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Tuesday, March 10, 2009

China reacts to 'illegal' US navy operations

Tue, 10 Mar 2009 07:48:11 GMT   |    PressTV



China responds to US claims that its ship was harassed, accusing Washington of illegally surveying off its southern island of Hainan.


The Chinese embassy in Washington issued a statement on Monday in response to Pentagon claims that one of its ocean surveillance ships was shadowed aggressively in international waters.

"The US navy vessel concerned has been in China's special economic zone conducting illegal surveying activities," the website of Hong Kong-based Phoenix Television quoted Beijing as saying in the statement on Tuesday.

"China cannot accept these baseless accusations. China demands that the United States halt all illegal surveying activities," reads the statement.

According to the Pentagon, five Chinese vessels maneuvered dangerously close to a US Navy ship in the South China Sea -- about 75 miles (120 kilometers) from Hainan Island -- on Sunday, approaching within 25 feet (8 meters) of the unarmed surveillance ship.

China says it has repeatedly used diplomatic means to demand that the US side halt its activities in the Chinese special economic zone -- where Beijing authorities have also sent vessels to carry out law enforcement activities.

The Chinese embassy also rejected the US claim that it had been operating in the high seas, adding that the Chinese government would issue a formal statement about the incident.

Republican Congress member Mark Kirk said "It's surprising in that the Chinese challenged a United States ship just two and a half weeks before the Obama/Hu Jintao summit" scheduled to be held in London in April.

Kirk recalled a similar challenge against former president George W. Bush just two months after he took office in January 2001 and urged a forceful response from the Obama administration.

He suggested that Washington once again send its surveillance ship USS Impeccable to the region escorted by a destroyer to send a clear message that it cannot be bullied in international waters.

US-China Working Group in the US House of Representatives will formally condemn the confrontation in a "strongly worded letter" to Chinese President Hu Jintao, Kirk continued.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Mossad linked to 9/11 attacks: Report

Mon, 09 Mar 2009 08:26:15 GMT     |     PressTV


At least 2,970 people died on the morning of September 11, most of them civilians.
New found information has implicated the Israeli Intelligence agency Mossad in the staging of the terror attacks of September 11, 2001.

According to a recent article published in the American Free Press proof weekly, the revelation that the cousin of alleged 9/11 hijacker Ziad al-Jarrah was in fact working as a longtime Mossad agent is that Israel had a hand in the terror attacks on US soil.

The New York Times recently reported that Lebanese national Ali al-Jarrah, a supposedly earnest Palestinian supporter, had been actually working as a highly valued spy for Israel over the past two decades.

Al-Jarrah reportedly admitted that he had been conducting covert espionage activities against Palestinian groups and the Lebanese Hezbollah since 1983.

"It is not the family's first brush with notoriety. One of Mr. Jarrah's cousins, Ziad al-Jarrah, was among the 19 hijackers who carried out the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001," said the Times.

His connections with one of the key masterminds of the terror attacks have fueled speculations about Israel's recruitment of people claiming to be Muslims as undercover assets.

Israeli connections to 9/11, according to the New York Times, can be traced back to the five 'dancing Israelis' who were witnessed jumping and high-fiving with shouts of 'joy and mockery' as Flight 11 and Flight 175 slammed into the World Trade Center in New York.

The Israelis were reportedly held in custody for 71 days before being quietly released after they were suspected of being Mossad agents.

Citing two former CIA operatives, the Forward weekly then reported that at least two of the detained Israelis were found to be members of a Mossad surveillance team.

"There was no question but that [the order to close down the investigation] came from the White House. It was immediately assumed at CIA headquarters that this basically was going to be a cover-up so that the Israelis would not be implicated in any way in 9/11," the weekly stated.

At least 2,970 people died on the morning of September 11, most of whom were civilians.

Former Italian prime minister Francesco Cossiga has touched on the issue, suggesting that the events of 9/11 were none other than a CIA-Mossad inside job.

"All the [intelligence services] of America and Europe ... now know well that the disastrous attack has been planned by the CIA and the Mossad in order to put under accusation the Arabic countries and in order to induce the western powers to take part ... in Iraq [and] Afghanistan," the Italian ex-premier was quoted by Corriere della Sera as saying.

Jewish personnel working at the center were reportedly advised to skip work on September 11, 2001.
His argument was further strengthened by leaked reports that employees of Israeli telecom firm Odigo -- which provides instant messaging services -- received a warning two hours before the attacks on the World Trade Towers and forewarned Jews to stay away from work that day.

Odigo headquarters is situated 2 blocks away from the former location of the World Trade Towers.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Economic crisis to topple capitalism: Poll

Sun, 08 Mar 2009 19:09:53 GMT  |   PressTV


Respondents to a Press TV poll say that collapse of capitalism will be the most likely scenario for the aftermath of the US economic crisis.


Almost half of some 8,001 respondents to the recent Press TV survey are of the opinion that the biggest US economic crisis since World War II will lead to the collapse of capitalism.

Meanwhile, 43 percent believed that the capitalistic system will modify itself and survive the crisis.

Some 12 percent of the respondents said that US President Barack Obama would defuse the crisis without any major modifications in the capitalistic system.

In mid-February, US President Barack Obama signed a record 787-billion-dollar bill to bail out the beleaguered economy and keep burgeoning financial woes at bay.

Meanwhile, US home prices plunged to a record 18.5 percent in December from a year earlier, with the pace of decline accelerating, according to the S&P/Case Shiller home price index. 

US Sergeant converts to Islam, Marries Iraqi woman

An interesting video, on the AFP News website of how US Sergent Blackwell married a Muslim woman in Iraq. His US Army superiors objected to the Sargeants wish to convert to Islam and marriage. The commanders tried to press charges against him.

Strange when the US Administration say they are there for the benifit of Iraqi people, who are incidentally mostly Muslim.

Anyway Sean is out of the Army and I wish Sean, Ehda and family all the best InshaAllah



US related truck triggers Tsvangirai road ordeal

Sat, 07 Mar 2009 06:34:37 GMT

Morgan Tsvangirai (L) and
his wife Susan
The truck involved in the death of Zimbabwean Premier Morgan Tsvangirai's wife belongs to a contractor for the US and British governments.

The truck was marked with a logo of the US Agency for International Development and was purchased using US government funds and its driver was hired by a British development agency, ABC News quoted unnamed American officials as saying.

The car crash took place around 5 pm on the highway from Harare to Masvingo when the articulated truck swerved from the oncoming lane into a three-car convoy in which the Tsvangirais were traveling, clipping their middle vehicle and causing it to overturn several times, police said.

The truck has been impounded by Zimbabwean authorities and its driver is in custody.

Tsvangirai and his wife, Susan, along with an aide and the driver were all rushed to Harare hospital for treatment following the Friday accident which occurred while they were en route to their hometown in Buhera district.

The premier's wife was declared dead upon arrival at a hospital in Beatrice, south of Harare. Tsvangirai, however, did not sustain serious injuries and was reportedly in a stable condition.

Later, President Robert Mugabe, accompanied by his wife, Grace, as well as Vice-President Joyce Mujuru and government officials visited Tsvangirai at the hospital, the BBC reported.

There was no immediate statement from Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) on the crash and party officials said there were no plans to issue one.

Heightened differences between Tsvangirai and Mugabe just three weeks after the formation of the national unity government following a bitter post-election standoff between the two have raised suspicions that the collision might have been politically motivated.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Fatal Tsvangirai crash ‘was not accident’, says MDC

HARARE, March 7 — malaysianinsider — source : Daily Telegraph

The wife of Zimbabwean leader Morgan Tsvangirai has been killed in a car crash in what his party claims may have been an assassination attempt.

Movement for Democratic Change leaders in South Africa said they suspected the head on collision with a lorry which left Prime Minister Tsvangirai injured and his wife Susan dead was not a genuine accident.

Rumours that the fatal incident was a botched assassination attempt spread quickly in the country which has a history of political killings.

It is understood that the couple were travelling to a rally in his hometown of Buhera yesterday afternoon when their car was hit on a road south of the capital Harare by a freight truck travelling in the opposite direction. Local reports said the driver of the truck had fallen asleep at the wheel.

Susan Tsvangirai died at the scene and her husband was taken to hospital with minor injuries, where he was visited by President Robert Mugabe. The couple been married for 31 years and had six children.

A statement issued by the MDC said: "We suspect that this is not a genuine accident and we appeal to Zimbabweans in South Africa to remain calm as facts continue to surface.

"We strongly believe that these are the evil acts of a few individuals bent on derailing the progress of the Inclusive government.

"We are, however, alive to the fact that a lot of Robert Mugabe's opponents died in suspicion road accidents involving army trucks."

Tsvangirai, who has survived three previous attempts on his life, was sworn in as prime minister last month but has a tense relationship with his former rival Mugabe.

A spokesman for Tsvangirai's MDC said there was growing unrest among supporters in Harare.

Mugabe brutally suppressed opposition until being forced into a power-sharing deal following last year's close election, and thugs from his Zanu-PF movement have been accused of carrying out hundreds of political murders.

"It's just going crazy, everyone's phones have been ringing constantly, clearly the suspicion is that this is not as innocent as it might appear," said a businessman who refused to be identified.

"We're hearing the MDC saying it was an accident, fine, if it is then it's tragic but we can accept that. But this is a typical way people are bumped off here. It'll be very difficult to calm people down."

There were also questions about why Tsvangirai's security detail had failed to prevent the crash.

"These guys are supposed to travel in a cavalcade and the prime minister's car is never in the lead, it's police or a dummy car," a Harare lawyer told The Daily Telegraph. "There are obviously too many questions at the moment, and that's where the trouble lies."

Tsvangirai, 56, had long feared that groups loyal to Mugabe would take his life. In 1997 an unidentified gang tried to throw him from a 10th floor office window, and in 2007 he was admitted to hospital after a brutal assault by police at a prayer rally.

Although she preferred to stay out of the limelight and was not herself politically active, Mrs Tsvangirai provided vital support for her husband, bringing him food in prison after his police beatings and nursing him back to health afterwards.

The demur Mrs Tsvangirai was also at her husband's side when he was sworn in last month, cutting a very different figure to Mugabe's extrovert wife Grace who appeared at the ceremony in a lurid leopard skin dress.

The son of a bricklayer, Tsvangirai had no formal education, worked in a nickel mine before becoming involved in politics. Although he supported Mugabe's rise to power and Zimbabwe's independence from Britain in 1980, he became an outspoken critic of the regime's excesses as head of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions. He formed the MDC in 1999, leading the party to 57 seats the following year and fighting in opposition for nearly a decade before joining the government this year.

Tsvangirai's wife killed in car crash

Fri, 06 Mar 2009 19:37:35 GMT | PressTV

Moragan Tsvangirai (center) and his wife Susan (l) in the Prime Minister's inauguration ceremony
Zimbabwe's Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai is rushed to a hospital after his car collided with a truck in an accident that killed his wife.

"Yes I can confirm that he was involved in a car accident along Harare-Masvingo road," Tsvangirai's spokesman, James Maridadi told CNN on Friday.

Tsvangirai along with his wife, an aide, and the driver, were all rushed to Harare hospital for treatment, Maridadi added.

The prime minister's wife, Susan, however, died in the hospital of the wounds she sustained doing the head-on collision. The extent of Tsvangirai's injuries remains unclear.

Morgan and Susan Tsvangirai, who got married in 1978, have six children.

The premier is said to have been en route to his rural home in Buhera, where he planned to hold a weekend rally, when the accident took place near Beatrice.

Tsvangirai, Zimbabwe's main opposition leader was sworn in as prime minister last month, after endless rounds of talks with his arch-rival President Robert Mugabe.

The leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) was offered the post of prime minister after his disputed defeat against Mugabe in the March 2008 presidential elections.

Tsvangirai won a majority of votes by a narrow margin in the election, but failed to secure more than 50 percent of the ballot while accusing the government of poll rigging.

The MDC leader initially planned to take part in a run-off against Mugabe in June, but withdrew from the elections, after his supporters were targeted in a campaign of violence led by the government. About 200 MDC supporters were killed.

After endless rounds of talks, mediated by South Africa's former president Thabo Mbeki, the two sides finally set aside differences and agreed on September to share power.

However mistrusts between the two arch-rivals continued as they sparred over who should control key ministries such as finance, information and home affairs.

The concerns were finally addressed when Zimbabwe's parliament approved a law that places Mugabe and Tsvangirai on a National Security Council that will allow all parties control of the security forces.

The two rivals' perpetual political row saw many opposition figures and activists killed and repeatedly arrested, including the premier himself.

US jobless claims surge to 8.1 percent






Sat, 07 Mar 2009 01:38:45
Colin Campbell, Press TV, Washington

Recession claims 651,000 new US victims

Fri, 06 Mar 2009 13:57:04 GMT      |    PressTV



Americans line up to talk to job recruiters at a career fair in Los Angeles. The US lost 651,000 jobs in February alone, the worst monthly loss since 1949.
More than 650,000 Americans lost their jobs in February as US employers feel the strain of an ailing economy, the Labor Department says.


Some 651,000 jobs were shed in February alone as the unemployment rate in the US reached 8.1 percent -- its highest in 25 years--, a Labor Department report revealed on Friday.

Job losses were spread across nearly all major industries with economists saying that they see no end to the recession in sight.

More Americans have lost their jobs every month since January 2008, creating a decline in payroll employment of about 4.4 million, with more than half having occurred in the last 4 months.

According to CNN, the February drop marked the worst six-month job purge since the end of World War II.

The US officially slipped into a recession in December 2007; however, its impact was disguised by an emergency tax rebate introduced by the administration of former US president George W. Bush last spring.

The erratic decline, economists say, turned into a full-out plunge on almost every front since September 2008, followed by a sharp fall in all economic indicators.

US February unemployment worst since 1983



Sat, 07 Mar 2009 00:57:32
Mike Kellerman, Press TV, Washington

Thursday, March 5, 2009

USM archaeologists unearth ancient Kedah buildings

SUNGAI PETANI, March 4 — Bernama

A group of archaeologists has unearthed two prehistoric buildings from the third century AD in the Bujang Valley recently.

The group, from Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM)’s Centre for Global Archaeological Research, found a building and a smelting factory, following an excavation project in Sungai Batu, Semeling.

Discovered in two areas near an oil palm plantation in Jalan Lencongan Merbok recently, the buildings proved that an ancient civilisation had existed in the Bujang Valley.

USM Vice-Chancellor Prof Tan Sri Dzulkifli Abdul Razak disclosed today that the discoveries were important historical findings.

He said the date depicted the early beginnings of commercial smelting activities in the Bujang Valley.

The excavation — conducted with the cooperation of the National Heritage Department with an approved grant of RM2.3 million by the unity, culture, arts and heritage ministry -- began on Feb 1, with a total of 70 participants, including USM students.

“This finding is solid proof that the prehistoric civilisation depended on basic knowledge, trade and large-scale industrial production,” he told reporters after a working visit to the site.

The excavation project was headed by USM Centre for Global Archaeological Research director Prof Madya Dr Mokhtar Saidin, and it resulted in two weeks of digging before the buildings were unearthed.

Dzulkifli said the project was part of a plan to develop the National Heritage Department Bujang Valley Heritage Park.

“The finding at Sungai Batu is different from artifacts found in other sites in the Bujang Valley. Previously, archaeologists only found buildings that had the characteristics of ancient temples.

“This latest finding at Sungai Batu I were of bricks believed to be from a house or office, and another at Sungai Batu II which functioned as a smelting factory,” he said.

According to Dzulkifli, both findings were important as it could unravel questions regarding the real date when civilisation started in the Bujang Valley.

Dr Mokhtar said coal samples found at the foundry were sent for Radiocarbon Dating tests at the Beta Analytic Inc, Florida, US, which confirmed that it dated back to the third or fourth century AD.

He added that the Sungai Batu area would be gazetted as the Bujang Valley Heritage Park next year, after research was completed.

The Bujang Valley area consists of almost 300 sq km of land from Gunung Jerai to Sungai Muda, Seberang Perai.

Captain James Low identified the Bujang Valley civilisation after discovering more than 20 temples in Kampung Bujang in 1840.

Research and excavation activities carried out found that the Bujang Valley was a main port in South-East Asia from the fifth century AD to 13 century AD.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

SPRM Penyiasatan Terpilih atau Prosedur Undang-undang (Bhg.1)

Forum ini membincangkan tentang perkembangan terkini SPRM dalam menangani gejala rasuah di Malaysia dengan membariskan Dr. Dzulkifly Ahmad, YB Salahuddin Ayub dan Mohd Nazree Mohd Yunus.




Sunday, March 1, 2009

Mr Mugabe turned 85 on 21 February but his party is being held a week later.

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe eats cake at his birthday celebrations
Mr Mugabe marked his birthday with a cake reportedly weighing 85kg (187lb)

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has vowed to continue seizing land from white farmers after a spate of "farm invasions" over the past month.
 
Speaking at a rally to celebrate his 85th birthday, he also promised to push for majority Zimbabwean ownership of companies operating in the country. 
Mugabe supporters raised $250,000 (£176,000) for a lavish birthday party in Chinhoyi, north-west of Harare. 
Zimbabwe asked African states for $2bn (£1.4bn) in economic aid just days ago.[read more]

[ related article : Tsvangirai may not attend Mugabe's fete ]

World's oldest axes found in Malaysia

Sat, 31 Jan 2009 17:18:08 GMT | PressTV

Mokhtar Saidin holding a 1.8 million-year-old artifact during a press conference on Penang Island, Malaysia
Malaysian archeologists say they have discovered the world's oldest axes during excavations in the country's northern state of Perak.

The stone axes were found along with other tools in June 2008 and were tested by the Japanese laboratory, Geochronology Japan Inc.

Experts say the result has a margin of error of 610,000 years and the find has to be approved by other experts as well, AP reported.

Studies showed that the seven axes dated back to about 1.8 million years ago, said director of the Center for Archaeological Research at Malaysia's University of Science Mokhtar Saidin.

"It's really the first time we have such evidence (dating back) 1.83 million years," he said, adding that the previous record belonged to 1.6 million-year-old axes found in Africa.

Archeologists are trying to find human skeletal remains at the site, but the humidity of the area has made it nearly impossible. The oldest bones found in Perak are at most 10,000 years old.

The oldest evidence of human existence in Malaysia were stone tools dating back to about 200,000 years ago which were found at the same site.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

BBC defends silence on Gaza appeal

Tue, 24 Feb 2009 06:34:09 GMT PressTV


Delivering humanitarian assistance to war-hit Palestinians has become a daily challenge due to a 19-month Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip.
The British Broadcasting Corporation defends a controversial decision not to broadcast a humanitarian bid that would benefit Gaza.

The BBC in January refused to air a charity appeal for the victims of a three-week Israeli war on Gaza and thus provoked tidal waves of condemnation in Britain.

Thousands of people held demonstrations in front of the BBC Broadcasting House in central London over the stance of the network.

Sir Michael Lyons, the chairman of the BBC Trust, however, argues that the British network was subjected to "undue external pressure" over the issue -- after senior members of the British parliament filed a motion in condemnation of the decision.  
 
"I began to feel that some of the political criticism of his decision was crossing the delicate line between fair comment and undue interference in the editorial independence of the BBC," Lyons told The Guardian on Tuesday.  
 
BBC Director General Mark Thompson was accused of "being complicit in denying humanitarian aid" to the people of Gaza when he turned down the screening of a commercial demo by the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC).

Lyons, however, defended the BBC verdict. "At that point I thought, and still do, that a red card was in order," he asserted.  
 
The decision reportedly left humanitarian agencies with a donation shortfall of millions of pounds.

The British network says in its defense that it refrained from broadcasting the "controversial" bid mainly because it would undermine its policy of impartiality.

The public-funded broadcaster nevertheless raised more than 10 million pounds to alleviate the humanitarian disaster in the Congo and nearly 18 million pounds for the Burma crisis. 
 
"I never thought I would live to see [the BBC] refuse to broadcast a humanitarian appeal on the grounds that it was controversial," said veteran Labour lawmaker Tony Benn, who was among those to criticize the broadcaster as an Israel appeaser.
 
 "The destruction in Gaza, and the loss of the lives of over a thousand civilians and children, has shocked the world as secretary general of the UN, Ban Ki-moon, made clear, when he saw the devastation for himself," he explained.

With more than a month after Israel declared an alleged ceasefire, the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip -- home to 1.5 million people -- is at its worst.

UN relief workers believe the humanitarian crisis in the strip is spiraling out of control as Palestinians are suffering from acute shortages of fuel, food and medical supplies.
 

Monday, February 23, 2009

MACC chairman’s son arrested for importing child porn

merdekablog.com | 23 February, 2009

Chairman of MACC (Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission), Ahmad Said has a son named Ahmad Shauqi, a Malaysia Airlines pilot, who was arrested in Adelaide Airport for importing child pornography material into Australia.

Could this charge have anything to do with Ahmad Said’s recent issuing of a public prejudgment that “there was strong and good evidence” against Selangor Menteri Besar Abdul Khalid Ibrahim in alleged wrongdoing in the maintenance of a luxury car and purchase of sacrificial cows? Is this why we did not hear much of the main stream media coverage on the arrest of Ahmad Shauqi?

Could the arrest have negatively impacted the independence of MACC for carrying out its duties? Could this charge be why the countless accusations brought up by the opposition leaders against BN are swept under the carpet with no investigation or follow-up actions? Is this the time for Ahmad Said to step down from his position for losing the public confidence on MACC?

In order to assure the impartiality and integrity of MACC, Ahmad Said should be interrogated for his ability to carry out his tasks freely and fairly.

*The name should be Ahmad Shauqi (first name), instead of Ahmad Said (surname).

Visiting pilot fined over child porn (ABC News, Feb 8, 2009)

A Malaysia Airlines pilot who was caught importing child pornography to Australia yesterday has faced court.

When Ahmad Said*, 25, arrived at Adelaide Airport yesterday he said he did not have anything to declare.

But customs officers searched his laptop and found child sex videos.

A handcuffed Said has faced court.

Magistrate Simon Smart told him the videos were cruel and violent and it was a disgrace that the married father of two had brought the material to Australia.

The magistrate said people like Said encouraged the market for child pornography.

Said, whose wife is expecting their third child, was fined $6,000.

He left court with a jumper over his head because of television camera crews.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Zimbabwe: Outrage Over 71 Ministers

Kholwani Nyathi | 22 February 2009 | Zimbabwe Standard (Harare)

Harare — THE government is still battling to accommodate the 61 new ministers and deputy ministers amid revelations the decision to inflate the number of ministers of state has caused friction in the two Movement for Democratic Change formations.

Mavambo, an opposition group yesterday launched a scathing attack on the bloated government saying it reflected "abundantly that this GNU was all about convenience for the politicians and not about delivery of service to the people".

President Robert Mugabe last week swore in five ministers of state and 19 deputy ministers bringing the number of ministers, and deputy ministers to 61.

When the 10 governors are sworn in at a date to be announced, this would bring the size of the government to 71 members.

Sources said government was ill-prepared for costs associated with such a bloated government.

Most of the ministers and deputy ministers were last week shown empty offices without furniture, while others were reportedly squatting at private offices.

Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai also told guests at the MDC-T's 10th anniversary celebrations on Wednesday that the government was virtually broke, adding some of the ministers had no "offices and adequate furniture."

The addition of the five ministers of state and deputy ministers who were not catered for in the Global Political Agreement (GPA) worsened matters and the role to be played by the new ministers of State remains unclear.

Sources said Mugabe pleaded with Tsvangirai and Mutambara to have his ministers accommodated as part of efforts to ensure "stability" in the country. Mugabe pointed out the appointments were necessary in order for him to manage the "dynamics in Zanu PF" in the face of a stiff resistance by some members of the old guard to the formation of the inclusive government.

But the move has angered members of the two Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and appalled the Mavambo formation.

Opposition MPs and senators, who feel their parties had gone back on their campaign promises for a leaner government also expressed anger over Tsvangirai and Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara's endorsement of the bloated government.

They accused their principals of going back on their promises of a leaner government, which they fear would cost them their seats in the next polls.

"When we were campaigning we were saying we want a cabinet of 15 ministers and during the negotiations the number went up to 26 and eventually 31 after the agreement," said an MDC-M MP.

"The number has now gone to 71 for the entire government yet we are beggars, the million dollar question now is how do you convince donors to rescue you when you have such a bloated government.

"It is unjustifiable and the people of Zimbabwe deserve an explanation. Nonetheless I wish the new government success and good luck."

The MP accused the leaders of the three parties of putting their own political interests ahead of those of long suffering Zimbabweans.

Job Sikhala, the former St Mary's MP and a senior member of the MDC-M came out in the open saying party supporters were "confused and dismayed by the circus."

"This was the most stupid thing to do," he said. "A collapsed economy like Zimbabwe cannot afford the luxury of 71 ministers, even a country as big as the United States with 51 states has one president, one vice president and a cabinet of less than 21 ministers."

Disgruntled officials, from the Tsvangirai camp who preferred anonymity also voiced their anger at the bloated government.

"This is a hard sell, what do we tell our supporters who have yearned for a small responsible government. This looks like a gravy train when the economy is in bad shape," they said.

Tsvangirai on Friday said Zimbabwe needs at least US$5 billion to kick-start the recovery process.

The priority areas would be to tackle the raging cholera epidemic that has killed 3 759 people and left 80 000 infected since August.

A staggering seven million people cannot feed themselves and schools and hospitals remain closed because the government cannot pay teachers and doctors.

Mavambo, which is transforming into an opposition party said now there was no difference between the two MDC formations and Zanu PF.

"At least, we are not surprised by Zanu PF wanting a big government, because we have lived with it for many years," said the party in a statement yesterday. "But it's hard to believe that the two MDCs who have, over the years, used every platform available to promise the people of this country that they stood for a lean and streamlined government can readily violate their own principles.

The movement said the parties' principals were concerned about "containing the in-fighting and ruptures amongst their followers, hence, the need to embrace everyone who matters as a way of silencing them and stopping the emergence of opposition within their own parties".

Ernest Mudzengi, a political analyst said Mutambara and Tsvangirai risked being punished by the electorate for agreeing to be part of an institution that would drain the already burdened taxpayers.

But the two MDC formations defended themselves saying the transitional government was temporary.

"We have serious misgivings with the size of the cabinet particularly at a time when the economy is in such a bad state," said Nelson Chamisa, the MDC-T spokesperson.

"The MDC-T policy is to have no more than 15 ministers. We believe in a lean, efficient and accountable administration. "

Chamisa who is the Minister of Information Communication Technology in the inclusive government added: "However, we have to appreciate that this is not an MDC government: it is a transitional and inclusive government. There are too many players involved. Our party can only have its say, not its way."

Edwin Mushoriwa of the Mutambara led MDC said the bloated government was the cost of getting Zimbabwe back to its feet.

"It's a compromise," he said. "If the MDC had formed this government alone, it would have been learner, it would have been less than a quarter of what we have but we had to compromise."

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Zimbabwe: Mugabe Birthday Bash in Trouble As Donors Shy Away.

Zimbabwe Standard (Harare) | 21 February 2009 | Harare - Zimbabwe

PREPARATIONS for this year's 85th birthday bash for President Robert Mugabe have reportedly hit a snag amid reports that the fund raising committee is struggling to raise enough resources for the event.

This year's 21st February Movement celebrations have been slated for February 28 in Chinhoyi.

However, less than a week before the celebrations are held, the fundraising committee is still running around for donors who can bankroll the event which has attracted thousands of people in the past years.

Reports say there is little enthusiasm from traditional party donors who have been alarmed by the establishment of the inclusive government. Some of these donors are politicians that have been left out of the new government.

Also, because of the changing political environment, parastatals which had donated to the celebrations in the past have been hesitant to do so.

Many of these parastatals now fall under the control of MDC ministers.

To make up for their huge shortfall, the fundraising committee has arranged a late dinner dance at Rainbow Towers in the capital on Wednesday night.

Zanu-PF Secretary for Youth Affairs, Absalom Sikhosana confirmed the event would take place.

"Yes, the event will be held at the Rainbow towers on Wednesday night and it is going to be a fundraising dinner," he said.

Sikhosana however said that they had been receiving donations from the country's 10 provinces although he refused to disclose how much the fundraising committee had managed to raise so far.

The donations are in the form of cash as well as cattle or foodstuffs, he said.

On reports that the fundraising committee was failing to meet its target, he said, "We are operating on a shoe string budget. The most important thing is not about donations.

"Even without a single cent, the celebrations will go on," he said.

He, however, disclosed that they were still expecting some donations from different parts of the country.

The 21st February movement celebrations have been criticised for consuming huge sums of money while most Zimbabweans are trapped in poverty.

However, Sikhosana dismissed criticism of the event. "The problem is that at times, we tend to politicise something that is totally apolitical. We are just after our noble objectives that we have set for ourselves and nothing else."

He would not disclose the noble objectives. Currently, about seven million Zimbabweans are in urgent need of food aid and face a severe threat of a cholera outbreak that has so far claimed more than 3 700 lives.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Zimbabwe PM to swear in his ministers

Fri, 13 Feb 2009 08:58:18 GMT | PressTV

Tsvangirai took office on Wednesday (February 11)
Zimbabwe's new prime minister is preparing to swear in his cabinet ministers, to act in the unity government with President Robert Mugabe.

Movement for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai's premiership, effective since Wednesday, comes a at a time when the country is struggling with a deadly cholera epidemic, ailing health system, and an economy buried by a diabolical hyperinflation.

Mugabe has yet to name 15 ministers, to work with Tsvangirai's 14 cabinet ministers.

Although the president has kept key ministries of defense, justice and foreign affairs reserved for his ZANU-PF party, a co-minister of home affairs assigned by the new premier will be tasked to jointly oversee a portfolio that controls the police with a Mugabe-appointed minister.

Disputes over the results of last year's election in March ended with a power-sharing deal penned in September, but the agreement froze over the allocation of ministries.

After endless rounds of talks, mediated by South Africa's former president Thabo Mbeki, the two sides finally agreed in September to share power.

Tsvangirai has chosen Tendai Biti, the lead negotiator for Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in talks over the power-sharing deal, to fill the challenging post of finance minister.

Senior MDC lawmaker Giles Mutseyekwa, a top air force official arrested three years ago in a discredited plot to assassinate Mugabe, to oversees the police.

The premier has also named party spokesman Nelson Chamisa as minister for information and technology, and a white farmer and former lawmaker, Roy Bennett, as the deputy minister for agriculture.

However, the extent of cooperation between the two sides has given rise to new concerns, when security forces chiefs snubbed the inauguration of Tsvangirai as the new Prime Minister.

The country's police, army, prisons and spy agency chiefs were absent at Tsvangirai swearing-in ceremony on Wednesday, a Press TV correspondent reported on Friday.

Zimbabwe army general, Constantine Chiwenga and commissioner of police Augustine Chihuri announced during last years March 29 general elections that they were not going to "salute the MDC leader even if he wins the election because he is a puppet of the United States and Britain.”

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