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THE MAN WHO HAS SURVIVED LONGEST IN ZIM "OPPOSITION" POLITICS!

THE MAN WHO HAS SURVIVED LONGEST IN ZIM "OPPOSITION" POLITICS!
THE MAN WON THE 2002 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS!
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THE FACE OF COURAGE!

THE FACE OF COURAGE!
"WE THANK YOU FOR GIVING US THE DIRECTION TO FREEDOM!"

TSVANGIRAI IS MUGABE'S SORE FINGER!

TSVANGIRAI IS MUGABE'S SORE FINGER!
"NaMwari Tsvangson anditemesa musoro!"

TSVANGIRAI WAS BEATEN BY MUGABE'S GRADUATES!

TSVANGIRAI WAS BEATEN BY MUGABE'S GRADUATES!
"We have degrees in violence....!" R G Mugabe.

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Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
I look for "The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth" at all times.

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Saturday, March 31, 2007

Dear Dr John Makumbe,

We heard you "LIVE" on Radio "702" here in South africa giving an Ultimatum to the South Africans about their expected role in the resolution of the Mugabe-made crisis in Zimbabwe!
 
We agree with you in full and we are asking you issue that particular ultimatum in writing so we can post it on our blogsites!
 
We hold you in the highest esteem and we thank you for your kindest co-operation in this regard!
 
Rev Mufaro Stig Hove.
 
THE RADICAL SOLDIER.
 
 
 
Cell: 0791463039 RSA.


 


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Friday, March 30, 2007

MESSAGE FROM THE ZCTU AND ZINASU!

We are starving; we will eat your teargas!!!
 
.
 - Zimbabwe National Students Union
 
The Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU)
 
has resolved that:
  • All workers be mobilised to stay away from work from 3 to 4 April 2007
  • National actions will be called for after every three months and they will be incremental until the situation improves
Poverty. Hyperinflation. Oppression. Unemployment. Failure of basic services.
  • Show your disagreement with how our country is being mismanaged and SUPPORT the ZCTU and STAY AWAY ON 3 and 4 April 2007
  • Read the ZCTU communique about the stay away on http://www.zctu.co.zw/html/stmts/21906.shtm or contact them for more information, on email info@zctu.co.zw or phone +263-4-794702/42 or +263-4-702517.
  • Lobby your friends and colleagues - forward this email on to them.
Let the workers organise. Let the toilers assemble. Let their crystallized voice proclaim their injustices and demand their privileges. Let all thoughtful citizens sustain them, for the future of Labour is the future of Zimbabwe.


 


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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

MR MORGAN TSVANGIRAI ARRESTED AGAIN!

Zimbabwe Opposition Leader arrested
 
 
 
Harare, March 28: Zimbabwe's main Opposition Leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, was taken into police custody, an aide said on Wednesday.

"Tsvangirai and a number of others we have not been able to identify have been taken by police in a bus," said aide Eliphas Mukonoweshuro. "We don't know their whereabouts. We don't know if they have been charged."

Earlier police sealed off approaches to Harvest House, the opposition headquarters in downtown Harare. Police also sealed off two other nearby streets blocking traffic and pedestrians. Witnesses said tear gas was fired to disperse onlookers.

Mukonoweshuro said police had come to search the offices of the Movement for Democratic Change.

Tsvangirai and 12 senior opposition colleagues were hospitalized after a March 11 crackdown on a prayer meeting and alleged they were assaulted with clubs and iron bars while under arrest.

President Robert Mugabe has vowed to use more violence to crush opposition to his rule. The 83-year-old leader is to attend an emergency meeting of southern African leaders in Tanzania Wednesday that is to focus on the political turmoil in Zimbabwe.

Bureau Report


 


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Monday, March 26, 2007

Subjecting our leaders to crucible of public scrutiny!

RECENT OPINION ARTICLES

 


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Defying Mugabe's laws a moral duty

Zimbabweans must rise above party divisions

By Joram Nyathi

http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/opinion251.16173.html


THE debate below is not for those of a nervous disposition, those allergic to the truth or those who have already chosen their future political leaders according to their immutable laws of ethnicity. If you are one of them stop reading right here.

The only Zimbabwean leaders who have ever enjoyed real popularity are the late Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe. The greatest service performed for Zimbabwe by Morgan Tsvangirai was to stop Zanu PF’s hegemonic drift towards a one-party state dictatorship. What the MDC failed to stop was the emergence of a fully-fledged tyranny. What Zimbabwe desperately needs is a leader whom the nation can trust, is committed to democratic values and rule of law, not by law.

As the political stalemate moves swiftly and inexorably towards an indeterminate self-resolution, President Mugabe still casts a long shadow over our future even as his evil rule nears its inevitable end. He is no longer the popular, gripping orator he was at Independence in 1980 and now evokes near universal revulsion by his repressive policies.

Beyond his support for police brutality against opponents, what Mugabe’s regime has managed to do is stifle and kill open debate about the country’s leadership. The result is that voters are never fully informed about the people who want to lead them. Instead Mugabe has occupied all the space for 27 years and people have by default elected the only person they know.

So far as debate about his successor goes, Mugabe has kept Zimbabwean playing the sunflower as his sun scuds across the sky. The feigned ambivalence about his preferred choice between Joice Mujuru and Emmerson Mnangagwa keeps the nation vacillating from one faction to the other.

This is astounding — that a nation which seeks a complete break with Mugabe’s violent culture should look up to him to select for it the person to lead it. How can a person who perpetuates Mugabe’s legacy give Zimbabwe a better future? Thankfully, Mugabe has refused to oblige this illogical expectation. He can’t trust anyone to guarantee his security, hence the push for life presidency.

Those in Zanu PF who want the presidency will have to step out of Mugabe’s shadow for the people to see them. Future leaders should make a clean breast of their past and tell us what they stand for. Transparency demands that leaders account for their actions. In short, a leader should justify his claim to national office by selling us realistic, measurable policies.

So far the people we have been sold by the media as potential successors to Mugabe in Zanu PF have opted to remain inscrutable. We hear the names but not who they are or their national agenda. We have been told of their links to the military and other security agencies yet the Zimbabwe we want is not a latter-day Sparta but a modern Athens. It doesn’t bode well for any nation that its political leaders are elected on the basis of speculation about who they are, what they stand for or purely for belonging to a particular party.

In addition to Mujuru and Mnangagwa, the media has given us Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono and former Finance minister Simba Makoni. Both have however been waved aside for two misconceived reasons. One is that they are not Mugabe’s clear favourites. The other is that they lack grassroots support.

I have already dismissed the first as illogical. The second reflects a failure to understand how Zimbabwean politics works, which is gravely detrimental to the national good.

Up until now, Zimbabwe’s national leaders have not been chosen by the people but by the party. People only elect them. That was the full meaning of the late Simon Muzenda’s statement when he said if Zanu PF selected a baboon as its candidate, people should vote for it. That is why Zanu PF’s presidential aspirants can’t be bothered to go public with their credentials but still expect to be elected once selected by the party.

Outside Zanu PF, it is no secret that many Zimbabweans didn’t know most of the 57 MDC MPs they voted for in 2000. They wanted change, any change, not the calibre of the people they voted for and the MDC has not moulded that protest mentality into a sustainable ideological framework. How do you sell a new constitution, free and fair elections and international observers to a hungry villager in Tsholotsho, Omay or Buhera whose wish-list is precise and concrete: food, water, shelter, medicine and roads?

The problem with this system of selecting leaders is that once they are elected, they rule in their own interest at worst or on behalf of the party at best. They are under no obligation to fulfill national pledges they never made — we are too desperate to see the back of Mugabe to care whether Zanu PF or the MDC wants us to vote for a baboon. We run the danger of moving in circles and then blaming history for repeating itself. Let’s not repeat errors of the past where the sole qualification for high political office was to have crossed the border into Mozambique before 1979.

To respond to those who ask me how the current crisis will end, my answer is simple: I don’t know. The situation is flux. Mugabe is still holding on tenuously. Tsvangirai warned recently of a dangerous leadership vacuum because of faction fights in Zanu PF while his MDC enjoys ephemeral resurgence after attacks on its activists last week. A power vacuum must be avoided at all costs, even if it means making what the ICG calls "an alliance of convenience" with the devil, an odious phrase. It stinks of PF pre-1980.

Still, it is time we made our political leaders pass through the crucible of public scrutiny on their way to the top.

 

Tsvangirai denies meeting Zanu PF but says he is ready to negotiate!

 
 
By a Correspondent

http://www.zimbabwejournalists.com/story.php?art_id=2027&cat=1

LONDON – Opposition Movement for Democratic Change leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, has denied reports that he held a meeting Friday with senior Zanu PF officials from the Emmerson Mnangagwa and General Solomon Mujuru camps to seek ways through which to remove the ageing Robert Mugabe from power.
Tsvangirai, speaking on the BBC's Today Programme, said such a meeting never took place but he remained open to such initiatives that could help bring to an end the country's ongoing political and economic crisis.
Media reports suggested Tsvangirai had been called into a meeting by the feuding Zanu PF camps who are largely seen by the West as the only ones capable of removing Mugabe from office.
The reports said Tsvangirai, who is widely backed by the West to take over but was regarded as weak, has the support that will bring in the much-needed investment and donor money once Mugabe was out of office. They alleged the meeting was to discuss some power-sharing deal and a sequence to ease Mugabe out of office.
Channel Four News reported Friday that it had uncovered a "secret" meeting between vice president Joice Mujuru, a leading contender to take over from Mugabe, and her South African counterpart, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, in Johannesburg, ostensibly to discuss Mugabe's exit strategy and related issues. The South African meeting was said to have been held as Tsvangirai was meeting the Zanu PF officials in Harare.
Said Tsvangirai: "There was no such meeting. That's mere speculation by the media. Nothing true from those stories. We have always called on all patriotic Zimbabweans who want to see a solution without Mugabe to come together and talk. We have always put the Road Map on the table as the only way out of this crisis. There seems to be a national convergence that such a road map between some in Zanu PF who see a future without Mugabe and the MDC is the only way to deal with the political crisis."
He said a negotiated settlement was the only way through which to get Zimbabwe back on the recovery path.
Expressing confidence that the Zanu PF government was approaching its end, Tsvangirai urged Britain to put pressure on Mugabe through the international community but said he had no desire to see the UK taking unilateral action against Zimbabwe.
"I think every time you make reference to Britain, it raises some anxiety within Mugabe's headquarters. What I've always said is yes, Britain should play a part, but it should play a part within a much wider context," he said.
"In other words, working within the EU and the United Nations framework to try to put pressure on Mugabe to find a solution to the pressures that Zimbabwe is facing."
Tsvangirai said his party would be happy to let Mugabe go into retirement through "an honourable exit". "Our position is that we expect him as a founding president to have an honourable exit. We will be happy to put him aside and concentrate on the job at hand - to concentrate with moving the country forward, create jobs but unfortunately he sees us being vindictive. That's not the case," he said.
Tsvangirai said Zimbabwe had reached the "tipping point" with the "paralysed" Mugabe remaining as the stumbling block to efforts to deal with the ongoing crisis.
Meanwhile the Guardian newspaper reports today that the West is largely frustrated by Tsvangirai and is working to split Zanu PF from Mugabe ahead of a potentially decisive meeting this week.
Diplomatic sources, according to Chris McGreal, say Britain and the US believe that the strongest challenge to Mugabe comes not from the opposition but from within the ruling Zanu PF.
Therefore the West is encouraging dissent by reassuring rebellious factions that their problem is with Mugabe and not the ruling party.
Western officials are said to be looking in particular to General Mujuru, whose province refused to endorse Mugabe's plans to extend his reign by another two years. The sleek General is take Mugabe on at Wednesday's Central Committee meeting, according to international reports.
Mujuru is said to have met European and US officials who have said such an agreement would end targeted sanctions against Zanu PF officials, including travel restrictions, and lead to a resumption of aid.
Under such an agreement, Zanu PF leaders, including Mugabe, would be granted amnesty from prosecution for past crimes such as the Matabeleland massacres in the 1980s and more recent violence.
Arthur Mutambara, the leader of the other MDC faction, told the Guardian his party would not support such an initiative outside a new people-driven Constitution.
Zimbabwe has for the past few weeks been catapulted back onto the news and political agenda following the savage police beatings of the MDC's founding leader, Tsvangirai, and other pro-democracy leaders intending to attend a prayer meeting organised by the Save Zimbabwe Campaign.
Mugabe, however, remains defiant, saying he would participate in next year's presidential election and telling the world that Tsvangirai would never rule Zimbabwe.


 


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Tsvangirai urges UK pressure on Zimbabwe!

 
 
 
 
http://www.itv.com/news/world_885c90df12803019cb2472870c78e309.html
"I think every time you make reference to Britain, it raises some anxiety within Mugabe's headquarters" - Morgan Tsvangirai.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Zimbabwean opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has urged Britain to put pressure on president Robert Mugabe through the international community.
Mr Tsvangirai said he had no desire to see the UK taking unilateral action in its former colony.
But he added: "I think every time you make reference to Britain, it raises some anxiety within Mugabe's headquarters.
"What I've always said is yes, Britain should play a part, but it should play a part within a much wider context.
"In other words, working within the EU and the United Nations framework to try to put pressure on Mugabe to find a solution to the pressures that Zimbabwe is facing."
Mr Tsvangirai, the leader of the Movement for Democratic Change who was beaten by police earlier this month, said he had not been in talks with ruling Zanu PF officials about a transition of power.
But he expressed confidence that Mr Mugabe's regime was approaching its end.
 
 
 


 
 

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Friday, March 23, 2007

MR TSVANGIRAI'S PROFILE FROM THE MDC WEBSITE!

Profiles

 
 
Morgan Tsvangirai is a self-made person, a solid administrator, competent thinker, charismatic leader, democratic team player and above all, a compassionate family man. He has an unshakable appreciation of the key challenges facing Zimbabwe as a country and Zimbabweans as a people.
Tsvangirai is a product of important social movements in this country, which include the labour and constitutional reform movements. He is the former Secretary General of the powerful Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions and is the founding chairperson of the National Constitutional Assembly, a group that advocates for a new constitution for Zimbabwe.
He is a graduate of Harvard University's John F Kennedy School of Government, where he a attained a diploma from the school's Executive Leaders In Development Program, in June 2001.This programme concentrates on such themes as leadership, managing political and economic reforms, managing transition, economic development, financial management and globalisation. This is a programme for executive global leaders in key organizations, government departments, international organizations, academic institutions and Non-Governmental Organisations.
The eldest of nine children, Tsvangirai was born in Gutu, Masvingo and attended Munyira Primary School and then Silveira and Gokomere high schools. He left school after GCE O-Levels to help support his family. And at 20 he was working at Mutare Clothing where he had his first taste of trade unionism as a member of the local textile union. Two years later he joined the Trojan Nickel Mine in Bindura. He spent ten years at the mine, rising from plant operator to general foreman. Tsvangirai became branch chairman of the Associated Mine Workers Union and was later elected into the executive of the National Mine Workers Union before becoming Secretary General of the ZCTU in 1988.
Tsvangirai has also held several high-ranking positions in many regional labour movements. He has been a guest speaker at various faculties of various universities on the continent and beyond. He has also been a guest speaker and presenter at various conferences including at the World Trade forum, trade union related forums, and both NGO and government organized seminars. The man is an eloquent speaker. He is also a multitalented personality and displays an amazing amount of energy, which drives his hard work.
It was Tsvangirai who led the ZCTU away from its alliance with the ruling Zanu PF. As his power, and that of the movement grew, his relationship with the Government deteriorated. In 1989 he was imprisoned for six weeks on charges of being a South African spy. He has also been a victim of premeditated and government inspired harassment and violence. There have been three assassination attempts on his life, which include the 1997 attempt, where unknown assailants burst into his office and tried to throw him out of a tenth story window.
Morgan Tsvangirai, has been married to his wife Susan since 1978. They have 6 children. Their eldest son is 22 years old and the youngest are twins who are 8 years of age. When not in the office or out meeting the people Tsvangirai likes to read and spend time with his family.
Since his election as MDC President in February 2002, he has remained steadfast in his belief that the people should complete the change for a better life for all.
"We remain committed and focused to completing the change we set on to achieve some five years ago. This change should speed up economic recovery for the good of us all. It should also witness the birth of a new era where basic liberties are recognized and the dignity inherent in every human being is upheld and respected."

 



 


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MORGAN Tsvangirai wins the prestigious 2001Solidar Silver Rose Award.

Tuesday, October 31, 2006
 
 
 
Morgan wins Award
 
 
 
MORGAN Tsvangirai wins the prestigious 2001Solidar Silver Rose Award.
 
 
He was presented with the award yesterday at a special ceremony at the European Union (EU) Parliament in Brussels.
 
The award was presented to him by Glenys Kinnock, a Member of the EU Parliament, on behalf of the president Guyvuy Vherhofstadt.
 
The Solidar Silver Rose is an award for outstanding achievement by an individual or organisation in the activities of civil society and in bringing about a fairer and more just society.
 
Tsvangirai, whose party almost ended Zanu PF's 21 years of uninterrupted rule in last year's parliamentary election, has become President Mugabe's biggest thorn in the flesh since independence.
There have been a number of attempts on Tsvangirai's life by suspected Zanu PF supporters on a number of occasions
as he went around the country on party business.
 
Austrian Roma rights campaigner, Rudolf Sarkozi, and Polish community organisation, The Barka Foundation for Mutual Help, were also awarded the 2001 Solidar Silver Rose Awards.
 
Kinnock, who headed the selection jury, said: "We hope that these awards will give greater recognition to these courageous figures, and give inspiration to others who may wish to follow in their footsteps."
At a crucial period for world stability, the Solidar Silver Rose Award winners "show the positive change that can be brought about by determined individuals and organisations", the citation read.
Solidar is an independent international alliance of development, humanitarian assistance and social welfare non-governmental organisations which have links with the trade unions and democratic labour parties.
 
After accepting  the award, Tsvangirai will meet with high-level officials on a tour of European capitals of Copenhagen, Stockholm, Brussels, Paris and London.
 
During his tour, he will "ask the Western governments to send a strong signal to Mugabe that restoring the rule of law and protecting human rights in Zimbabwe remains high on the political agenda".
 
Although the horrific events in the United States on 11 September have naturally focused world attention on combating terrorism, Tsvangirai will urge the West not to forget the crisis in Zimbabwe.
 
Some of the officials he will meet include Charles Josselin, French Minister for Co-operation, Laurette Onkelinx, the Belgian Deputy Prime Minister, Anna Lindh, the Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs and Baroness Amos, the British Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.
 


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MR MORGAN TSVANGIRAI: PROFILE!

Friday, 14 December, 2001, 07:00 GMT
 
Profile: Morgan Tsvangirai
 
Morgan Tsvangirai
Zimbabwe's newest political phenomenon
Morgan Tsvangirai emerged from a trade union background to become the most effective opposition leader in Zimbabwe since independence.
In the June 2000 general election his young party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), inflicted a stunning blow on the ruling Zanu-PF party's usual iron grip on power.
The MDC gained 57 of the constituency-based seats, against 62 held by Zanu-PF - a result without precedent in Zimbabwe, where opposition parties had never held more than a handful of seats.
Mr Tsvangirai himself was not elected. Turning down the opportunity of a seat in one of the cities, where the MDC's support is strongest, the MDC leader chose instead to stand in his home district - which, like most rural constituencies, was won by Zanu-PF.
By helping to inflict a dramatic defeat on the government over its constitutional reform bill the previous February, Mr Tsvangirai won an aura of credibility which was enhanced by the general election result.
Click here to watch the BBC Hardtalk interview with Morgan Tsvangirai.
Mr Tsvangirai has been performing a delicate political operation - attempting to maintain popularity and political momentum whilst holding together the very disparate interest groups gathered under the MDC umbrella.
Born in 1952 in Buhera in eastern Zimbabwe, Morgan Tsvangirai was the eldest son of a bricklayer.
The young Morgan left secondary school to become a textile weaver, but then went to work in a mine in Bindera, north-east of Harare, where he became involved in union actitivies and rose rapidly to become leader of the mining union.
A political force
In the late 1980s, Mr Tsvangirai became head of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, which had been set up at Zimbabwe's independence.
But it was another decade before he really emerged as a political force.
President Mugabe
Mr Mugabe: Forced to rescind taxes
In December 1997 and early 1998, Mr Tsvangirai led a series of strikes - so-called "stay-aways" - against tax increases which brought the country to a standstill.
These forced the government of President Mugabe to cancel two tax increases and, as it turned out, also to abandon a promised tax to help fund war veterans' pensions.
A pointer to the future
This was an ironic foreshadowing of the political confrontation between the veterans and Mr Tsvangirai's supporters over the issue of farm occupations.
In 1999 Mr Tsvangirai helped to create the MDC.
Morgan Tsvangirai
Mr Tsvangirai has capitalised on economic discontent
Within months, the new party had defeated the government over its referendum on constitutional reform, which included clauses allowing the seizure of white-owned farms without compensation.
It was the most dramatic political set-back for President Mugabe since independence.
But even this was eclipsed by the MDC's election showing.
Mr Tsvangirai is seen as representing a younger generation of Zimbabweans, particularly urban workers, who are less interested in Mr Mugabe's historical role as Zimbabwe's founding father than what they see as his recent record of economic mismanagement.


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