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	<title>The Zimbabwe Daily News &#187; Hani Yamani</title>
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		<title>A prelude to a Cabinet reshuffle?</title>
		<link>http://thezimbabwedailynews.com/2003/10/a-prelude-to-a-cabinet-reshuffle/</link>
		<comments>http://thezimbabwedailynews.com/2003/10/a-prelude-to-a-cabinet-reshuffle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Oct 2003 14:17:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Staff Reporter</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Leader Page]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hani Yamani]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Daily News published a story a year ago in which it was alleged that
$165 million had been paid out by the main contractor allegedly to bribe
various government officials in order to secure the contract for the
construction of the new Harare International Airport building.
The basis of the story was a letter written to President Mugabe [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Daily News published a story a year ago in which it was alleged that<br />
$165 million had been paid out by the main contractor allegedly to bribe<br />
various government officials in order to secure the contract for the<br />
construction of the new Harare International Airport building.</p>
<p>The basis of the story was a letter written to President Mugabe by Hani<br />
Yamani whose company, Airport Harbour Technologies, won the contract for the<br />
$5 billion project.</p>
<p>Yamani claimed in the letter that the equivalent of US$3 million (then about<br />
Z$165 million) had been paid to two Cabinet ministers, whom he named and<br />
several government officials to secure the contract for his company.</p>
<p>The authenticity of Yamani’s letter has never been challenged.<br />
Yamani originally singled out and named the Speaker of Parliament, Emmerson<br />
Mnangagwa, and former transport minister, Enos Chikowore and recommended<br />
that they be investigated thoroughly. Yamani said such investigations should<br />
not only centre on the airport construction deal, but should also cover<br />
other projects in which Mnangagwa, in particular, and members of the wealthy<br />
Joshi family were involved through Zidco, the Zanu PF trading company.</p>
<p>Mnangagwa and the Joshi brothers, Jayant and Manharlal, are directors of<br />
Zidco.</p>
<p>Yamani, who wrote a seven-page letter to Mugabe in July 1999, in which he<br />
detailed the involvement of the two ministers and several civil servants<br />
whom he accused of allegedly taking bribes, said Mugabe was fully informed<br />
of the deals involving his trusted lieutenants, Mnangagwa and Chikowore.</p>
<p>After The Daily News broke the story Yamani telephoned the paper from Jedda<br />
in Saudi Arabia to say that Mugabe should fully investigate the activities<br />
of the two men to avoid further losses to Zimbabwe. “The issue must be<br />
thoroughly investigated, with all corrupt people being rooted out,” Yamani<br />
said then. “In the past I didn’t have evidence about Mnangagwa’s and the<br />
Joshi’s bank accounts, but I have it now and I will help clean up Zimbabwe,<br />
a country that has a lot of potential but is being pilfered day in day out<br />
by these powerful people.”</p>
<p>Since then Zimbabwe has waited with bated breath for Mugabe to deal with<br />
these serious allegations of corruption. But, alas, the last time anything<br />
was ever said on this issue was in December when a government spokesman<br />
warned that Mugabe would sue The Daily News for defamation. At the same time<br />
Mnangagwa said he had instructed his own lawyers to institute legal<br />
proceedings against the newspaper, also for defamation.</p>
<p>In due course the police caused two Daily News staffers, Sandra Nyaira and<br />
Julius Zava to sign warned and cautioned statements in connection with a<br />
case of alleged criminal defamation of Mugabe. This was back in March.</p>
<p>Former deputy news editor, Julius Zava, has since died.</p>
<p>In the meantime, not a whiff has been heard of any measures taken by<br />
government to investigate the very serious allegations made by Yamani.</p>
<p>One of the greatest weaknesses of Mugabe’s rule has been his inability to<br />
get to grips with corruption which, of his own admission, is now rampant in<br />
Zimbabwe.</p>
<p>Mugabe has proved at the same time to be either totally incapable of or<br />
unwilling to deal with errant ministers. In his 21 years at the helm, Mugabe<br />
has fired only two Cabinet ministers, Edgar Tekere, after he was charged and<br />
acquitted of murder, and the late Herbert Ushewokunze whom he accused of<br />
having no sense of responsibility, discipline and conduct. But Dr<br />
Ushewokunze bounced back in a different portfolio. In 1982 Mugabe did fire a<br />
number of PF Zapu ministers, but for political reasons.</p>
<p>His preferred style has been to recycle even allegedly corrupt and patently<br />
non-performing ministers. He went to considerable lengths to rehabilitate<br />
some of the ministers who resigned in 1989 following exposure in the<br />
Willowgate Scandal. Some of the officials Mugabe has surrounded himself with<br />
are people of dubious credentials and performance. In some cases they lack<br />
moral rectitude.</p>
<p>It is in this context that his intriguing statement over the weekend must be<br />
analysed. Mugabe told revellers at Vice-President Simon Muzenda’s birthday<br />
bash in Masvingo that he no longer had confidence in some of his Cabinet<br />
ministers.</p>
<p>“If I look at the calibre of the ministers that I have, I do not trust<br />
 them,” he is reported to have said. Was this statement a prelude to yet<br />
another Cabinet reshuffle?</p>
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