A lot of people in Zimbabwe are surprised that Mthuli Ncube was chosen as the “Best African Finance Minister of the Year” because the country’s economy is struggling.
One person on X, which used to be called Twitter, said the award was like praising a captain for steering a ship into an iceberg.
Another person said it was the funniest joke of the past ten years.
Zimbabwe has a very high unemployment rate, as high as 85%, according to experts.
According to Reuters, most transactions are done in US dollars because people don’t trust their local currency.
Reputation Poll International is a company that gives awards for good reputation. They gave Mr Ncube an award on Sunday.
The minister, chosen by President Emmerson Mnangagwa in 2018, told the Herald newspaper that he was happy to get the honor.
He said that the recognition was for the work he and the Treasury team did to lead the transformation of the economy.
But, activist Hopewell Chin’ono said that the award was a “disrespect” to Zimbabweans.
He was very surprised, especially after Mr. Ncube’s new budget, when Mr. Chin’ono called it “the worst budget for the people that Zimbabwe has ever had”.
Taxes will go up and the cost of a passport will increase to $200 (£160) from $120, which will make it the most expensive in the region.
Mr Chin’ono said that Mr Ncube is running the worst economy in the world because of his bad and dishonest decisions.
Zimbabwe’s economy has been having a difficult time for many years. The Zimbabwe dollar was stopped being used in 2009 because prices were going up really fast – even by the hour – due to very high inflation.
Critics say the ruling Zanu-PF party, led first by Robert Mugabe and then by Mr Mnangagwa, did not manage things well. They say that the Western countries’ sanctions are the reason for their problems.
Zimbabwe had by-elections on the weekend because some MPs from the main opposition party were removed.
Zanu-PF candidates won 7 out of 9 by-elections, but they still need 3 more seats to have enough power to change the constitution.
Tag: President Emmerson Mnangagwa
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Startlingly as Zimbabwe’s finance minister rated as best in Africa
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SA congratulates president of Zimbabwe while others denounce the poll
South Africa, Russia, and China have praised Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa for winning the election, despite some controversy surrounding it.
Additionally, the United States, along with other countries, voiced their disapproval of the recent general election, claimed to be dishonest by the opposition.
The government of the United States said that there was a consistent unfairness against the opposition and pointed out trust worthy reports that showed election monitors were made to change certain result forms. The electoral commission said that these claims were not true.
A message from the government of South Africa
South Africa knew that the elections happened during a tough economic situation due to sanctions against Zimbabwe.
It also agreed with worries from independent election watchers about how real the outcome is.
Some people who watch over things said that the survey didn’t meet the rules of the whole world or Zimbabwe’s own laws.
Zimbabwe has important trade relationships with South Africa, Russia, and China. These countries supporting the poll is important because Zimbabwe may face more isolation and penalties from Western countries due to criticism of the poll.
The opposition Citizens Coalition for Change is currently counting their own results and hasn’t yet made a final decision on the next steps they will take. But the messages of congratulations to President Mnangagwa show that Zimbabwe’s main supporters are willing to move forward and agree with the outcomes. -
Mnangagwa re-elected as president of Zimbabwe after contentious election
Zimbabwe’s current President Emmerson Mnangagwa won the country’s presidential elections on Saturday by getting the most votes, even though the election had some problems with being delayed.
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission has officially declared the winner of the 2023 presidential race. President Emmerson Mnangagwa won the election with 2,350,711 votes, which is 52. 6% of the total votes. Nelson Chamisa, from the Citizens Coalition for Change party, got 1,906,734 votes, which is 44% of the total votes. This information was tweeted by Zimbabwe’s Information Ministry on Saturday. For anext ended period, Zimbabwe’s politics have remained under the control of the Zanu-PF party,indicating victory for the 80-year-old person. They have been the most powerful party in the country since it became independent from Britain in 1980.
Chamisa, who is 45yearsold, was very hopeful about winning but now he does not accept the results that were announced by the electoral organization. It is currently uncertain if he will take legal action.
The party he belongs to criticized the delayed delivery of voting supplies, which caused long wait times for voters. They also mentioned some suspected problems with how the voting was done.
The CCC said that some of its candidates were left off the ballots. The ballots also had pictures of the ruling party’s candidates instead of the CCC’s candidates.
The group that oversees elections did not answer those claims.
Voting continued for an additional day in some areas of Zimbabwe, where the voting process began late on Wednesday. The president made a rule that allows voting to continue until Thursday in three provinces, including the capital city Harare where Chamisa’s party has a lot of people who support it.
People thought the polls were peaceful, but they said the election process didn’t meet many regional and international standards. -
Zimbabwe poll condemned by election observers
The handling of the election in Zimbabwe, where the votes are being counted, has drawn criticism from election observers from southern African nations.
The calm voting, according to the regional organisation known as SADC, fell short of some local laws and its own rules.
More than 40 poll watchers were detained late on Wednesday as they attempted to calculate their own vote total to compare with the official result.
Rights groups have denounced the arrests.
In the midst of high unemployment and rising inflation, President Emmerson Mnangagwa is running for re-election.
Nelson Chamisa of the opposition Citizens Coalition for Change is his main rival.
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Zimbabwe’s Mnangagwa to rule until death – Criminal pastor Angel spills the beans
An undercover report by Al Jazeera’s Investigative Unit released in March 2023 has shed light on a bigger issue than just money laundering by members of “Africa’s Gold Mafia”.
In the report, Zimbabwean diplomat and pastor, Uebert Angel, who was caught on camera admitting to laundering millions of dollars through a gold-smuggling scheme, made a statement about President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s rule.
According to Uebert Angel, Mnangagwa will be president until he dies.
Uebert Angel and President Emmerson Mnangagwa “Okay, let me just say don’t worry. He will be president, okay? Don’t worry about it.This president will be president until he dies. That’s all. I’ve said a lot,” he is recorded saying.
Uebert Angel mentioned his role as an ambassador at large and the influence it gives him in Zimbabwean affairs while talking to undercover Al Jazeera journalists who pretended to be Chinese nationals looking to launder large sums of money.
“I’m [an] ambassador at large. I’m [an] ambassador to 85 countries. But on this special envoy, I’m a representative of the president. That means I can sign contracts. I can sign treaties with governments without the president getting involved,” he noted.
According to the reports, Uebert claimed several times that Mnangagwa was aware of his schemes. “I can call the president now, not tomorrow, now and put him on speaker, it’s not an issue, We are the government.” he mentioned.
“You want gold, gold we can do it right now, we can make the call right now, and it’s done,” Angel told Al Jazeera’s reporters. “It will land in Zimbabwe – Zimbabwe can’t touch it too until I get to my house. So, there can be a diplomatic plan. So, it is a very, very easy thing,” he said.
Mnangagwa, who has been in power since 2017 after ousting Robert Mugabe, served as Vice President of Zimbabwe from 2014.
It is unclear whether Uebert Angel’s statement was prophetic or not, but his prophecies have come true in the past.
During the 2020 Ghanaian presidential election, Uebert Angel prophesied President Akufo-Addo’s victory. Akufo-Addo received 51.59% of the vote, beating former president Mahama, who secured 47.36%, according to the Electoral Commission.
However, concerns over “vote-rigging” in Zimbabwe’s previous elections raise suspicions about the legitimacy of Mnangagwa’s presidency.
Uebert Angel’s ambassadorial appointment was made in 2021 by President Mnangagwa, who was declared president-elect in August 2018 by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission after obtaining 50.8% of the votes.
Emmerson Mnangagwa took the oath of office in August 2018 His opponent, Nelson Chamisa, who represented the Movement for Democratic Change Alliance, secured 44.3% of the vote cast.
Chamisa accused Mnangagwa of “trying to bastardise the result,” and then proceeded to court but his election challenge was thrown out.
Nelson Chamisa lost the 2018 election Meanwhile, the revised constitution limits the president to two 5-year terms, and the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission is yet to announce the exact date for the next general election to be held in 2023, but it has revealed that it would be held in either July or August.
Source: The Independent Ghana
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26 opposition party members in Zimbabwe granted bail
26 opposition party members who were detained for hosting what the police claimed was an unlawful gathering were granted bail by a Zimbabwean court on Friday.
Before a crucial election this year at a yet-to-be-announced date, fears of a crackdown on opposition politicians were stoked by the arrest of Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) members, including two Members of Parliament.
“This confirms that the arrest was an abuse of process in the first place,” CCC spokeswoman Fadzayi Mahere told journalists outside court. “All this shows that the regime’s paranoia has reached fever pitch and they notice that they are staring defeat in the face.”
Zimbabwean police on Jan. 14 fired teargas at the CCC party gathering in Harare and arrested its members. The defendants’ lawyers argued that the arrests were unlawful as the gathering was at a private space.
Arguing against bail, prosecutors said the party had not sought clearance to hold the meeting. Zimbabwe laws require that political parties apply for approval from police two weeks in advance before holding a gathering.
The arrests came after a wave of politically motivated violence against opposition supporters in rural Zimbabwe, raising fears of repression ahead of this year’s presidential election.
The CCC, led by the youthful Nelson Chamisa, will battle President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s ZANU-PF for the second time at the poll.
The opposition party, born out of the old Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), enjoys massive urban support and is seen as a threat to ZANU-PF’s 43-year-old stranglehold on power.
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Zimbabwe to open new Chinese-built parliament
Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa will on Wednesday formally open a new 650-seat parliament in the capital, Harare, that was funded by China.
President Mnangagwa will use the occasion to deliver a state of the nation address, the state-run Herald newspaper reports quoting the clerk of parliament.
The finance minister will on the next day present the 2023 national budget, the newspaper adds.
China funded the project as a gift to Zimbabwe. It houses the national assembly and the senate.
A Chinese company was behind the construction.
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UK museums willing to return skulls to Zimbabwe
London’s Natural History Museum and Cambridge University have said that they are ready to co-operate with Zimbabwe to return human remains that were taken in the colonial era.
The fresh statements come after a delegation from Zimbabwe held talks with officials from both institutions.
The Zimbabweans are looking for the skulls of late-19th Century anti-colonial heroes, which they believe could be in the UK.
But these have not yet been found.
The authorities in Zimbabwe have long suspected that the remains of some of the leaders of an uprising against British rule in the 1890s – known as the First Chimurenga – were taken to the UK as trophies.
The most significant among them was a woman who became known as Mbuya Nehanda. She was executed in what is now the capital, Harare and is revered as a national heroine.
In doing a search of its archive, the Natural History Museum did uncover 11 remains “that appear to be originally from Zimbabwe” – but its records do not connect them with Nehanda. These include three skulls taken in 1893, thought to be from Zimbabwe’s second city, Bulawayo, as well as remains uncovered in mineshafts and archaeological digs and later donated.
Cambridge University’s Duckworth Laboratory has not been so specific, simply saying it has “a small number of human remains from Zimbabwe”, but in a statement sent to the BBC it said it had not identified any of these as belonging to First Chimurenga figures.
The Natural History Museum, with 25,000 human remains, and the Duckworth Laboratory, with 18,000, have some of the largest such archives in the world.
These have come from a variety of sources including archaeological excavations of ancient sites, but for many the exact origins have been obscured by time.
During the colonial era, body parts were sometimes removed from battlefields or dug up from graves either as trophies or for research into a now-discredited scientific field.
In the 19th Century, phrenology, which investigated the idea that human characteristics could be determined by the shape of the skull, was very popular in the UK and other parts of Europe. Phrenological societies would collect skulls to help develop the theory, which for some extended to racial classification.
Some researchers set out to show that skull shape indicated that people from different parts of the world were inherently inferior.
Some of the archives that now exist in the UK are amalgamations of what had been amassed by defunct phrenological societies as well as private collectors.
Zimbabwe’s government believes that somehow the skulls of the country’s heroes ended up in the archives of a British museum.
Chief among them were spiritual leaders, including Charwe Nyakasikana, who became known as Mbuya (Grandmother) Nehanda as she was the medium of the revered ancestral spirit Nehanda. She was arrested after being accused of murdering a British official.
Nehanda was then hanged and her body decapitated, it is believed. What happened next is not clear, but in recent years, Zimbabwean officials have made several public statements saying it ended up in the Natural History Museum.
With a death cry of “my bones will surely rise”, Nehanda became an increasingly potent symbol for those fighting against white-minority rule in what was then known as Rhodesia from the late 1960s.
Zimbabwe gained independence in 1980.
Image source, ShutterstockThe Mbuya Nehanda statue in Harare was put up in 2021 A three-metre statue of Nehanda now stands over a major road in the centre of Harare. At its unveiling in 2021, President Emmerson Mnangagwa pledged to continue to call for the return of her skull and others from the Natural History Museum.
For Zimbabweans, the removal of the head “means that you have literally punished the person beyond the grave”, Godfrey Mahachi, who led the delegation to the UK, told the BBC in 2020 when the visit was being planned.
“If the head is separated, that means that the spirit of that person will forever linger and never settle.”
Despite not finding what the Zimbabwean delegation was looking for, both the Natural History Museum and Cambridge University say they are committed to working with the Zimbabwean government to repatriate what was found.
As part of its policy of repatriation, earlier this year, the Natural History Museum returned ancestral Moriori and Maori remains.
In a press statement following a recent cabinet meeting, Zimbabwe’s government said that the delegation that went to the UK was satisfied that “there are indeed human remains of Zimbabwean origin in the UK”.
“Government will spare no effort to ensure the repatriation of our ancestors,” it added.
The Zimbabwean delegation also held talks with the British Museum, Oxford University’s Pitt Rivers Museum, the University of Manchester Museum and the UK’s National Archives. But no details are given about what was discussed.
Despite the lack of success in this trip to the UK, the historical significance to Zimbabwe of the remains of Nehanda and others means that the search will continue.
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Museums in the United Kingdom are willing to return skulls to Zimbabwe
The Natural History Museum in London and Cambridge University have stated their willingness to work with Zimbabwe to return human remains taken during the colonial era.
The new statements come after a Zimbabwean delegation met with officials from both institutions.
Zimbabweans are looking for the skulls of late-nineteenth-century anti-colonial heroes, which they believe are in the United Kingdom.
But these have not yet been found.
The authorities in Zimbabwe have long suspected that the remains of some of the leaders of an uprising against British rule in the 1890s – known as the First Chimurenga – were taken to the UK as trophies.
The most significant among them was a woman who became known as Mbuya Nehanda. She was executed in what is now the capital, Harare, and is revered as a national heroine.
In doing a search of its archive, the Natural History Museum did uncover 11 remains “that appear to be originally from Zimbabwe” – but its records do not connect them with Nehanda. These include three skulls taken in 1893, thought to be from Zimbabwe’s second city, Bulawayo, as well as remains uncovered in mineshafts and archaeological digs and later donated.
Cambridge University’s Duckworth Laboratory has not been so specific, simply saying it has “a small number of human remains from Zimbabwe”, but in a statement sent to the BBC, it said it had not identified any of these as belonging to First Chimurenga figures.
The Natural History Museum, with 25,000 human remains, and the Duckworth Laboratory, with 18,000, have some of the largest such archives in the world.
These have come from a variety of sources including archaeological excavations of ancient sites, but for many, the exact origins have been obscured by time.
During the colonial era, body parts were sometimes removed from battlefields or dug up from graves either as trophies or for research into a now-discredited scientific field.
In the 19th Century, phrenology, which investigated the idea that human characteristics could be determined by the shape of the skull, was very popular in the UK and other parts of Europe. Phrenological societies would collect skulls to help develop the theory, which for some extended to racial classification.
Some researchers set out to show that skull shape indicated that people from different parts of the world were inherently inferior.
Some of the archives that now exist in the UK are amalgamations of what had been amassed by defunct phrenological societies as well as private collectors.
Zimbabwe’s government believes that somehow the skulls of the country’s heroes ended up in the archives of a British museum.
Chief among them were spiritual leaders, including Charwe Nyakasikana, who became known as Mbuya (Grandmother) Nehanda as she was the medium of the revered ancestral spirit Nehanda. She was arrested after being accused of murdering a British official.
Nehanda was then hanged and her body decapitated, it is believed. What happened next is not clear, but in recent years, Zimbabwean officials have made several public statements saying it ended up in the Natural History Museum.
With a death cry of “my bones will surely rise”, Nehanda became an increasingly potent symbol for those fighting against white-minority rule in what was then known as Rhodesia in the late 1960s.
Zimbabwe gained independence in 1980.
IMAGE SOURCE, SHUTTERSTOCK Image caption, The Mbuya Nehanda statue in Harare was put up in 2021 A three-meter statue of Nehanda now stands over a major road in the centre of Harare. At its unveiling in 2021, President Emmerson Mnangagwa pledged to continue to call for the return of her skull and others from the Natural History Museum.
For Zimbabweans, the removal of the head “means that you have literally punished the person beyond the grave”, Godfrey Mahachi, who led the delegation to the UK, told the BBC in 2020 when the visit was being planned.
“If the head is separated, that means that the spirit of that person will forever linger and never settle.”
Despite not finding what the Zimbabwean delegation was looking for, both the Natural History Museum and Cambridge University say they are committed to working with the Zimbabwean government to repatriate what was found.
As part of its policy of repatriation, earlier this year, the Natural History Museum returned ancestral Moriori and Maori remains.
In a press statement following a recent cabinet meeting, Zimbabwe’s government said that the delegation that went to the UK was satisfied that “there are indeed human remains of Zimbabwean origin in the UK”.
“Government will spare no effort to ensure the repatriation of our ancestors,” it added.
The Zimbabwean delegation also held talks with the British Museum, Oxford University’s Pitt Rivers Museum, the University of Manchester Museum, and the UK’s National Archives. But no details are given about what was discussed.
Despite the lack of success in this trip to the UK, the historical significance to Zimbabwe of the remains of Nehanda and others means that the search will continue.
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Malawi compensates Mozambique for stolen charcoal
Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa has declared a national disaster over coronavirus even as the country is yet to confirm any case.
Mr Mnangagwa has also postponed independence day celebrations scheduled for 18 April and banned all public gatherings of more than 100 people.
The Zimbabwe International Trade Fair (ZITF) that was to take place in the south-western city of Bulawayo from 21-25 April has also been postponed.
The ban will affect church gatherings, weddings and sporting events for 60 days.
The president told a press briefing at his office in the capital, Harare, there would be no travel ban, but discouraged travellers from countries that had confirmed coronavirus cases from visiting Zimbabwe.
He also advised Zimbabweans against travel abroad until the pandemic was under control.
Source: bbc.com