabwe, sadly, most certainly in politics, but tragically often in the church itself – and, let me say, in the way that we govern many of our schools – leadership is seen as an opportunity to advance one’s own position to the detriment of others. We have throughout our nation, throughout our culture, developed a leadership class. We have developed a cult of leadership. Becoming a leader is seen as an opportunity to put oneself ahead of the rest of the people. Certain things then become as of right – aides and fancy vehicles, and the term ‘Honourable’, and a whole array of practices designed to elevate that leadership class into something different to the rest of society. And folk, let me say to the Christian leaders here today, that many of our churches are replicating what we see in politics – where Christian leaders are elevated to a certain status, where Christian leaders are given lifestyle which is way beyond the lifestyle of their followers, where certain perks and privileges are given. And the same applies to schools. If you become a Steward in a school suddenly that is not seen as an opportunity to serve, it is seen as an opportunity to dominate, and it is contrary to the historical leadership example of the Lord Jesus.

Secondly, and it’s tied to the first example, the concept of leadership embracing simple living. The Lord Jesus lived a simple lifestyle. We see it in some obvious examples, such as when he came into Jerusalem on a donkey, not on a stallion. But his entire life was marked by simplicity. Leadership was not, in the Lord Jesus’ example, a ticket to the high life, to wealth. And yet tragically in our nation, in politics, in the church, less so in the schools, leadership is seen as a means to wealth, as a ticket to wealth. Leadership is seen as a turning back on a simple lifestyle. One has to travel elsewhere to see, ironically, just how far we have drifted as a nation. I’ll give you two examples. The first is from Denmark. I have been staggered by the Danish example at the political level. There was a recent Danish prime minister who used to ride on his bicycle to work. Many Danish cabinet ministers ride to work on their bicycles. I’ve just come back from China, and friends don’t get me wrong – I’m not besotted by China – but I have been struck by aspects of their leadership, and whilst I’m fully open to the flaws and faults of the Communist Party, let me explain to you three things that I’ve learnt about the Communist Party’s leadership practices.

Firstly, if you are found guilty of corruption in China and you hold a leadership position in the Chinese Communist Party, you face instant dismissal. Secondly, if you become a minister or hold a senior position in the Chinese Communist Party, you cannot run a private business. Thirdly – and this is quite remarkable – if you are found to be engaged in an adulterous relationship as a leader, you face instant dismissal. Contrast that, friends, to the practices in our own country, where corruption becomes part of leadership, where corrupt acts are simply forgotten about, where coming into political leadership is seen as a means to furthering ones business and enhancing ones business interests, rather than an end to that business interest and a complete focus on the government job at hand. And let’s think about the example of adultery, where the sin of adultery, for all the religiosity of our nation, is simply disregarded in our nation. Friends, my purpose is not to hold up the Communist Party of China as a perfect example to you. My purpose this morning is to state to you as Christian educators, that if the Chinese Communist Party can set these standards of leadership, if countries that are in a post-Christian era such as Denmark, can set examples like that for leadership, how much more can we as Christian educators, how much more can we as a nominally Christian nation – I stress ‘nominally’ Christian nation – be able to set an example in leadership; not only for our own people, but for our region, for Africa, and the world.

But as I see it, friends, and this is the crux of what I have to say, is that that role of developing sound leaders who fear God, who seek at every turn to replicate the Lord Jesus’ example, falls primarily to Christian educators, because it is you who are primarily the Lord’s instruments; it is you who need to see yourselves as the Lord’s salt and light in this nation; it is on your shoulders that this responsibility rests. Not alone – with us.

And so I want to end by leaving you with this challenge: As you deliberate today, as you deliberate in the months that lie ahead – how can we, through our Christian schools, through Christian educators, develop practices within our schools and develop teaching of subjects that recognise this all-important role that we have. I don’t believe that schools have addressed this squarely, and I believe that unless we do so, as I said earlier, many of the problems that have afflicted our country in such a devastating fashion for so long will simply continue.

May the Lord bless you as you deliberate in the next few days, and I look forward to hearing from you the results of your deliberations. Thank you.

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Zimbabwe: unlicensed and outdoors or no school at all

IRIN

www.irinnews.org

30 August 2010

EPWORTH – Simbarashe Choga, 65, a retired teacher, is the local butcher in Epworth, some 20km northeast of Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare; he is also the principal of the primary school he runs out of his shop.

“My teachers keep their records and other materials at my butchery, which operates as our head office because, as you can see, there are no buildings here,” Choga told IRIN. “We have a total enrolment of 182 pupils from the first to the seventh grades, and the majority of them learn outside.”

Most of the houses in Epworth have no running water or electricity and the area is best known for its high levels of crime. Choga insisted that his institution had been registered by the local municipal authority, but said most of the schools offering primary and secondary education were unlicensed, and at the ministerial level even his school was not accredited.

This means that pupils at Choga’s school have to sit their grade-seven examinations for entry into high school at other institutions that have been formally licensed by the education ministry.

Choga, who employs mostly untrained teachers, complained that they had to make do with inadequate books and stationery, and urged the government to register his school, “so that people like myself, and many others in Epworth and other parts of the country, can make education accessible to the underprivileged, who are too poor and lack learning facilities.”

Good marks, for now

The United Nations Development Programme recently found that Zimbabwe had a literacy rate of 92 percent – the highest in Africa – but David Coltart, minister of education, arts, sport and culture, commented: “That hardly means anything if Zimbabwe’s education system remains in the state it is today. I am not accepting congratulations.”

The ailing education system, once a model for sub-Saharan Africa, has buckled and all but collapsed under the economic and political crises
of the past decade, when widespread food shortages, hyperinflation, cholera outbreaks, and an almost year-long strike by teachers in 2008 led to a dramatic decline in the standard of learning.

It is not uncommon for 10 pupils to share a textbook, and although the government drastically slashed school fees in 2009, deepening poverty has put even the reduced cost of attending government schools in some areas beyond the reach of thousands of children.

“The proliferation of these unregistered schools is a national crisis, and we are very worried,” Coltart told IRIN. He said unauthorized schools were multiplying because limited resources meant education officials could not check on them.

“There are no vehicles to use to visit districts and inspect the schools, as was the case when the economy was still sound. I am, however, happy that the finance minister [Tendai Biti] recently allocated my ministry money to buy 40 vehicles to use during our tours across the country.”

Coltart said even though private schools played an important role in raising educational standards, this was not the case where the institutions were unregistered and were not monitored by officials from his ministry.The government recently announced that it had closed more than 100 unlicensed private tertiary colleges.

“Students going into their fourth form have to go elsewhere, as we are also not registered and cannot conduct Ordinary Level examinations. Fees are cheap here, and the parents enrol their children with us because they cannot be absorbed by the few secondary schools in the area,” said Sophia Sibanda, a teacher at a school near Choga’s.

“The most important thing is that these pupils know how to read and write, and get a little knowledge about geography and history,” she said. “Otherwise they would get into adulthood without being able to count.”

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Zimbabwe stops teenage mother expulsions

Independent SA

by Columbus Mavhunga

29 August 2010


Zimbabwe’s government has been forced to fend off charges that it is encouraging teen sex after deciding to grant parental leave to pregnant schoolgirls and soon-to-be dads.

The education ministry of Zimbabwe’s power-sharing government last week announced that young girls who fall pregnant during the course of their studies will no longer face automatic expulsion from school.

Instead, they will be given three months’ leave and allowed to resume their studies shortly after giving birth.

Student nurses, who also faced the same sanction, will also be allowed pick up where they left off.

The move brings Zimbabwe in line with other countries in the region, including South Africa and Namibia, which try to accommodate rather than stigmatize teen moms.

Zimbabwe goes one further by also giving the boy who fathered the child three months’ leave, to encourage them to support the mother.

However, the development has not gone down well with conservative groups such as Tsika Dzedu (Our Culture), which conducts programmes in schools to teach Zimbabweans about their culture.

“It is taboo to allow such absurdity,” Muchineripi Marere, the group’s head, railed. “It is unmentionable in African culture to allow girls to get pregnant, let alone promote it.”

The government retorts that it is a matter of common sense.

“I think we have been punishing our children, who in most cases would have fallen pregnant because of a lack of knowledge of the hazards of what they are doing,” Minister of Education David Coltart told the German Press Agency dpa.

“I know we have received a bashing on this. But I think we are just being realistic. Teenage pregnancy happens and we can’t run away from that situation. Expelling them is retrogressive as it promotes illiteracy, something which we, as a government, are totally against.”

Intellectuals and parents of pregnant teenagers have applauded the move.

“It never made sense that in Zimbabwe, the girl who fell pregnant was expelled while the boy who made her pregnant remained in school to finish his education,” Zimbabwe’s Petina Gappah, author of the acclaimed short story collection An Elegy for Easterly, wrote on social network website Facebook.

“Here again, the government of Zimbabwe shows that, where it chooses to be, it can be progressive. More of the same please!”

A mother who saw her daughter’s dreams of a good job dashed when she was expelled from school took the same view.

After giving birth Rutendo Nyamasvisva moved to neighbouring Botswana in search of “piece jobs” or casual labour.

“If she had finished her school, I am sure she would be a teacher or a lawyer,” Anna Nyamasvisva told dpa.

“Now even her child might not be able to finish school because my daughter is not earning a lot of money,” Nyamasvisva, who works as a clerk in a courier company in Harare, complained.

There are no statistics available on the number of girls who fall pregnant in this conservative country of 12 million people, whose education system was the envy of Africa before President Robert Mugabe’s policies plunged the country into severe economic decline, between 2000 and 2008.

A headmaster at a public girl’s school in Harare said they had up to two pregnancies a year, out of 700 pupils.

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Government snubs civil servants

Newsday

By Owen Gagare

29 August 2010

Government snubbed civil servants’ unions who requested a meeting a fortnight ago pressing for a minimum wage of $500 for the lowest paid worker.

Apex Council president Tendai Chikowore wrote to government seeking a meeting to kick-start salary negotiations but said their employer was dragging feet over the meeting.

Civil servants earn between US$150 and US$250 per month.

The Apex Council comprises the Zimbabwe Teachers Association (Zimta), Public Service Association (Psa), Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (Tuz) and the Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (Ptuz).

“I was talking to the government team leader (Prince Mupazviriho) and he says he has not received a mandate from Treasury and the Ministry of Public Service to start negotiations. We are still waiting,” she said.

Mupazviriho however said he had not yet received the mandate to enter into new negotiations and had not yet received the civil servants’ request as he had been away from work.

However, he admitted he had been discussing the issue of salaries with civil servants’ union leaders.

Although she refused to discuss their exact demands, Chikowore last week said the Apex council wanted the lowest paid civil servant to earn a salary above the poverty datum line. The poverty datum line is estimated at around $500.

She also said civil servants had not moved from last year’s salary demands when they failed to hold meaningful negotiations with government.

Civil servants went on strike at the beginning of last year, demanding a minimum salary of $502.

The strike was eventually called off after the government convinced its workers that it was cash-strapped.

“I have not been mandated by the various unions to divulge our demands, but naturally we would want the lowest paid civil servant to earn a salary above the poverty datum line,” she said.

“We also had a position last year, where we were looking at a minimum wage of $502. We did not get our demands, so, there is no reason for us to come up with new demands when previous demands have not been met. We will go for negotiations with the same demands.”

The proposal for negotiations by the civil servants is a direct result of the decision by the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme to certify Zimbabwe’s diamonds, resulting in the country being allowed to sell its gems.

The diamond sale was greeted with excitement by civil servants who for years had been assured by the government that their plight would be eased as soon as the country started to sell its diamonds.

Chikowore said civil servants wanted the government to honour its word.

“Last year we were told that the government could not increase salaries because of low revenue inflows. The government said its major handicap was that it was not allowed to sell its diamonds, so we expect action now that the diamonds are being sold,” she said.

Finance Minister Tendai Biti, Education, Sport, Art and Culture Minister David Coltart and Public Service Minister Professor Eliphas Mukonoweshuro are on record saying the government did not have money to pay civil servants competitive salaries.

The ministers have however said the salaries would be reviewed as cashflow improves.

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