Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Cabinet to consider List of Parastatals for Reform

State Enterprises and Parastatals Minister, Gorden Moyo, says he would be taking 10 underperforming state-owned enterprises (SOE)s to Cabinet to decide on the most viable recapitalisation option for every one of them.



Moyo also said the government decision-making board would also determine the fate of parastatals, which currently operate as both player and regulator.



Though the SOEs concerned would not be named, those frequently named include TelOne, NetOne, the Grain Marketing Board, Zimpost, the National Oil Company of Zimbabwe, the National Railways of Zimbabwe, Air Zimbabwe and the Zimbabwe United Passenger Company (Zupco).



“I will be taking each and every parastatal to Cabinet for ministers to decide on them on which one to privatise or commercialise,” Moyo said. “We will then have some parastatals have public private partnerships and others leased in order to recapitalise the state owned enterprises.”



Moyo said parastatals had potential to contribute about 40% to Gross Domestic Product, but have failed to measure up due to challenges related to funding and poor management.



According to a World Bank report, Zimbabwe’s state enterprises have very low volumes of sales and low revenue collections owing to structural bottlenecks, inefficiency and the economy’s liquidity crisis.



A greater proportion are also both under-funded and heavily indebted, which undermines their resuscitation.



“There is no single Act that I administer, this is a weak ministry in terms of teeth to bite. It doesn’t have any enabling teeth,” Moyo said, stressing that legislation dealing with state-owned enterprises should be reviewed to give the State Enterprises and Parastatals ministry more control over the institutions.



He said his ministry would propose a subsidiary law to translate Cabinet decisions on the parastatals into legal provisions.



A number of SOEs have been operating without boards for the past five years, while others have also failed to produce audited reports for close to a decade.



He also urged the enterprises to adopt good corporate governance practices to enhance their chances of attracting partners.



“It doesn’t cost a cent for parastatals to adopt a culture of good corporate governance. We cannot continue having a culture of leakages and continue paying ourselves huge salaries when the economy is bleeding.



“Close to 60% of our parastatals’ problems will be solved by good corporate governance practices,” said Moyo.


Story by Victoria Mtomba



















MOYO LAUNCHES TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE REPORT


BULAWAYO - Aug 04 2010 11:19

Communities in Matabeleland region want President Robert Mugabe to make a public apology for the Gukurahundi atrocities and to speak out on reparations people are demanding for victims of the “moment of madness”, the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum said in a report.

The outreach report, which is volume two of the document Taking Transitional Justice to the People, was officially launched by the Minister of State Enterprises and Parastatals, Gorden Moyo, in Bulawayo last Friday.

Titled, Who Will Dare Begin The Process of Recovering the Truth, the document sets out the experiences of the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum and its associates, who conducted outreach meetings in 51 constituencies to take the concept of transitional justice to the community.

It says the overriding plea of all participants was for “truth recovery and truth disclosure to redress the human rights abuses of the past and in so doing foster true national reconciliation’’.

According to the report, all the participants at the outreach meeting held in Nkayi agreed that those involved in the Gukurahundi massacres that took place in Matabeleland and parts of Midlands should apologise for the atrocities.

“President Robert Mugabe should come to the people and apologise for the massacres that happened in Matabeleland,’’ an elderly male participant said at the Nkayi meeting.

Participants also stressed that there could be no reconciliation if the truth on what happened during the Gukurahundi massacres is not acknowledged.


“There is no other way to reconcile the region of Matabeleland with the rest of the country if the truth of what happened during Gukurahundi is not known.Even for an apology to be accepted, it must be clear what is being apologised for,’’ reads the report.

The document also details how there was silence in the 1980s over the atrocities but explains that on March 16 1983, Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace (CCJP) representatives — Mike Auret, Bishop Henry Karlen and Bishop Patrick Mutume met with President Mugabe who was then Prime Minister and presented a comprehensive dossier of evidence of the atrocities which were committed by the Fifth Brigade in Matabeleland and the Midlands.



The evidence was collected by priests and missionaries who worked in rural Matabeleland and the Midlands.
A month later however, President Mugabe refuted the allegations and accused his critics of being “a band of Jeremiahs (which) including reactionary foreign journalists, non-governmental organisations of dubious status in our midst and sanctimonious prelates.’’


He accused the CCJP of condemning the Fifth Brigade and not the dissidents.

In January 1984, the government set up the Simplicius Chihambakwe Commission of Inquiry to investigate the atrocities but its findings were never made public.

When the Legal Resources Foundation set up shop in Lupane in 1984, it was inundated with enquiries from people wanting to obtain death certificates for heads of families who had “disappeared’’ in the 1980s and to enable children to get birth certificates so they could go to school and for other administrative purposes.
This prompted the foundation and CCJP to document the atrocities resulting in a report: Breaking the Silence, Building True Peace in 1987 which became the only published report on Gukurahundi.

The Human Rights NGO Forum report compiled this year says participants at the meeting in Bulilima were also concerned about the aftermath of Gukurahundi.



“The victims of Gukurahundi need to be rehabilitated. Some may need counselling because they have not been able to deal with the trauma. Where possible, the perpetrators must be made to pay for the damages and the pain they caused,’’ was one of the recommendations made by participants in Bulilima.



The report says the “arrogance of the leadership in failing to acknowledge past wrongs came out as a major obstacle to reconciliation’’.



About 20 000 people are believed to have been killed during the Gukurahundi atrocities

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