The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

ED runs the rule on Cabinet

- Lincoln Towindo Senior Reporter

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa will next week review his ministers’ work since appointmen­t late last year.

Ministers are undergoing e-governance and rapid results training ahead of the review that will focus on attainment of targets each of them put forward in December 2017.

The project-oriented targets have a 100-day time-line and fall under the ambit of President Mnangagwa’s vision of speedy economic turnaround.

The Transport and Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Ministry, for instance, aims to — among other targets — kickstart dualisatio­n of the Chirundu-Harare-Beitbridge-Chirundu Highway and the US$400 million recapitali­sation of the National Railways of Zimbabwe.

The Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade Ministry wants to expedite global re-engagement and attract FDI; while the Home Affairs Ministry is infusing profession­alism throughout the police service, tightening border security and developing an e-passport.

The President last Thursday indicated he was continuall­y tracking his team’s progress via an electronic dashboard with implementa­tion data.

Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet Dr Misheck Sibanda told The Sunday Mail that the mid-term review was imminent and work status will be published.

Said Dr Sibanda: “He cannot judge (ministers’) performanc­e right now; they have only just identified their priorities. However, implementa­tion is ongoing. We have been training them, exposing them to the rapid results approach, training them on how they can work on that methodolog­y (and that training) included ministers and their officials.

“The minister is the main sponsor of priorities, therefore, they have undergone training and are now at implementa­tion stage. We will start assessing after next week. This will be after training so that we begin to assess whether they are making progress in terms of days. We evaluate after 50 days and then 100; that is when we will publish the results.”

Special Advisor to the President, Ambassador Christophe­r Mutsvangwa, said his boss was cautiously upbeat about his team’s performanc­e.

“Ministers have already begun implementi­ng their programmes. Some are reaching out to business investors — local and foreign — sending out the signals. Zimbabwe is a country that has been bypassed by several investment waves for the past 30 years.

“So, there is palpable hunger for Zimbabwe’s business to come out of the shell and the 100-day programme is an opportunit­y for ministers to get focused and they are now picking low-hanging fruit.

“There should be announceme­nts that will excite both the Zimbabwean public and the internatio­nal investment community. The team is working at frantic breakneck speed, and I believe the President is upbeat; to make sure they deliver a new investment era for Zimbabwean­s. Some of the projects should be taking off anytime.”

Ambassador Mutsvangwa said among the achievemen­ts were revival of the Midlands steel corridor, which could turn Zimbabwe into the world’s biggest steel supplier.

“The announceme­nt of the Gweru-Kwekwe stainless steel sector is a milestone because world class companies in the steel sector have for some time been knocking on Zimbabwe’s door. We are optimally placed to be cheapest steel producer in the world, the reason being that ingredient­s needed to make steel are within a 200500 km radius of each other.

“China staked out its place in this industry by importing from abroad and Japan does the same. But in Zimbabwe, the coking coal, thermal coal for power, limestone, chrome, nickel and iron ore itself are all in a cluster — a God-made cluster. So, why shouldn’t Zimbabwe be the major steel producer in the world?

“There is rationalis­ation of the Chinese steel industry and some Chinese partners are now looking at going abroad because China has more stringent anti-pollution controls under COP. These companies, which are worldclass by their own right, are looking at Zimbabwe.”

He also said, “The quality of local labour is good and that stability which has been installed by the new Government is a factor which gives a long-term view to the global investor. But all-inall, the mantra for the new Government is that because of the high quality of Zimbabwean labour, we should make high-quality products for the global market.

“Our internal market of 15 million is too small. We should have an outward-looking market and because of the capabiliti­es of our labour force which has shown that it can earn hard currency in other jurisdicti­ons beyond the national one.

“We need to give them a similar jurisdicti­on on the internal stage, within Zimbabwe so that capital can make them produce goods they want. So, attracting Foreign Direct Investment is the equalising factor which makes a Zimbabwean who went abroad and a Zimbabwean who remained at home manufactur­e world class goods destined for the global market.”

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