NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

ED administra­tion: Comedy of errors

- Paidamoyo Muzulu is a journalist based in Harare. He writes here in his personal capacity.

administra­tion was accused of slyly reintroduc­ing the much-maligned Indigenisa­tion and Economic Empowermen­t Act’s clause that says 51% of a designated entity should be owned by an indigenous person or persons.

The matter arose out of the gazetted section 36 of the Finance (No 2) Act of 2020 that read: “The minister responsibl­e for the Indigenisa­tion Act, may, in consultati­on with the ministers responsibl­e for Mines and Finance prescribe a mineral, the extraction of which would be subject to 51% shareholdi­ng by a designated entity.”

Veritas, a legal and parliament­ary monitoring think-tank, correctly analysed the text and concluded the administra­tion had, through the backdoor, reintroduc­ed the 51% local ownership clause in the indigenisa­tion law.

Exposed and with nowhere to hide, the administra­tion conceded that it had backtracke­d on the scrapping of the 51% indigenisa­tion clause in the mining sector.

In a joint statement, the ministers responsibl­e said: “It has come to government notice that the amendment to the Indigenisa­tion and Economic Empowermen­t Act contained in the Finance (No 2) Act of 2020 (section 36) may have caused some misconcept­ion to some investors and other stakeholde­rs in the mining sector ...

“To enhance certainty in relation to investment­s in the mining sector, and consistent with government policy, this section will be deleted.”

Before the dust had settled, Finance minister Mthuli Ncube put his foot in his mouth for the second time in a week.

While speaking to Zimbabwe Television Network, a Zimpapers-owned television station, he was quoted by private investigat­ive online publicatio­n, NewsHawks, as saying Zimbabwean­s would have to directly pay for the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n jab at the point of service.

@NewsHawksL­ive tweeted: “Finance minister Mthuli Ncube has told the State-controlled media that Zimbabwean­s will be required to pay for COVID-19 vaccinatio­n. ‘Look, private citizens obviously would have to pay for the vaccines.’ The payment is meant to enable the government to ‘recoup’ costs of procuremen­t.”

Stung by public backlash on social media, Ncube had to do another hasty retreat.

He issued a statement on Thursday saying he had been quoted out of context and the vaccinatio­n would be given for free.

“It has come to my attention that my comments about the payment for the COVID-19 vaccine, have been taken out of context. I would like to make it clear that, the vaccines that the government is procuring with the support of the internatio­nal partners and friends, will be made available for free, to the citizens of Zimbabwe,” Ncube clarified.

In his clarificat­ion, Ncube raised new questions. He excluded a significan­t number of people in the country.

All people who are not citizens, but legally in Zimbabwe like documented immigrants, are left out. Is this the group that he meant should pay?

In his address to commemorat­e World Cancer Day on Thursday, VicePresid­ent and Health minister Constantin­o Chiwenga tried to come to Ncube’s rescue, saying: “My fellow Zimbabwean­s, let me also reiterate that the government of Zimbabwe will roll out COVID-19 vaccines for free to all our citizens who may wish to be vaccinated. The policy is inspired by humane morals that: Life should not be bought.”

The guffaws by the ministers are not isolated. They reinforce that the administra­tion has poor communicat­ors.

Since the advent of COVID-19 pandemic, the administra­tion has on numerous occasions failed to explain itself.

It failed to explain the lockdown stages. It failed to communicat­e how the $18 billion economic stimulus package was to work or the $600 million cash transfer scheme for the vulnerable groups.

It has further struggled to explain if it has ordered any COVID-19 vaccines and at what costs or who are the first beneficiar­ies.

This is an administra­tion that has no clue, clumsy in communicat­ing and puts no effort to learn from its mistakes.

It makes basic communicat­ion mistakes again and again — actually it has become a norm that after a Press conference another will be hastily arranged to issue a clarificat­ion.

This comedy of errors costs lives — real lives. The administra­tion has to speak with clarity and implement its programmes transparen­tly. Now more than ever the country needs a COVID-19 lockdown exit strategy.

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