1. The Dinde Community in Hwange is facing a serious predicament at the hands of the government. They face expulsion from their ancestral homes to make way for a Chinese mining company, Beifa Investments (Pvt) Ltd, all in the name of “development”.
2. Beifa was granted a mining exploration permit by the Government to conduct exploration activities in the Dinde area. A large cross-party section of the Dinde Community is opposed to this unwelcome intrusion into their way of life. They have protested but so far to no avail
3. One Never Tshuma was arrested & detained after leading a community protest. Although Tshuma is a ZANU PF member and has been condemned by leaders of his own party, he has received solidarity & support from the local MDC Alliance MP, @molokele & the rest of the community
4. Tshuma is being charged with inciting public violence, the same offence for which Makomborero Haruzivishe was unjustly convicted by the regime in a different matter. Tshuma is one of the leaders who are resisting the unpopular intrusion of the Chinese company.
5. Tshuma appears to have been thrown under the bus by his party. There is suspicion that the local ZANU PF & traditional leadership have been compromised & are batting for the Chinese company under the guise of development. It’s telling that Beifa reported its case to ZANU PF
6. How does a foreign investor deal with a political party on matters of investment and law enforcement? This conflation between party and state is dangerous. From reports in Dinde, this is not simply a ZANU PF issue. This is a community issue regardless of party affiliation.
7. This is yet another example of conflicts between central government and local communities, caused by central government imposing itself on the local communities without proper consultation. The investor finds itself sandwiched between competing interests.
8. All this is done in the name of “development”. But “Development” is a complex process which is not one-dimensional. For local communities there are certain intangibles to which they place value in their lives, which may not seem so to investors & bureaucrats sitting in Harare
9. So-called “development” that fails to respect the interests, rights and expectations of local communities is not worth it. They have also seen how the extractive state & its local & foreign elites have plundered resources elsewhere leaving local communities with nothing.
10. Diamonds in Marange, Black Granite in Mtoko, plush tourist resorts in Hwange, Gonarezhou & others - local communities have nothing to show for the resources upon which these multi-million dollar businesses are built. Therefore, they are skeptics of the “development” narrative
11. The government must respect the people of Dinde just like it must respect the Chilonga community and others around the country. It is notable that in both cases, vulnerable & often neglected & forgotten ethnic minorities are at the rough end of this mistreatment.
12. In Chilonga it was the Shangaan. In Dinde it’s the Nambya and Tonga. The government has long neglected these areas & the first thing it does is to send a foreign company to disrupt their way of life. At least start by fixing roads, schools and hospitals there. Show you care!
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1. “An errant child would get a bit of a sjambok to whip them into line, either physically or through other measures, maybe counselling. What are we doing with this child of ours, Nelson Chamisa?” says the editor of state paper @SundayMailZim Victoria Ruzvidzo
2. There’s so much that’s wrong with this. For a start, the irony is that the Black man was regarded as a “boy” during colonial times & in an interview to commemorate independence the editor of a state paper describes the opposition leader as a “child”, literally a boy!
3. Mnangagwa instinctively raises his head and looks up, and probably grins underneath that mask but he realises the gaffe & by referring to “Mr Chamisa”, he tries to distance himself from the derogatory image. But he missed an opportunity to show leadership.
1. On 28 September 2020, Zimbabwe’s @JSCZim conducted interviews to fill vacancies at the Constitutional Court. These vacancies had arisen on 22 May 2020 & should have been filled by then. 6 months after interviews, @edmnangagwa has not made the appointments. He can’t be bothered
2. He’s waiting for Constitutional Amendment No. 2 which will give him power to appoint the judges of his own choice, without any public interviews. Kenya and South Africa have most recently conducted judicial interviews. They will appoint judges before our man does!
3. The @JSCZim is mute while the institution it’s supposed to defend is being dragged by a President who has no regard for the Constitution that he is sworn to uphold. If it stands in the way he just pretends it doesn’t exist. Then again, he came to power through its violation.
1. If there’s a phrase that must not be entertained by the MDC Alliance right now, it is the phrase “boycott by-elections”. Not when the opponents are doing everything to take you out of political spaces. Boycott is exactly what they want you to do; it guarantees an easy ride.
2. You might boycott when you have leverage, as when Morgan withdrew from the violent & farcical presidential run-off election in 2008. The costs of participating were higher than the costs of boycotting. Morgan had won the 1st round. Mugabe running alone afterwards was a sham
3. The opponent must know that there is a price to pay if you boycott. There is no price to pay for ZANU–PF or MDC-T if the MDC Alliance boycotts by-elections. In fact, the opposite is true: they have everything to gain, with the strongest party abandoning its strongholds.
1. “We need in every community a group of angelic troublemakers. Our only weapon is our bodies and we have to tuck them in places so wheels don’t turn” Bayard Rustin
Everyone knows MLK Jr but in the background of the Civil Rights Movement were brilliant strategists like Rustin
2. If you’re looking for something powerful, educational and inspiring to watch, look for #AmendTheFightForAmerica on Netflix. You’ll learn how struggles build upon other struggles, how ideas that become popular today, germinated long ago, how history repeats itself
3. You will also learn how history has a habit of remembering some heroes & forgetting others; how even in popular struggles some groups & individuals are pushed to the margins. You will also learn how leaders have had to make personal sacrifices for the greater good.
1. It’s the illegality that bothers me. The @ZECzim Chief Elections Officer can justify the suspension of by-elections all he likes, but he should not use false legal grounds. I have explained why this is dubious before but ZEC insists on the lie. This thread explains the falsity
2. The @ZECzim CEO Utoile Salaigwana cites section 86 of the Constitution to justify the suspension of the right to vote in section 67. This is a straw man argument they have created; that is, they have created their own argument in order to attack it & justify their position.
3. The issue is not whether the right to vote is violated. If it were, @ZECzim could use section 86 and they would have cover. But that is NOT the issue here. They are dodging the real issue, which exposes the illegality & CANNOT be covered by deploying section 86.