Saturday, March 21, 2009

Donors can not rebuild the Economy

CANADA - TORONTO - The Global economic crisis has exposed the limitations of what the IMF and World Bank can do in times of real financial crisis.

The impact is such that any emerging economy in real need for economic assistance and revival has to re-think where it gets its funding and advice from.



The old adage that don’t mis-manage your economy to the point that the IMF and World Bank gets involved brings a whole new meaning to the chaos and crisis of today.



There have been various calls for reform of these institutions with China and the petro-dollar reach nations expected to bank roll the new monster institutions.



There are clear lessons and guiding trends for Zimbabwe and Africa in all this.



The most important lesson remains that don’t mis-manage your economy to the point that IMF and World Bank become your financial doctors.



Trends indicate that after decades of various economic structural programmes most African nations including Zimbabwe find themselves several steps back.



Whilst corruption and other faults maybe to blame it remains a challenge to identify a true success story in Africa driven by IMF and World Bank policies.



The success of any economic policy depends on a national “buy-in” of the policy. It can’t be imposed policy and expected to work miracles.



Policy must be developed with the Zimbabwe situation and circumstances in mind.



Zimbabwe is undergoing a very sensitive transitional phase both economically and politically.



A lot of hope has been placed resumption of donor aid, IMF, World Bank and other donors or sources of grant funds to finance the revival of the Zimbabwe Economy. This hope and anticipation may as well be misplaced.



The IMF and its related organizations have serious capacity issues now and are pre-occupied and re-inventing themselves to remain relevant in the age where they have come short and the Western Capital system has been forced to rely on Communist China to buy US Treasury bonds.



Sovereign Wealth Funds have demonstrated how they have replaced the World Bank and IMF as the lenders of last resort by bailing out some of the most respected Financial Institutions and playing a leading role in maintaining liquidity in the Global financial markets. Maybe Zimbabwe could change its focus from look “east” to “look Sovereign Wealth Funds”



The IMF and World Bank play a critical role is credit rating of nations and help create conducive business environment by their mere presence.



Beyond that the nation involved has to do all the hard lifting and the groundwork to create a solid economy. In short the recipient nation must have its own action plan, agenda and clear national course of direction.








An economy cannot recover just from Donors or from Aid. The donors and Aid can assist to avoid mass starvation and deaths but beyond that it’s not their purpose or responsibility.



Donor Agencies are designed to help the Economy of the Donating nation in as much as it may assist the recipient nation.



The key to a sound economic policy is drafting a economic national vision which takes into account the nation’s key resource - human capital.





Human capital plays such a central role that many nations which don’t possess any meaningful natural resources have managed to develop and dominate the world just because their human capital was properly harnessed and focused on achieving national economic independence and prosperity.



Zimbabwe due to the dramatic economic meltdown of the last 10 years has lost significant levels of human capital. In crafting a new National Economic vision there is need to identify where this human capital is and what or how much it will take to attract or re-attract this capital.



It is this human capital which will then help develop the necessary policies that can liberate Zimbabwe from donors, aid and any other forms of begging when the nation could easily be a Donor itself rather than a recipient.

Zimbabwe in need of an Economic blue print.

During political and economic crisis such as the one being experienced by Zimbabwe normally political developments get all the attention at the expense of everything else. There is talk of a new constitution and fresh elections in 24 months.

How ever there is no talk of an economic recovery conference or an economic recovery programme developed with the input of all stake holders. Zimbabwe needs a home grown economic recovery blue print that will guide not just the recovery of the economy but that will also act as the road map for greater economic prosperity.

The current main political players have divergent economic policies and are unlikely to admit failure or any inadequacy in their plans. Already there is conflict over the validity of the current Monetary Policy and the recently announced budget by the then acting Minister of Finance Senator Patrick Chinamasa. The disagreements indicate deep-rooted mistrust of each others policy and ideology. This will scuttle any hope of quick economic recovery.

The way around this is to have an all-stakeholder Economic recovery conference which will include Non Governmental Organizations, business leaders, Bankers, Donors, SADC and many others who can contribute towards mapping out an effective recovery plan and mobilize the human and financial resources required.

The importance of an Economic recovery conference is clear as it allows every stakeholder to take ownership and accept what role they can play in rebuilding Zimbabwe. Any policy developed in isolation and in private is likely to be resisted and resented which will result in a pro-longed economic meltdown.

The traditional Donors are currently overstretched and likely to use every excuse to delay provision of any assistance which Zimbabwe desperately needs. The key to this is to make this process less of a political development and more of a national economic effort beyond the political conflict. The hosting of an Economic recovery conference can assist in un-blocking lines of credit which can assist Zimbabwean banks and companies. There is need to send a clear signal to the international investment community that Zimbabwe needs investors and its ready to welcome them.

The recent trend of haphazard and piecemeal approaches to donors and regional bodies will create a long run problem for the nation and future generations. The process has to be transparent and inclusive in allowing new ideas ,networks and approaches to be used to ensure that the current efforts properly fit into any long term Economic blue print.

Whilst the current Government has a limited mandate which is meant to reduce suffering and assist in stabilizing the Economy it must lay down a clear foundation of how the Zimbabwe economy will be grown and expanded. There is need to identify the key personnel and economic areas which can drive an economy. It is currently unclear if Zimbabwe Economy will be driven by mining, agriculture, tourism, manufacturing or any other sector.

It is important that such sectors be identified and a clear action plan be put in motion .This process is critical in stabilizing the economy as it can attract investors ,increase production and create new desperately needed jobs. The multiplier effect of this is that the Government coffers can start to receive revenue in form of income and corporate taxes in addition to royalties from mining houses.

So whilst politicians get used to their new offices and their newly acquired status the Economic recovery plan has to be quickly devised beyond political lines. Whilst the Government of National Unity is a temporary stop gap measure the Economic blue print is more permanent in nature and as such it requires national and international input

Zimbabwe's GNU need to see beyond personalities

It appears my recent articles about the GNU have been misunderstood by many and deliberately distorted by others. As a Zimbabwean I am ready to accept whatever settlement that will end the suffering of fellow Zimbabweans. I am happy that finally there is light at the end of the tunnel .My hope and dream is to see that day when Zimbabwe can compete with other nations such as Japan, South Korea ,Germany and other nations that have risen from ashes to become economic powerhouses. However in our happiness we must always be alert and avoid falling into the same trap that led to ruinous policies all because as a nation we invested in personalities and not proper institutions.

This is a time to rebuild the country and rebuilding includes highlighting where Zimbabwe was going wrong .An example is the Roy Bennett case. Most people agree the law must take its course and there shouldn’t be double standards and selective application of the law.

It is widely reported in the media that the Zimbabwe Police has been instructed to stop all investigations for political violence and murders of early 2008. So naturally the question is if murderers can be forgiven and investigations stopped why cant the investigation of Roy Bennett be stopped ?Can you just imagine if in 1980, after signing the Lancaster House agreement, and after elections and at forming of cabinet stage, if General Peter Walls had arrested any of the returning comrades (including Mugabe ,Mutasa , Tekere etc) for alleged crimes committed against the Smith Government during the struggle??

Why cant Roy Bennett, Jestina Mukoko ,Gandhi Mudzingwa and others just be released with out further negotiations or arm-twisting. Is that asking for too much if you are in a “Unity” Government .

Roy Bennett could be tried whilst on bail on the understanding he is a senior government official who has returned voluntarily from exile. If he is to run away from being a senior government official then one should automatically wonder what is wrong with that Government.

The state has been investigating Mr Bennett for more than 3 years. As such one would expect there is no need to hold him a day longer without proceeding to trial. In short the state has had enough time to compile and document its evidence as such holding him in remand especially given Zimbabwe’s Prison conditions may be a way to adminster an extra- judicial death sentence merely by exposure to disease and other life threatening conditions endured in Zimbabwean jails and detention facilities.

The whole idea of a GNU is noble ,but we still have to assess its intention in the current set-up and the beneficiary of such a policy. Mr Mugabe was the biggest beneficiary of the GNU .Election loser rewarded with the Presidency . Life Presidency I may add. And yet Mr Mugabe has refused to give up leadership of his own party , on the basis that his party is too weak and too divided to tackle the opposition. And now we have just been told Mr Mugabe is not the problem?

A look at the Executive Presidency shows a scary trend. Those around Mr Mugabe in the 1980s devised the Executive Presidency on the hope that when Mugabe leaves they would enherit such supreme and total powers. Led by the late Eddison Zvobgo and assisted by some of the current mafia crop calling itself legal fundis Mr Mugabe was given more powers than a King would normally have. And all these Legal whiz-kids believed Mr Mugabe would leave soon and they will enherit the same powers. That was 22 years ago. And now we have the same mafia crew devising some scheme in the name of saving the people and molesting the constitution to accommodate Mr Mugabe

As indicated in my earlier article a Unity Government was still possible without Mr Mugabe as the (Life) President. Mr Mugabe has held his people at ransom just to remain in power .All the killings, murders, torture, rape, detentions ,abductions were done to allow Mr Mugabe to remain President. And the GNU as currently constituted only served to legitimize his quest for Life Presidency.

The issue at stake is the respect of the Constitution of the country. The idea that the constitution can be amended to suit an individual to remain in office is not just acceptable. If Zimbabwe is to join progressive nations like the ones above there is need to develop a culture of respecting the constitution as a guiding tool leading to a stronger and independent nation. The President must up-hold the Constitution and not undermine as we have witnessed under Mr Mugabe .

Mr Mugabe has ruthlessly amended the constitution several times just to remain in office. And as a direct result Zimbabwe is now a colony again. Zimbabwe is basically on life support and begging South Africa and other nations all because one man decided to die in office of President. Zimbabwe no longer has a credible currency or central Bank. If then we are going to correct this situation is it not a basic requirement that the man who presided over this must repent? He must retire and get some rest, spend time with his family.

At the centre of this crisis is how Mr Mugabe’s personality has been allowed to over shadow institutions including even his own party. An individual should not be allowed to be more powerful than his own party or institution he leads . In the USA the Clinton Family is very powerful ,but had to give way to Barrack Obama to lead the Democratic Party .This was so because the people said so. Mr Mugabe despite being Zimbabwe’s founding President he has not found any suitably qualified “Revolutionary” in his party to carry on the struggle on behalf of the party. The Clintons tried to plead with the people that they were the true custodians of democratic values in the same way Mr Mugabe claims to be the only and true custodian of the Revolution .

So at party level there is an institutional problem whereby the party cant replace its leaders in a timely and democratic manner. And the problem migrates from the party to the whole nation.

It is clear Mr Mugabe feels since his two vice-Presidents ( Muzenda and Nkomo) died whilst in office the same should happen to him. The only problem is that his party members and others are taking notes of these tricks and tactics . If not checked and condemned this could become an acceptable “Zimbabwean” way of doing things.
Zimbabwe requires high levels of donor aid and foreign direct investment to reach its potential. However for this to fully materialize there is need for the country to conform to internationally recognized standards of doing things. Zimbabwe has to earn the confidence of the international community and arresting a deputy minister designate ahead of swearing in is hardly the sign to show seriousness or evidence that there is “Unity”

The criticism of the GNU mechanics and implementation must not be mis-interpreted as calling for continued suffering of the people. The move is welcome in as far as it helps the nation heal and recover. However in as far as it serves to clandestinely convert the Republic of Zimbabwe into a monarch headed by King Mugabe Zimbabweans must be at liberty to expose that.


Gilbert Muponda is can be contacted at gilbert@gmricapital.com

Zimbabwe revised budget an encouraging start

The revised budget announced on 19 March 2009 by the Minister of Finance Tendai Biti marks an encouraging start in formulating a sustainable economic recovery path. The budget is particularly realistic as it seeks to restrict expenditure to revenue streams that are both realistic and achievable. Implementing balanced budget similar to what the Minister is proposing ,would be a difficult task but not impossible. If it can be implemented it will break new horizon in showing that at last a fiscally disciplined Government is in place.

Whilst its understandable that the budget does not meet all expectations this is normal given the over expectations surrounding the Minister’s new policies. It has taken close to 30 years for Zimbabwe’s Economy to decline this much and its simply expecting too much for one budget statement to correct all those policy mis-alignments.

The reduction of the budget from US$ 1.9 billion to US$ 1 billion clearly sends a message that the Government has to try and live within it means. This has a critical effect of limiting the need to use dis-credited measures such as the now in famous Quasi Fiscal Activities which were used to finance anything and everything without proper parliamentary approvals .Parliamentary approvals are critical in building confidence as they provide check and balance mechanism which is required wherever public funds are being distributed .

The down ward revision of the budget shows points that the new Government or the Minister is aware Zimbabwe can not fully rely of begging and borrowing without taking any serious steps to try and streamline expenditure in line with revenue streams available.

The revised budget clearly notes areas which urgently require funding . In particular the Minister pays attention to “declining productive capacity and hence massive de-industrialization, food shortages, loss in value of the local currency, corruption, deteriorating public service delivery particularly education, health, sanitation as well as public utilities and infrastructure”.

Whilst there is nothing new about these observations it is encouraging that the revised budget clearly highlights these problems and given the high expectations on the Minister many would be expecting him to follow through on this and ensure corrective measures are taken. A step that will unlock goodwill and additional resources from the International community.

The Minister rightly notes the need to boost production and exports which will create jobs, increase foreign currency reserves whilst increasing the tax base. Zimbabwe’s tax base which drives the Government revenue has shrunk to such levels that the Government is overtaxing the few tax payers still around. An economy that has largely been informalised like Zimbabwe can not sustain a decent Government revenue base. This is why its critical to create a conducive business environment that encourages investment and formal job creation.

Historically tax payments on income tax related to workers has been the major contributor of Government revenue. However due to the massive company closures and scale downs this had to be replaced by custom s duty and other related revenue as main source of Government funding. This is not sustainable nor is it desirable. Zimbabwe does not generate that much in foreign currency to keep importing. Therefore if there are no imports there is no import duty or other related revenue. This makes it imperative to expand and diversify the government revenue base in ways suggested in the revised budget .

The return to rule of law can assist to restore productivity on farms and encourage further investment into the Agricultural sector where Zimbabwe once had serious comparative advantages over the rest of the Region.

According to the revised budget “All economic enterprises, from the informal sector, street vendor, to the largest national corporates listed on the stock exchange, must henceforth trade and meet their tax obligations in foreign currency.” This measure confirms the earlier budget in formally accepting that the Zimbabwe dollar is now history.

This measure simply acknowledges reality even though it creates further hardships for the general public given the limited amount of foreign currency in circulation. The Zimbabwean financial system is not yet in a position to fully start lending in foreign currency which would be required to assist industry to get back on its feet.

This aspect serves to remind the need for restoring international relations. This will allow Zimbabwe institutions to tap into international capital and resources. Its encouraging to note that the Minister is aware of the need to re-engage the international community. One hopes his colleagues in the Inclusive Government will fully be supportive and stop acting in ways that antagonize well wishers in the international community .

Gilbert Muponda is can be contacted at gilbert@gmricapital.com

Monday, February 9, 2009

Is Zimbabwe now a one party state again?

Zimbabwe’s current transitional phase requires a clearly defined national vision and plan on how to get the country back on its feet. Any country’s most valuable resource is its people. This explains why some countries which lack natural resources such as oil, minerals and land have managed to rapidly develop and become leaders in many areas. It is because of the human capital which was properly harnessed and put to national use. Japan rose out of ashes of world war to become the second biggest economy. There is no reason why Zimbabwe can not rapidly recover as long as there are proper plans and vision in addition to national will. The key is respect of the peoples will and aspirations.

Those in Government of National Unity (GNU) must be reminded of 22 December 1987 when ZANU swallowed ZAPU and the Zimbabwean dream vanished just like that. Being in government of a national unity which resembles a one party state is not a license to ruin and loot the country. Even up to this day 22 December is a National holiday to celebrate the death of democracy .

A Government cant just be about “ power sharing”. The political parties and leaders have a duty to protect national democratic space .And obviously you cant do that by colluding to share power with an election loser . Its just unbelievable that the election loser gets to remain President with added powers of “appointing” and “firing” a Prime Minister.

Whilst the GNU may avoid total collapse of state institutions its whole implementation is scandalous in that the election winner is being co-opted into government by the loser. This sends a wrong message about elections ,normally the Loser must sit out and get time to re-organize whilst the winner is given a chance to fail or succeed by being allowed to implement its policies.

The law of unintended consequences comes into effect under such circumstances. The intentions are noble and in the people’s name. However the most likely outcome is that the political rivals cozy up to each other and become partners in protecting self interest as defined by the term sharing power and not sharing responsibility to deliver a better Zimbabwe.

Zimbabwe needs a general culture shift on the purpose and conduct on how citizens are treated. Obviously people didn’t vote for a GNU. But that’s what they are getting.
Who is going to keep the GNU accountable to the people since rival politicians are now on the same train?

Taxation without representation must end. The Zimbabweans in the Diaspora have played a critical role in sustaining the Economy under difficult conditions. There is need to formally acknowledge this role by allowing them full rights and privileges as those Zimbabweans based in Zimbabwe .This means a new constitution which allows dual citizenship and allows those in the Diaspora to vote must be developed.

As a supporting measure there is an urgent need to review and amend Zimbabwe's immigration regulations especially with regards to dual citizenship .A significant number of Zimbabwean Non Resident Citizens (NRCs) are now settled in foreign lands and may be less attracted to going back to Zimbabwe despite their skills being needed back home. The Indian government recently introduced the "Overseas Citizenship of India (OCI)" scheme in order to allow a limited form of dual citizenship to Indians.

This is a model that Zimbabwe could adopt with the necessary adjustments. This can open channels to allow NRC to vote and possibly have exclusive members of parliament representing non-resident Zimbabweans who are in the Diaspora. This measure will go a long way in showing commitment on the part of the authorities to incorporate policies which serve all Zimbabweans, not just those in Zimbabwe .This will also address the current scenario which appears to be taxation without representation whereby the NRCs have kept the Zimbabwe economy going yet they cant vote.

One must also remember that the ability to have mobility with regards to where people want to move and work is a part of their human capital. Being able to move from one area to the next is an ability and a benefit of having human capital which Zimbabwe may miss if not proper measures are taken to address how non-resident Zimbabweans are treated. Restricting people from being mobile would be to inherently lower their human capital.

It is clear that a quick make-over of the shock therapy ad-hoc policy implementation will not deliver the Economic prosperity that Zimbabweans seek .There is need for more comprehensive policy changes to usher a modern, progressive, more tolerant democracy to build a just, prosperous, peaceful society where people's human and property rights respected. This is critical to build confidence among the NRC and encourage investments by the NRCs.

Individual capital, also known as human capital, comprises inalienable or personal traits of persons, tied to their bodies and available only through their own free will, such as skill, creativity, enterprise, courage, capacity for moral example, non-communicable wisdom, invention or empathy, non-transferable personal trust and leadership.


Educated individuals, who often migrate from poor countries to rich countries seeking opportunity. This movement has positive effects for both countries: capital-rich countries gain an influx in labor, and labor rich countries receive capital when migrants remit money home. This has been the case in Zimbabwe and there is a clear need to formally recognize this by putting in place incentives to encourage more remittances and investments back home.

When workers migrate, their early care and education generally benefit the country where they move to work. And when the environment starts improving workers are normally expected to go back and use newly acquired skills and experience in developing their home country. This does not happen by accident or hap-hazardly. It requires a national effort and proper co-ordination.

The "brain drain" or "human capital flight" occurs when the most talented individuals (those with the most individual capital) depart for education or opportunity to the colonizing or historically related country (historically, Britain and France and the U.S.). Zimbabwe has been going through such a drain over the last 10 or so years. It will take a serious effort on the part of the New Government to lure back all those skilled doctors, nurses ,teachers, engineers, architects etc. Patriotism alone is not enough to draw back a majority of these skilled professionals. There is need for proper co-ordination and deliberate effort to make this reality.

Zimbabweans have a right to ask whether what they voted is what they are getting . If the people voted for MDC and they get a GNU what does that say about respecting the people’s wishes and aspirations? It remains to be seen whose interests the GNU will be serving as Zimbabweans seek a normal life. However one thing that’s clear the GNU has just proven that rigging elections ,will be rewarded by a seat in a resultant Government.

Gilbert Muponda is an Entrepreneur based in Canada. He is CEO and Co-Founder of 3MG MEDIA Limited. He can be reached at;
Email: gilbert@gilbertmuponda.com
Skype ID: gilbert.muponda
Phone: 1-416-841-5542

Monday, December 15, 2008

Gilbert Muponda acquires Zimdaily.com

UK - LONDON - Entrepreneur Gilbert Muponda has acquired a 50 % stake in ZimDaily Media, which runs Zimbabwe’s top daily online news site ZimDaily.
ZimDaily Media runs Zimbabwe’s other leading online brands including www.zimface.com and Zimbabwe’s number one online radio www.zimnetradio.com.
The ZimDaily Media Group has been immediately strengthened by the addition of www.zimtelegraph.com a reliable, focused and in depth news website targeted at anyone serious about news. The Zimbabwe Telegraph is partially going live today and will be fully launched this weekend.

The acquisition by Muponda has resulted in the creation of a new media group with 15 web sites, making it a formidable advertising channel and infrastructure, one of the biggest such operations in Africa.

In 2001 Gilbert Muponda led a team of three young professionals from the financial services industry to set up ENG Capital (PVT) LTD, then Zimbabwe‘s fastest growing Financial Institution.

The firm was set up to serve a niche market in provision of advisory services, asset management, corporate finance and private equity. He was the first victim of the Anti-graft political campaign meant to silence and eliminate independent businesses deemed undesirable by the Government of Zimbabwe in 2003-4. ENG was closed and its assets parceled out to politically well connected individuals. He is currently CEO of GMRI Capital which he founded in 2007.

The new group will operate under the 3MG Media Limited brand. ZimDaily founder Munamato Maisva becomes the Operations and Technical Director and Gilbert Muponda will be Chief Executive Officer.

Munamato holds BEng Degree in Telecommunications, Media and Internet Engineering, Msc in Computer and Internet Security and works for the World's leading computer Software company.

They will both sit on the Group’s Editorial Board.

The creation of 3MG Media seeks to establish a leading multi-media content service provider, online marketing systems technology developer and one of the largest electronic distributors of African news, events and information globally.

3MG Media is blessed with a highly diverse group of committed professionals, dedicated to deliver trustworthy and reliable news. We find strength in the diversity of our staff. Our team has accrued collectively over 15 years of experience in generating value through Internet based driven enterprises. We have experienced marketers, web site developers, technicians, editors, and accomplished journalists.

The 3MG Media Limited business team represents more than 50 years in the fields of journalism, investment banking, advisory services, accounting, marketing, advertising and information technology.



The Group will rely on new technology and skill which will allow the group to operate with a fraction of the staff and budget of media companies of similar scope and size. The 3MG Media business enterprise model is based on a 6-level revenue stream of marketing, branding, advertisements and transactions, subscriptions, information sales and technology services which include website development and hosting for external clients.

As a reader and visitor you can directly help develop a strong continental and global voice platform, an alternative for Zimbabwe and Africa by supporting the various 3MG Media brands which will be soon listed on www.3mgmedia.com .

Gilbert Muponda will be available on ZimDaily forums www.zimdailyforum.com from today to answer all questions which our valued readers may have.

Thank you for your support and encouragement, we appreciate.

Munamato Maisva
munamato@zimtelegraph.com
Skype: zimdaily

Gilbert Muponda
gilbert@gilbertmuponda.com
Skype: gilbert.muponda

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

I just had to respond (part 2)

My Second response PART 2 - I wrote my first article not seeking to correct history or self defense. I simply had to state facts and then people can digest for themselves. I have been silent for 5 years and could have been silent for another 5.But who would benefit from my silence?

The ENG issue can not and should not be viewed in isolation but rather in context of the general occurrences in Zimbabwe during that period up to present day. Respectable business people were labeled all sorts of names.

Many have kept silent not because they are guilty but they chose privacy. If Zimbabwe is trying to build a better and progressive nation these business people should be encouraged to share their stories and experiences. It is only after we hear their version of events can we create a credible value system .I am encouraged by the emails sent to me, especially the hate mail which I find particularly motivating as I believe it allows further exchange of divergent views which hopefully will allow us develop a more vibrant and progressive nation.

I personally have nothing against Dr Gono; my assumption is that he is just doing his job. And as such what needs to be challenged are the man?s policies not his person. Dr Gono has presided over the massive brain drain in the financial sector particularly. During that period he has succeeded in transforming the RBZ into the Reserve Bank of ZANU (PF). In short he has turned the central Bank into the party?s finance department. The effect of this is that now Zimbabwe does not have a
central Bank. It is important that this be scrutinized and exposed because Zimbabwe is undergoing a transformation and the new order needs to avoid this.

Is it going to be acceptable for MDC or Mavambo/Kusile transform the country?s central bank to a tool to effect the party?s agenda without parliamentary oversight and approval? The concept here is to look at the principle and not the person.

Zimbabwe?s national institutions are being corrupted to such an extent that unbelievable activities are now
just being viewed as normal or acceptable. Why would the Central Bank directly buy plasma TVs and cars for the judiciary officers? What does the Central Bank or its officers/Governor expect in return for the favor? Is this not supposed to be done thorough normal parliamentary budget allocation to various ministries? It is this trend of rule bending and goal post shifting that results in the economy mal-functioning because everything is just unpredictable.

The country can only attract investment and investors if there is rule of law, not rule by law. The idea of changing rules just to suit an individual or isolated incident is disastrous. Zimbabwe had a fairly well developed legal system; the companies Act, Banking Act and Collective Investments Act were well thought regulations governing Banks, Companies and other financial institutions. But during the so-called anti-graft campaign these rule and regulations were over-ridden in dramatic fashion. This brings instability and increases capital flight and brain drain.

This is beyond personalities. It?s beyond ENG. This is about confidence building and stable institutional frame work that assists Zimbabwe to regain former glory. Even though land reform was necessary, during the fast track land reform it became normal for individuals to take the law into their own hands. This set a bad precedence .Once it becomes clear that there is selective application of the rule of law then there is no incentive to uphold rules and
regulations.

As part of the stage managed anti-graft campaign of 2003-4 I was arrested after a team, masquerading as RBZ Inspectors led by a soldier-(Major Santu) ransacked ENG Capital. I later learnt Major Santu was in fact a soldier ?seconded? by the Joint Operations Command (J.O.C) to ?assist?Dr Gono run the RBZ. Now if you have soldiers running the Central Bank what does that tell you about all other departments of Governments? It is clear the soldiers and security services are now running the country, ignoring the normal rules and regulations that would make Zimbabwe an attractive investment
destination. Now why would any normal country have soldiers manning the Central Bank?

It?s just unfortunate that a majority of Zimbabweans are now starting to know what J.O.C is. This is so because when events are happening to someone people chose to ignore and not pay attention as to what exactly is the allegation and who is doing what to whom. The point is Zimbabweans need collective national value system and when ever that value system is violated people must speak out and take action to defend that value system. That is how strong societies are built. Since time immemorial a successful lawless society is unheard.

Zimbabwe?s current problems may pass but they will return as long as there is no cultural shift amongst Zimbabweans themselves. The notion that it only happened to Muponda or Mawere there fore it?s not my problem is disturbing. When the anti-graft operation was implemented it was welcomed as a messianic mission ridding the nation of all ills.
Zimbabweans only started to be concerned when it got closer to them personally when Operation Murambatsvina, Operation

Sunrise Operation Mavhotera papi were being implemented. The fact is as a nation we must confront situations with facts and voice concern where ever the rule of law is being ignored.

There is need to look at the full picture and assess the implication of whole sale arrest of business people for the purpose of investigating them. The norm else where is to investigate then arrest if there is a case. The simple failure to apply the laws uniformly has accelerated the economic decline.

Businesses destroyed or taken over Royal Bank, Intermarket, Barbican, Intermarket, Rapid, Sagit, Africa Resources, Century Bank. And this all happened within a space of less than 6 months. Jobs were lost.
Business people were scandalized, arrested or haunted out of the country. The list is rather long but it includes such luminaries as Dr Makoni. Mawere, Mushore, Makoni, Chekeche, Jowa, Sachikonye, Chando, Durajadi, Simba, Muzwimbi, Nyemba, Vingirai, Zimuto, Makamba.

Is this normal to see a whole generation of entrepreneurs scandalized and lose all creditability and all at the same time? What are the implications on foreign investor sentiment when they see such hostility to local investors? These are respectable and pioneer first generation entrepreneurs who find them selves scandalized and some how classified criminal even though there is no clear evidence against them.

It is clear there is need to look beyond individuals and start reviewing wider concepts that are at play. Individuals come and pass, therefore its not worth the effort or attention to just focus on the individual whilst ignoring the irreparable damage being done to national institutions and their credibility.