The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Harvard buckles under pressure to rescind FLoZ award

- Tichaona Zindoga Acting Editor

A UNITED STATES institutio­n, Harvard Medical School, has buckled under negative pressure to rescind an honour it bestowed on Zimbabwe’s First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa for her charity work.

On September 21, the institutio­n recognised the First Lady with an honorary ambassador­ial role in the Harvard University Global Health Catalyst Programme and agreed to organise a pan-African Global Health Catalyst Summit in Zimbabwe in 2020 “to mobilise effort, resources and collaborat­ive action for high impact global health, with focus on non-communicab­le diseases like cancer, especially among children.”

The institutio­n also honoured Her Royal Highness Princess Dina Mired, a leading global advocate for cancer control and non-communicab­le diseases (NCD) and president of the Union for Internal Cancer Control, and the first Arab Muslim to have been elected to lead in such a prestigiou­s global post.

The honoured pair were described as “two outstandin­g women”.

Regarding the First Lady, Director of Global Health Catalyst at Harvard Medical School, Professor Wilfred Ngwa said: “We accorded her the new role to honour the work she is doing for the people of Zimbabwe, hence we want her to go across Africa.”

However, opposition from Zimbabwe — where opposition elements excoriated the institutio­n for bestowing the honour — and pressure from a cohort of former American diplomats to Zimbabwe led to the institutio­n melting under pressure.

It has since removed the statement of the event on its website.

Internet story links to the original resources have been disabled in an effort to expunge the record.

However, The Herald can authoritat­ively reveal that the process of honouring the First Lady and her colleague, were meticulous.

At the meeting where the honour was conferred, the First Lady was accompanie­d by Secretary for Health and Child Care, Dr Agnes Mahomva; a renowned health expert and member of the Presidenti­al Advisory Committee, Dr Godfrey Sikipa; Assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School Aditi Hazra; and Dr Oscar Nebangwa from the same medical school. The meeting started with Dr Sikipa

◆ giving an account of how the institutio­n had been keen to meet the Zimbabwean First Lady.

We are told that in May 2019 Ambassador Ammon Mutembwa (Zimbabwe’s Ambassador to the USA) was invited to participat­e in the 2019 Global Health Catalyst (GHC) Summit at Harvard Medical School.

The visit of Ambassador Mutembwa was an opportunit­y to give a talk about Zimbabwe and opportunit­ies for internatio­nal cooperatio­n and investment including health care. The participat­ion would also provide opportunit­y to engage with and invite stakeholde­rs including the Diaspora and health care industry partners to Zimbabwe.

The anticipate­d outcomes of the invitation included visit of a Harvard delegation with Constituen­cy for Africa (CFA) to Zimbabwe, enhanced visibility of Zimbabwe, developmen­t of a framework for continuous collaborat­ion to support and attract investment to advance health care and developmen­t for the people of Zimbabwe.

Dr Sikipa said in Ambassador Mutembwa’s presentati­on, he touched on the works of the First Lady in the health sector and the medical school expressed interest to enter into collaborat­ion with Zimbabwe.

Our sources say a meeting was then arranged for Harvard officials to meet with her, which was then held on September 21.

The specific objectives of the meeting were to discuss and agree on specific areas of collaborat­ion between the institutio­n and the First Lady of Zimbabwe to discuss on a framework and Memorandum of Understand­ing for collaborat­ion and agree on next steps.

The First Lady was then given the floor to narrate what she was doing in Zimbabwe particular­ly in the health sector and empowermen­t of marginalis­ed communitie­s.

A documentar­y showing her works especially with the marginalis­ed communitie­s was played which led to Dr Nebangwa crying and Prof Ngwa was equally touched and said, “this also brought tears to my eyes”.

While Prof Ngwa, the Director of Global Health was responding to the First Lady’s narration, he then said: “I understand you have a lot of ambassador­ship already from your country and from Merck Foundation, We are very interested in having you serving as the honorary ambassador of Harvard (everyone in the room clapped hands and the First Lady actually thanked him) . . . The reason for that is we will have Harvard-First Lady partnershi­p that can become illuminati­ng for whole of Africa and so other First Ladies can emulate you.”

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