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Harare International Airport

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Posted on June 13th, 2011 by Bev Clark. Filed in Reflections, Uncategorized.
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I’ve just read Michael Laban’s blog on bribery and corruption, both of which are fueled by the abuse of power. I’m reminded of an incident that I witnessed at the Harare International Airport on Saturday. While we were loading luggage into my car an airport employee was busy clamping the wheel of the vehicle next to mine. When I expressed surprise at a vehicle being clamped in the actual car park rather than in the designated clamping zones, he said he was doing so on account of the vehicle having parked badly (the misbehaved car straddled two parking bays). Whilst I’m totally for drivers behaving respectfully, like actually parking properly in the parking bays, no where on the airport premises are there any signs saying that vehicles will be clamped for parking badly. This is exactly what Michael Laban illustrates in his blog; the airport employee decided to abuse his position, whether for an appropriate reason or not.

The very unprofessional Sunday Mail

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Posted on June 13th, 2011 by Bev Clark. Filed in Media, Reflections, Uncategorized.
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The Sunday Mail advertises itself as Zimbabwe’s leading family newspaper. Their last edition featured an incredibly gruesome photograph of two burnt corpses. Fatalities from a vehicle accident that involved a fuel tanker on Boschoff Drive in Harare. Yes, one might think that the Sunday Mail photographer, Believe Nyakudjara, would have snapped the wreckage of the vehicles, but instead this is what gets dished up. The Sunday Mail’s appalling lack of professionalism and sensitivity must be roundly criticised.

Bad publicity for a beauty pageant

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Posted on June 13th, 2011 by Lenard Kamwendo. Filed in Media, Reflections, Uncategorized.
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A couple of weeks ago Lungile Mathe was dethroned as Miss Tourism Zimbabwe (Miss Personality). This happened before she could receive her prize money, a car as well as other extras for scooping the top position in the beauty contest. The dethronement came after reports in the press that our beauty queen was offering sex in exchange for money. Whether this was true as reported in the press, or not, I believe the Zimbabwe Tourism Authority (ZTA) boss should have at least made some time to investigate the issue and consult his boss, the Minister of Tourism, before sending a text message firing Lungile.  Mr Kaseke went on to label the queen “a woman of loose morals” something, which I think, was harsh and unprofessional.

When all this hearsay drama was happening the Minister of Tourism was overseas trying to sell the Zimbabwe brand. When he came back the whole issue took a new twist with the Minister telling Mr Kaseke to reinstate the beauty queen and apologise to her and the nation. In the Sunday Mail of June 13 2011, Mr Kaseke said they are now thinking of giving back Lungile her title. But is it going to do any good to the model, the country and even the Miss Tourism as a brand?

One thing the Minister should do is whip his subordinate into line because since the event was a national event one should not wake up and grab a phone texting dismissal messages. Since the tables have turned the ZTA boss is now eating his words.

Women will be on top when men start taking birth control pills

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Posted on June 13th, 2011 by Lenard Kamwendo. Filed in Reflections, Uncategorized.
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Yes its coming!

To all you men out there who have been forcing their women to pop those pills before having it, now its your turn to be blamed for being irresponsible when your wife tells you that she is now expecting.  Every time when you hear a couple talking about family planning its always the women’s responsibility to make sure that she doesn’t fall pregnant unexpectedly.

According to MyBirthControlStore.com “a study has showed that male contraceptive will be based on a non-steroidal hormonal medical therapy that will be known as selective androgen receptor modulator. Dr. James Dalton at AAPS, the lead researches has expressed his views on the new male contraceptive development as “the most successful lab research on male birth control pills so far with complete safety and reversibly inhibited fertility with no side effects”.

Clinical trials have already begun in some US and UK labs.

Two UK based doctors, Nnaemeka Amobi and Christopher Smith of King’s College, have spent more than 12 years researching the developing of male birth control pills and they have designed the concept of “dry orgasm pill”. As the name suggests, this kind of pill will be required to take 2 hours prior to sex. It would “dry-up” the male semen without making any changes in orgasm.

While this drug is still on trial it has successfully worked on monkeys. After reading the last part of that research where it talks about “drying up of semen” I almost panicked because of the fear that maybe it wont be reversible. This will be very interesting seeing men in a clinic or pharmacy queuing for their family planning pills and being reminded by your wife at home to take your pills.

Seems like there isn’t a way out anymore guys, it’s now a shared responsibility.

Talking corruption and bribery

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Posted on June 13th, 2011 by Michael Laban. Filed in Activism, Economy, Governance, Reflections, Uncategorized.
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Corruption is easier to define than bribery. Or, there are lot more definitions out there. Transparency International defines it “the abuse of entrusted power for private gain”.

Fairly simple. Someone has a position – which has ‘power’ to it – whether it is the check out clerk’s power to ring up your purchases, or make you stand and wait and wait and wait, or it is the passport officer, who “hasn’t got the right paper to make you a passport”, so you can choose between never travelling, or giving over some other paper.

Someone abuses that position – you must make a facilitation payment, or take them to dinner, or buy them a beer.

Bribery may be that facilitation payment (money), or anything else (gifts, information, kissing up, favours sexual or otherwise, a lift, a banana, whatever), given to someone (individual or group). Whatever is given, so long as it is not ‘official’ – so it varies with whoever gives it, it does not get receipted, and/or it is not openly asked for as part of the fee. In this respect, a tip to a waiter or barman is a bribe.

Be that as it may, it is one part of this blog investigation. Bribery may or may not be illegal. It may or may not be standard procedure. It may or may not be expected. One of the things we are curious to find is the who, what, where, when, why, of bribery. This blog investigation is not intended to be judgmental. It is simply intended to get the information out there, so people, be they visitors or local people, know how to act? How much to tip/bribe? When to do it? What is vulgar and not vulgar? When is it expected, and when is it insulting?

From Wikipedia:
Bribery, a form of corruption, is an act implying money or gift given that alters the behaviour of the recipient. Bribery constitutes a crime and is defined by Black’s Law Dictionary as the offering, giving, receiving, or soliciting of any item of value to influence the actions of an official or other person in charge of a public legal duty.

Or;
The bribe is the gift bestowed to influence the recipient’s conduct. It may be any money, good, right in action, property, preferment, privilege, emolument, object of value, advantage, or merely a promise or undertaking to induce or influence the action, vote, or influence of a person in an official or public capacity.

So, it has aspects. Something is given. All agree. That something may be quite a number of things.

Behaviour is changed (influenced). Or intended to. All agree. You want the barman to notice you and get you a beer. You want the passport officer to give you travel documents. You want the attendant to fill your bike up with petrol. You want to get your property deeds in your name. You want people to vote for you. You need your ‘free’ anti-retrovirals.

Bribery is a crime. Not all agree. But this is fine. We are not going to look at that. We just want to know what happens. How it happens. Why it happens. We want the information out there for all to see. We want examples.

For example, I was run down by a woman who drove through a red light many years ago. My bicycle went under the car, and I smashed her windscreen. With my face. I spent five days in a coma. My mother came form Australia to ‘look after’ her brain damaged son in Zimbabwe.

One activity involved going to the police for report filling, fines, bureaucracy, paper work and those exciting activities (i.e. who was responsible to pay for the brain scan, which seems to have found something). While waiting in the Police officers office, we listened to him lament (it was 1200) about his lunch that was ordered, and how would he pick it up, would we be finished so he could get it before it got cold, etc.? All good questions.

When the husband of the (obviously guilty) driver appeared, it did not go missing on him. He offered to ‘sort out’ the officer’s meal. Things went well for him then. The charge was not ‘driving with undue care’ which carried an obligatory 3 day jail sentence! They paid for treatment, dental work and a new bicycle, but no jail time.

From the examples, we want to know where the bribery happens the most. In medicine (hospitals, doctors and nurses, drugs), with the traffic police, Ministry of housing, Registrar general and travel documents, customs, local government, drivers licences, Emergency taxis and public transport, the courts, prisons, criminal police investigations, political offences, the diamond industry, or where?

We want to know “how much?” Tipping, as it is common, and most see it as legal, is easy. Ten to fifteen percent of the bill. But, how much do you ‘tip’ a ‘street kid’ (anyone of any age or sex, that inhabits the street) who offers to assist you in cheating the city of it’s parking fees? How much do you pay to ‘avoid’ a speeding ticket, after you have, in fact, been driving above the speed limit? What is the ‘fine’ with and without receipt, for not having break down triangles? How much do you pay to expedite a hospital bed? If the bed is supposed to be free, what is 10 to 15 percent?

How much is your vote worth? People offered to vote for me if I would buy them a beer. Now this is quite insulting, considering that many people (over 15 000, but the actual number is definitely unknown) died so that the ‘seller’ had the right to vote. And he was willing to sell it for a beer (maybe $1.00). And how was I to know (voting is secret) whether he voted for me anyway?

Perhaps that is why I lost the last election?

Military dogs

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Posted on June 10th, 2011 by Bev Clark. Filed in Uncategorized.
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Dogs have been fighting alongside U.S. soldiers for more than 100 years, seeing combat in the Civil War and World War I. But their service was informal; only in 1942 were canines officially inducted into the U.S. Army. Today, they’re a central part of U.S. efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan — as of early 2010 the U.S. Army had 2,800 active-duty dogs deployed (the largest canine contingent in the world). And these numbers will continue to grow as these dogs become an ever-more-vital military asset.

So it should come as no surprise that among the 79 commandos involved in Operation Neptune Spear that resulted in Osama bin Laden’s killing, there was one dog — the elite of the four-legged variety. And though the dog in question remains an enigma — another mysterious detail of the still-unfolding narrative of that historic mission — there should be little reason to speculate about why there was a dog involved: Man’s best friend is a pretty fearsome warrior.

Above, a U.S. soldier with the 10th Special Forces Group and his dog leap off the ramp of a CH-47 Chinook helicopter during water training over the Gulf of Mexico as part of exercise Emerald Warrior on March 1.

From Foreign Policy

Have a look at the full photo essay of dogs at work here