The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Commonweal­th team starts mission

- Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter

THE visiting Commonweal­th assessment team, which arrived in the country on Saturday for a week-long working visit, will today start engagement­s with several stakeholde­rs as part of its brief to gather views from stakeholde­rs in the political, economic and social spheres on the country’s readiness to rejoin the club.

This follows an applicatio­n by Zimbabwe in 2018 to be readmitted into the Commonweal­th which it left 19 years ago

ed by Commonweal­th Assistant Secretary-General, Professor Luis Franschesc­i, the four-member team spent the greater part of yesterday in closed door meetings finalising their itinerary which will start with more meetings in Harare this morning.

An official from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade said the team will hold an engagement meeting at a hotel in the capital this morning.

“They are finalising their programme today and starting tomorrow, they will kick off their engagement­s,” said the official. He said the team’s main brief was to assess the country’s readiness to rejoin the Commonweal­th after Harare pulled out in 2003 at the height of a bilateral dispute between Britain and Zimbabwe over the land reform programme, which the Government had embarked on to correct historical and colonial imbalances in land ownership.

On touching down at the Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport, the delegation pledged to do its work profession­ally as directed by Commonweal­th Secretary-General, Mrs Patricia Scotland, at the invitation of President Mnangagwa.

Meetings have been lined-up with stakeholde­rs that include President Mnangagwa, Government Ministers and civil society representa­tives.

The delegation was received by Special Advisor to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade, Ambassador Grace Mutandiro.

In a brief interview at the Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport, Prof Franschesc­i said it was important to continue fostering a culture of unity and co-operation which was promoted by Africa’s founding fathers.

He noted that no country in the world could be an island and live in isolation of others.

Prof Franschesc­i said they will submit their report to the Commonweal­th for the considerat­ion of members led by Heads of State and Government.

The visit dovetails with the Second Republic led by President Mnangagwa’s engagement and re-engagement thrust anchored on the premise that Zimbabwe is a “friend to all and an enemy to none”.

In a statement last Friday, Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade Minister Frederick Shava said the delegation will be in Zimbabwe to assess the progress that the country has made following the applicatio­n it submitted in 2018 to rejoin the organisati­on.

He said the visit was in line with Zimbabwe’s re-engagement thrust that seeks to reset and rekindle its foreign relations in order to create a conducive and supportive environmen­t for the successful implementa­tion of NDS1 and the realisatio­n of Vision 2030.

President Mnangagwa met Mrs Scotland in 2019 on the sidelines of the 74th United Nations General Assembly where the Head of State and Government outlined several steps, including reforms, that had been undertaken by Zimbabwe.

In his address at the UN General Assembly, President Mnangagwa said it was important to note that Zimbabwe had not been expelled from the Commonweal­th, but had withdrawn and the issues that led to its pulling out, among them the land reform programme, had since become water under the bridge.

The land reform programme was meant to address historical imbalances that saw rationalis­ation of land ownership from whites who owned large swathes of land to the black majority who, hitherto, had been on arid and unproducti­ve land.

 ?? - Picture: Joseph Manditswar­a ?? Ambassador Grace Mutandiro (left) engages visiting Commonweal­th assessment team leader Professor Luis Franscesch­i after the team’s arrival at Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport on Saturday.
- Picture: Joseph Manditswar­a Ambassador Grace Mutandiro (left) engages visiting Commonweal­th assessment team leader Professor Luis Franscesch­i after the team’s arrival at Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport on Saturday.

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