The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

It’s good to own a car, but . . .

Seemed well in my nephew Admire’s marriage until the year he decided to buy a car.

- Inotambika mughetto. rosenthal.mutakati@zimpapers.co.zw

FROM that point, no week passed without his wife asking me to confront him over the type of passengers he was carrying and the time he was getting home. “Sekuru sungirirai imbwa yenyu. Your nephew has suddenly become a womaniser and is coming home very late in the night. At times he will be very drunk yet he will be claiming to be broke. I have come to a point where he has to choose between me and his car. Handidi kuuraiswa,” his wife often told me with tears running down her cheeks.

So depressed had the woman become that she often threatened to commit suicide.

“Ndichazviu­raya hangu asare agarike,” she would say.

Gentle reader, while largely viewed as a sign of success and generally being organised, owning a vehicle can be a source of problems for most people.

It comes with a potpourri of problems that need maturity to overcome.

You suddenly find some dubious characters seeking to have a word with you. At times you are called by your first name and totem by outright strangers seeking to be as close as possible to tap into the benefits of you owning a car.

As I commit pen to paper, many marriages have collapsed because of that four-wheeled mechanical beast propelled by a combustive engine.

Women literally throw themselves at you if you own a car, but this is not without its own challenges.

“I grew up in poverty, but I do not intend to die that way. I need to change and get married to a guy who has a car so that I do not mix with people of various opinions, the so-called POVO in the bus. I need to enjoy just like anyone else . . . ,” one lady told this writer straight in the face.

She said a car featured prominentl­y on the qualities of men she deems ideal to spend time with.

And true to her words, there is unexplaine­d chemistry between people and the smell of petrol.

Cars make the lion in most people roar and this partly explains why some people always dangle keys in public even if they do not own cars.

“My friend to impress a girl or anyone who does not know you clearly, just act as though you have a car and all the bits will fall into place on their own,” an old acquaintan­ce of mine said.

It is not unusual to find people kneeling and according respect to those who own cars at weddings, parties, funerals and other family gatherings while seeking transport back home.

Gentle reader, while cars earn people respect, they have caused a lot of suffering for most people since time immemorial.

A good number of people have lost their jobs because of cars after being involved in accidents while off route.

Tenants have also been sent packing for making the landlord sit at the back while on a trip to town.

“I sent my lodger packing because he made me sit at the back of his truck yet he stays under my roof. I just wanted to show him that a house is far better and more valuable than a car and if he thought otherwise then he had to stay in his vehicle,” one Kuwadzana landlord said while roasting meat in the populous suburb last week.

In some families, people with cars are hated for asking their relatives to chip in whenever there is need to top up fuel or pass through a tollgate.

“He is so full of himself. How does he expect me to buy fuel and pay toll fees yet I do not have a car. Ngaandisiy­e nehurombo hwangu,” a workmate said of her brother recently.

Married women also have axes to grind against their husbands who own cars.

“I do not feel safe each time my husband drives alone in the car because he may be preyed on by some women. At times I throw away empty bottles of ciders from the car showing that the car is making him keep wrong company.”

Gentle reader, owning cars unlocks many benefits, but let’s ensure we act responsibl­y behind the wheel.

1. The Council of Ministers of the African Regional Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on (ARIPO) held its Eighteenth Session at the Elephant Hills Resort, Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, from 9 to 10 December 2021.

2. His Excellency Dr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa, President

of the Republic of Zimbabwe, officially opened the Session. In his speech, His Excellency Mnangagwa stressed the importance of encouragin­g and supporting innovation with a view to having competitiv­e businesses. The President of the Republic called upon ARIPO Member States to build ecosystems and structures that fully support creativity and innovation in schools, institutio­ns of higher

learning, industry and within communitie­s in general.

3. The Council of Ministers elected new members to serve as Officers for the 2022/2023 biennium as follows:

Chair : First Vice-Chairman : Second Vice-Chairman :

Zimbabwe Botswana The Gambia

4. The Delegation­s of The Gambia, Ghana, Malawi, Namibia, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, and Zambia delivered statements commending ARIPO for its contributi­on to the developmen­t of the national and regional Intellectu­al Property systems and highlighte­d the efforts that have been made by their respective Government­s towards the advancemen­t of the Intellectu­al Property agenda at national level. The Delegation­s reiterated the commitment of their Government­s to support the Organizati­on's work.

5. The Council of Ministers considered and took note of the following

documents that were presented by the Secretaria­t:

(a) Report of the Director General on the Activities Undertaken in

2020 and 2021 under the Value and Growth Transforma­tion Strategic Plan 2016-2020 that was extended for one year; and

(b) Report of the Chairman of the Administra­tive Council.

6. The Council of Ministers expressed its gratitude to the Government of the Republic of Zimbabwe for the warm hospitalit­y and excellent arrangemen­ts made for the Eighteenth Session of the Council of Ministers as well as the Forty-Fifth Session of the Administra­tive Council. The Council particular­ly expressed appreciati­on to The President of the Republic of Zimbabwe, His Excellency Dr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa for having granted exemption for ARIPO Governing Bodies' sessions to proceed despite the COVID-19 pandemic induced disruption­s.

7. The Council of Ministers expressed its appreciati­on and gratitude to the cooperatin­g partners of ARIPO for their continued support and participat­ion in the Eighteenth Session of the Council of Ministers.

8. During the Eighteenth Session of the Council of Ministers, three (3)

Countries signed the Kampala Protocol on Voluntary Registrati­on of Copyright and Related Rights, namely: The Gambia, Namibia, and Zambia.

9. The Council endorsed the Delegation of Botswana's offer to host the Nineteenth Session of the Council of Ministers at a date which will be communicat­ed in due course.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? His Excellency Dr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa receives Trade Marks certificat­es from the Mr Willie Mushayi, Chief Registrar,
Companies & Intellectu­al Property, Zimbabwe
His Excellency Dr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa receives a gift from the ARIPO Director General, Mr Bemanya Twebaze. The painting depicts the inaugurati­on
of the new ARIPO Headquarte­rs on December 9, 2016 during the 40 years anniversar­y celebratio­ns of ARIPO where H.E. was also the Guest of Honour
His Excellency Dr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa receives Trade Marks certificat­es from the Mr Willie Mushayi, Chief Registrar, Companies & Intellectu­al Property, Zimbabwe His Excellency Dr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa receives a gift from the ARIPO Director General, Mr Bemanya Twebaze. The painting depicts the inaugurati­on of the new ARIPO Headquarte­rs on December 9, 2016 during the 40 years anniversar­y celebratio­ns of ARIPO where H.E. was also the Guest of Honour
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Namibia Deputy Minister of Industrial­ization and Trade, Hon. Verna Sinimbo, signs the
Kampala Protocol on Voluntary Registrati­on of Copyright and Related Rights
Namibia Deputy Minister of Industrial­ization and Trade, Hon. Verna Sinimbo, signs the Kampala Protocol on Voluntary Registrati­on of Copyright and Related Rights
 ?? ?? The Gambia Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Hon. Dawda A. Jallow,
signing the Kampala Protocol
The Gambia Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Hon. Dawda A. Jallow, signing the Kampala Protocol
 ?? ?? His Excellency Dr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa
and The Council of Ministers
His Excellency Dr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa and The Council of Ministers
 ?? ?? Zambia Minister of Commerce, Trade & Industry, Hon. Chipoka Mulenga, signs the Kampala Protocol
Zambia Minister of Commerce, Trade & Industry, Hon. Chipoka Mulenga, signs the Kampala Protocol
 ?? ?? His Excellency Dr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa
His Excellency Dr Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa

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