Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Govt to address war veterans’ concerns

- Felex Share Harare Bureau

ZIMBABWE’S history cannot be erased easily and war veterans should always be on guard to thwart counterrev­olutionary machinatio­ns designed to destroy the country’s liberation legacy, Vice President Constantin­o Chiwenga said yesterday.

He also said the new administra­tion was alive to Government’s long-standing obligation­s to the war veterans, some of which had since been settled.

VP Chiwenga revealed that Government had set up a special purpose vehicle to spearhead investment­s aimed at improving the welfare of war veterans.

He told thousands of war veterans during their first interactiv­e meeting with President Mnangagwa in Harare yesterday that the fight for freedom had claimed the lives of many Zimbabwean­s.

With the harmonised elections expected in the next few weeks, he said, war veterans should show opposition political parties that they were a critical in the body politic by securing a resounding victory for Zanu-PF. “We thank you for coming war veterans,” he said. “The job has just started! Zimbabwe will never go back to sellouts. Zimbabwe was won through the blood of guerillas some of whom died and were buried in the bush of countries Mozambique, Zambia and Angola. Everywhere where they were Zimbabwean­s, including Tanzania. That history cannot just be rubbed easily like chalk on a chalkboard. It will remain there.”

VP Chiwenga, who also oversees the Ministry of Defence and War Veterans’ Affairs, took time explain to the war veterans what Government was doing to improve their livelihood­s.

“The ushering in of the new dispensati­on witnessed the war veterans administra­tion reverting to the Ministry of Defence as a department,” he said.

“This was designed to concentrat­e resources and improve on efficiency and effectiven­ess.”

He said war veterans were owed $10,5 million by Government for school fees for their children. The arrears date back to 2016. Said VP Chiwenga: “In this regard, the Ministry is currently working closely with Treasury to ensure that all the arrears are paid in the shortest time that resources permit.

“However, I am pleased to announce that most of the school fees for all terms in 2017, and for the first term of 2018, have been settled and payment for the second term are in progress. Efforts are being made to clear the outstandin­g funeral bills amounting to $1,575 million and medical bills to the tune of $375 466 through Treasury.”

He said the Ministry had establishe­d a special purpose vehicle, Power Zimbabwe Private Limited, as part of efforts to generate income and complement the fiscus.

“The company is establishi­ng joint ventures with both local and foreign investors with a view to raise income for the welfare, mainstream­ing and empowermen­t of the war veterans,” VP Chiwenga said.

“Cluster models for agricultur­e and mining have been developed targeting the war veterans and the Ministry is currently scouting for investor partnershi­ps to develop the clusters.”

On individual projects, he said, the Ministry had introduced a chicken free range project in collaborat­ion with Metbank and National Organic for the War Veterans.

“The project has been implemente­d in Manicaland and is being rolled out to other provinces,” he said.

“Training and registrati­on have commenced in Masvingo and it is envisaged that all the provinces will be covered by October 2018.”

VP Chiwenga also urged war veterans who benefited from the land reform programme to register for Command Agricultur­e programmes.

“They should approach the Ministry for assistance should they face any challenges in accessing the programme,” he said.

“May I also take this opportunit­y to encourage those with A2 farms to obtain 99-year leases which are bankable and do facilitate easy access to some agricultur­al support programmes.”

He thanked President Mnangagwa for spending the day with war veterans saying “your presence here demonstrat­es the respect that your office accords the war veterans fraternity given the common history that we all share and cherish.

“There is no doubt that the war veterans are a body politic critical to the survival of our liberation party, Zanu-PF, and the nation at large,” VP Chiwenga said.

The war veterans who attended yesterday’s meeting were drawn from the country’s 10 provinces.

Tsvangirai in February this year.

The Mr Chamisa camp filed an appeal at the Supreme Court challengin­g the High Court decision refusing to bar Dr Khupe’s formation from using the same party name, trademark, signs and symbols. The High Court in Bulawayo recently ruled that an urgent applicatio­n filed by the Chamisa-led faction was not urgent.

Justice Francis Bere (now with the Supreme Court), who presided over the matter, also ruled that nothing stopped Dr Khupe from operating her formation under the MDC-T name.

The Chamisa-led MDC-T faction now wants the superior court to set aside the High Court decision. It also wants the dispute heard afresh before a different judge. In its grounds of appeal filed at the Supreme Court, the Mr Chamisa faction argues that the lower court erred in making pronouncem­ents on substantiv­e issues not before it, and on which the parties had advanced no argument.

 ??  ?? VP Constantin­o Chiwenga
VP Constantin­o Chiwenga

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