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Zimbabwe Christian Alliance conducts community service delivery meetings – Chronicle

Zimbabwe Christian Alliance conducts community service delivery meetings


Sukulwenkosi Dube-Matutu, [email protected]

THE Zimbabwe Christian Alliance (ZCA) through its local peace committees is conducting dialogue meetings between community members and service providers across the country in order to address pressing service delivery issues that continue to haunt communities.

In an interview after a recent dialogue meeting in Gwanda, ZCA executive director, Reverend Useni Sibanda, said local peace committees were supposed to craft their 2024- 2026 plan.

He said they have conducted meetings in Matabeleland South, Matabeleland North and Midlands Provinces. Reverend Useni said the main challenge faced by communities across all provinces is the availability of water. ZCA has established 46 local peace committees in eight provinces across the country.

“As ZCA we have engaged in the process of facilitating dialogues between the community and service providers so that there can be concrete actions that can be taken to address outstanding issues of service delivery,” he said. “We were in Gwanda where we had a dialogue between residents and councillors. We also had pastors and church organizations. The challenges are peculiar to every district but the cross cutting issue has been the availability of water.

“Communities in both rural and urban areas have cited the challenge in accessing water. There is a need for construction of dams, drilling of boreholes among other strategies to improve water supply. Another issue is of sanitation and toilets. For example in Gwanda some areas rely on communal toilets, which are in a poor state,” he said.

Rev Useni said such issues should be resolved as they were causing conflicts within communities, adding that peace committees will facilitate dialogues to raise concerns in a civilized manner.

This will also provide an opportunity for service providers to be answerable to their clients. Reverend Sibanda said there were also conflicts related to climate change issues.

“Many parts of the country have been affected by drought, which has been induced by climate change. In most cases drought situations lead to conflicts.

“Our local peace committees will be instrumental in ensuring that food distribution exercises are conducted peacefully and fairly,” he said.

“Our strategy is to ensure that the peace committees are visible and significantly contribute towards promoting and ensuring peace. Because of the drought we will people scrambling for the little resources available leading to conflicts,” he said.

Gwanda Local Peace Committee chairperson, Mr Davis Mwera said other issues the committee would want to address under their new two year plan include issues of open defacation caused by open air worship and illegal settlements that are sprouting in the town.

He said there was also a problem of illegal mining activities that are causing damage to infrastructure and threatening humans and livestock. Mr Mwera said refuse collection and disposal of waste have also remained major concerns for residents.

“As we move to craft and roll out our two year plan we hope to record positive results. In the past we have recorded some progress from our interventions,” said Mr Mwera.

“We facilitated establishment of Spitzkop North police base, which has helped to reduce crime in the area. We have also managed to establish peace committees in some problematic areas as a mitigation strategy,” he said.

-@DubeMatutu

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Mai Titi Breathes Fire On £30000 Creditor: “Mildred, You Won’t Get a Cent From Me!” | Heathrow Backlash – ZimEye – Zimbabwe News

Mai Titi Breathes Fire On £30,000 Creditor: “Mildred, You Won’t Get a Cent From Me!” | Heathrow Backlash

29 April 2024

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By Lesley Dube | ZimEye | In a fiery statement delivered from inside detention at Heathrow Airport, ZANU PF socialite Mai Titi vehemently declared her refusal to repay a reported £30,000 debt to a woman who allegedly reported her for an immigration offense.

A statement comes at a time when more complaints were ganging up at the time of writing to file more reports against her while she is inside the detention at the London airport, Heathrow.

Mai Titi’s impassioned speech addressed a myriad of issues, including financial matters and personal grievances. She vehemently denied any intention of repaying the debt, asserting that she had already suffered significant losses due to a previous theft.

“I sold the trucks and I also sold the car that I had. I sold them on Facebook right here. I even sold the Mercedes-Benz that I had because I was trying to cover things behind the scenes, not cover the money but cover the 30,000 that had been stolen by the thief I lost everything…” she stated.

She then delved into the intricate details of her financial struggles, alleging mismanagement and deceit by various individuals. Mai Titi accused her creditor, Mildred, of betrayal and collaboration with others against her.

The socialite spared no words in her scathing critique of Mildred, labeling her as deceitful and promiscuous. She also criticized Mildred’s alleged involvement in gossip and personal attacks.

Mai Titi adamantly refused to acknowledge any debt owed to Mildred, dismissing her claims as baseless. She challenged Mildred’s character and credibility, asserting her own superiority and success as a single mother.

Furthermore, Mai Titi questioned Mildred’s motives and accused her of attempting to sabotage her life and career. She pledged to fight back against Mildred’s actions and to uphold her own reputation and integrity.

The dramatic declaration from Mai Titi, delivered amidst a tense atmosphere at Heathrow Airport, marks the latest development in a saga rife with personal conflicts and financial disputes. As tensions continue to escalate, the fallout from Mai Titi’s statement is sure to reverberate across social and political circles in Zimbabwe. Stay tuned for further updates on this unfolding story.- ZimEye

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‘One of the most racist things I’ve ever seen’: how RIBA is decolonising its HQ – The Guardian

Part Egyptian tomb, part masonic temple, the 1930s headquarters of the Royal Institute of British Architects has always exuded a cultish air. Sited on London’s illustrious Portland Place, among embassies, consulates and oligarchs’ pieds-à-terre, it is a fittingly regal headquarters for a chartered profession that has long styled itself as an exclusive gentlemen’s club.

If you have ever been to an event there, you probably won’t have paid much attention to the dull brown mural at the back of the auditorium. It’s a dirty, poorly lit and badly scuffed screen, which tends to fade into the background of the surrounding art deco pomp. And there’s a good reason that the RIBA hasn’t wanted to you look at it too closely.

“It’s one of the most racist things I’ve ever seen in my life,” says Thandi Loewenson, a Zimbabwe-born architectural designer and researcher. “And that’s saying something.”

Take a look, and you’ll see groups of semi-naked figures from all corners of the British empire, cartoonishly depicted as primitive savages with exaggerated features, huddled in timid submission around the edges of the mural. In the centre, radiating above a map of Britain like some heavenly vision, is the RIBA council, depicted as a professional parliament of identical faceless figures. Floating between the professionals and the natives, in a kind of architectural halo, are the symbolic buildings of empire: the government buildings of Pretoria, the viceroy’s palace in New Delhi, the old parliament house of Canberra, and other works authored by the institute’s distinguished members.

“It’s a very useful document,” says Loewenson. “It celebrates the role of the architect within the structures of colonialism. The buildings depicted here are literal repositories of stolen land and exploited labour.” But, in her eyes, there is something crucial missing from the tableau. “What’s absent are the sites of material extraction themselves – the mines, farms, plantations and jails, from where all of this wealth was violently taken.”

So she has come up with a solution. Along with several other designers from the colonial diaspora, Loewenson has been commissioned as part of a new exhibition, Raising the Roof, curated by Margaret Cubbage, which aims to shine a spotlight on the colonial symbolism embedded throughout the RIBA building – and propose ways that these histories might be interpreted and untangled.

Loewenson’s response is a startling mural of her own: a shimmering drawing etched into panels of graphite, conceived as “another layer” to be superimposed on the problematic Jarvis mural in the auditorium. Her image, created in collaboration with Chinese designer Zhongshan Zou, is a reinterpretation of a 1921 drawing of a lead and zinc mine in Kabwe, Zambia, called Broken Hill. It was one of the first sites of British colonial mineral extraction and it’s now one of the most toxic places on the planet. As a result of decades of mining, 95% of the local population have elevated levels of lead in their blood, leading to lifelong health conditions. Last year, the UN’s special rapporteur on human rights described Kabwe as one of the world’s “sacrifice zones”, where corporate environmental contamination has created shadowlands of misery.

Loewenson’s speculative proposal would see the mural daubed with layers of graphite – “this messy, slippery mineral, extracted from the earth” – so that fragments of the old world order, depicted beneath, would glimmer though the image of the toxic landscape that it created. “Traces of the original mural can still be seen,” she writes in an accompanying text. “The ghosts of buildings glow through the image, now contextualised by slag heaps and accompanied by the much less glamorous infrastructure of extraction that supported their own construction.” She won’t, sadly, be let loose on the mural itself, in this Grade II*-listed building, but it is a provocative proposition.

Built in 1934, to the designs of George Grey Wornum, the RIBA was conceived as a monument of imperial splendour. It was designed as a showcase of colonial riches, featuring African marble on its processional staircase, Indian silver grey wood on the floors of its halls, and Australian walnut and Canadian maple on the walls of its council chamber. In the building’s Florence Hall upstairs, the rear wall is lined with a carved wooden screen that stands as a hymn to the raw materials of the imperial dominions – a stately billboard advertising exotic things that architects could specify in their projects. One panel depicts a South African mine, while another shows a Canadian lumberjack hacking down a pine tree, of which the screen itself is made.

Architect and designer Giles Tettey Nartey, who grew up in Ghana, has responded to the panels with a series of beautiful, organically shaped stools, carved from the same Quebec pine as the screen, but stained a dark, inky black. They are arranged like little islands around a meandering table, where a blank tablet is fixed in the centre, awaiting a future interpretation panel.

“I didn’t want to impose a literal alternative to the Dominion Screen,” says Tettey Nartey, “but instead create something that would help to facilitate multiple conversations. I want people to pull up a stool, discuss, and come up with a collective response to the screen.” He says the 17 stools represent the countries “left out” of the carved panels (which feature Australia, South Africa, India, Canada and New Zealand), making us think about “other places that also had the British ideal of architecture imposed upon them”.

Hanging on the wall nearby, India-born architectural designer and artist, Arinjoy Sen, has come up with a dazzling, psychedelic alternative to the Jarvis Mural. He thrusts the Indigenous subjects of the empire centre stage, transforming them from suppressed savages in the margins to active players in a colourful carnival of creativity. Flanked by trees of Burma teak and west African mahogany, his drawing unfolds as a riotous, intricately detailed scene that samples numerous details from around the building to form a kaleidoscopic spectacle, shining with sunny optimism. The RIBA should commission a full-size version of it at once (preferably embroidered, like Sen’s delightful contribution to last year’s Venice Biennale) to replace its drab, racist mural downstairs.

Finally, artist and writer Esi Eshun contributes a poetic film that combines archival images with her own thoughtful commentary as she wanders through the building. She examines a number of the colonial structures depicted in the contentious mural and unpicks their histories, in relation to the native peoples on whom these buildings were “at once imposed and denied”. The retractable screen is a “cartography of desire and despair”, she says, which, as it rises out of and lowers back into the floor, evokes “imperial cuts and continuities, partitions and enclosures”.

The timing of the exhibition couldn’t be more apt. It opens in the week that Lesley Lokko receives the RIBA gold medal – the first Black woman to be awarded the hallowed gong – and at a time when the institute has its youngest and first ever Black president at the helm, Nigeria-born Muyiwa Oki. It is a moment of reckoning for the 190-year-old institution. This year also marks the 90th anniversary of the building’s completion, which sees the launch of RIBA’s capital project to refurbish and restore it, for which this exhibition will hopefully provide useful food for thought.

“This is not just an exercise in institutional self-flagellation,” says architectural historian and head of the London School of Architecture, Neal Shasore, who is advising on the conservation management plan. His research into the history of the RIBA building led the institute to add interpretation panels to some of these problematic features, and it also inspired the origins of the new exhibition. “These commissions are serious, nuanced responses to the complexity of the building’s colonial entanglements.”

He would ultimately like to see the “egregiously racist” Jarvis Mural taken down, acceded into the RIBA’s collection to be displayed contextually, and replaced with a new commission. “It’s not about pretending it wasn’t there, or ‘cancelling’, or any of these boring discursive tropes,” he says. “You can make it more present, and find imaginative ways of rewriting some of those problematic narratives, completely transparently. This is not a process of erasure.”

Barely anyone had noticed these elements in the building before, he argues, and this is an opportunity to highlight them, as well as open up the wider conversation. “From the Confederate monuments in the US, to the Rhodes Must Fall campaign, to the Colston moment in Bristol, we’re finally seeing these aspects of our built environment, and reflecting much more fundamentally on what the nature of architecture is – and the ways it can sometimes be co-opted for nefarious ends.”

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‘South Africa’s Corruption Whistleblowers Should be Protected’ – VOA Zimbabwe

Martha Ngoye was the legal executive at the South African state owned Passenger Rail Agency when she blew the whistle on unlawful government contracts worth millions. But instead of being honoured as a corruption buster she was fired by her employer.

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