Jonathan Moyo

The Right Honourable
Professor

Jonathan Moyo
MP
Minister of Higher and Tertiary Education
Assumed office
6 July 2015
President Robert Mugabe
Preceded by Oppah Muchinguri
Minister of Information and Publicity
In office
September 2013  6 July 2015
President Robert Mugabe
Preceded by Webster Shamu
Succeeded by Christopher Mushohwe
Minister of Information and Publicity
In office
July 2000  February 2005
President Robert Mugabe
Succeeded by Tichaona Jokonya
Member of Parliament
for Tsholotsho North
Assumed office
10 June 2015
Preceded by Roselyn Nkomo
Member of Parliament
for Tsholotsho
In office
31 March 2005  2013
Preceded by Mtoliki Sibanda
Personal details
Born (1957-01-12) 12 January 1957
Rhodesia and Nyasaland
Political party ZANU-PF
Spouse(s) Beatrice Moyo
Children Tawanda
Lungile
Nokuthula
Zanele (deceased)

Jonathan Nathaniel Moyo (born 12 January 1957) is a Zimbabwean politician who has served in the government of Zimbabwe as Minister of Higher Education since 2015. He previously served as Minister of Information from 2000 to 2005 and again from 2013 to 2015. He was elected to the House of Assembly of Zimbabwe as an independent candidate in 2005 and 2008. He is considered the core architect of AIPPA and POSA.

Kenya

In 1993 he was program director for the Ford Foundation in Nairobi. He departed under a cloud after allegations that he had embezzled USD $88,000 from the organisation.[1]

South Africa

In January 1998 he moved to South Africa, to the University of Witwatersrand (WITS) to work on a project entitled The Future of the African Elite sponsored by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. WITS later claimed that he had absconded with part of a R100 million research grant for the project. In October 2006 Moeletsi Mbeki, younger brother of former South African President Thabo Mbeki, and Witwatersrand University separately applied for an order to have Jonathan Moyo jailed the next time he visits South Africa.[2]

Zimbabwe

As ZANU-PF spokesman, he described the 2000 election, in which the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) won a large minority of seats, as a "wake up call" and a "reality check for us".[3]

Minister of Information (20002005)

During his 2000 to 2005 tenure, he crafted and defended, helped by Patrick Chinamasa, the Broadcasting Services Act (BSA) (2001), the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (Commercialisation) Act (2003),[4] the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) (2002), the Public Order and Security Act (2002), and the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (Commercialisation) Act (2003). This led to widespread criticism that he was attacking freedom of speech.

When Moyo brought the AIPPA to parliament, the chairman of the Parliamentary Legal Committee, Dr Eddison Zvobgo, said, "I can say without equivocation that this Bill, in its original form, was the most calculated and determined assault on our liberties guaranteed by the Constitution, in the 20 years I served as Cabinet minister."

Since being expelled from government, he has taken to deny and outrightly reject the common fact that he was the architect of these laws.

As Minister of Information, Moyo fought personal and government battles with the media from July 2000 until 2005, when he was expelled from ZANU-PF.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]

He beamed with pleasure and satisfaction when Chief Justice Gubbay resigned after being threatened by Joseph Chinotimba and company. When the Daily News was shut down, he said "The Daily News is a victim of the rule of law which it had been preaching since 1999." Daily News[13]

In the mere space of seven years, Moyo went from being a fervent critic of the government of Robert Mugabe to being its fiercest defender and then again to being one of its foremost critics, a fact that renders him a mystery to many Zimbabweans. Analysts and observers and ordinary people have labelled him an opportunist because of this puzzling behaviour, including George Charamba, his former friend and ally. He has said: "I have always been a critic of government policy. I was in government for more than five years. Before that I was a critic."[5][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21]

He is among host of individuals not allowed to travel to the United States because the US government feels he has worked to undermine democracy in Zimbabwe.[22]

Tsholotsho

Much philanthropy, including scholarship programs and support for sport over many years, has earned Moyo a place in Tsholotsho, his family area. This philanthropy increased during the days leading up to the March 2005 parliamentary election, a fact that critics feel made his win for the parliamentary seat in the area inevitable.

In the leadup to the 2004 party meeting, he held an unofficial meeting in Tsholotsho, of Zanu-PF political heavyweights including six provincial party chairmen, Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa, and a militant war veterans' leader, Joseph Chinotimba. It was aimed at contesting one of the two vice-presidential seats after the recent death of Simon Muzenda on 20 September 2003, seen as a stepping stone to the presidency in light of Mugabe's presumed retirement in 2008.

He was heavily censured at the later Zanu-PF meeting, with other attendees. Joyce Mujuru won the vice-presidency at the party meeting.

The subsequent decision to set aside the Tsholotsho seat in the 2005 parliamentary election for female candidates was widely interpreted as punishing those who organised the unauthorised meeting, and in particular Moyo.

In February 2005 Moyo registered to run as an independent for the seat.[23] Doing so earned the wrath of Mugabe, who expelled him from the party and the cabinet. He won the seat in the elections, held on 31 March.[24]

Standing again as an independent, Moyo was re-elected to the House of Assembly from Tsholotsho North constituency in the March 2008 parliamentary election. He received 3,532 votes, defeating MDC candidate Mgezelwa Ncube, who received 3,305 votes, as well as Zanu-PF candidate Alice Dube, who received 2,085 votes.[25] He was the first independent candidate in Zimbabwe to ever win re-election.[26] The mainstream MDC did not field a candidate in this constituency on the understanding that Moyo's victory would be good in the fight to remove Mugabe from power. However, no sooner had Moyo won did he start taking potshots at the MDC and openly defending and supporting Mugabe in newspaper articles. Some say he was angling for a cabinet position, something that did not happen.

Moyo was defeated in Tsholotsho North constituency by the MDC-T's Roselene Nkomo in elections which took place on 31 July 2013. Moyo tried to force through a recount of the votes but his attempt was blocked when Bulawayo High Court judge Justice Lawrence Kamocha barred the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) from conducting a vote recount in the constituency without an order of such effect from the Electoral Court and finalisation of the application of review. Despite Moyo's defeat, Mugabe appointed him as Minister of Information on 10 September 2013.[27]

Mugabe fiercely criticised Moyo in June 2014, saying that Moyo was "plant[ing] seeds of division" in ZANU-PF by attacking his opponents within the party through the media. According to Mugabe, Moyo had appointed newspaper editors sympathetic to the opposition. Mugabe stressed that party members should not be enemies and differences "should not make you want to attack them in the paper".[28]

After two years as Minister of Information, and after winning a by-election in Bulawayo on 6 June 2015, Moyo was moved to the post of Minister of Higher and Tertiary Education on 6 July 2015.[29]

Appointments

Criticism

Moyo was criticised and ridiculed for his activities during the time he was Minister of Information and Publicity.

In 2005 Asher Tarivona Mutsengi, then a student leader at Solusi University, criticised Moyo saying "..he will go down in the annals of history as a minister who lacked foresight and for pouring vitriol against his perceived opponents, his shopping spree in South Africa of scarce food stuffs, causing unemployment to a multitude of journalists and a penchant for uncivilized propaganda."

..."my final analysis is that he is heading for the precipice and his political prospects even if he wins the Tsholotsho seat that he is vying for as an independent are drab. He might be a spin-doctor and intelligent as some claim, but I don't subscribe to that myself."[30]

Innocent Madawo, a Zimbabwean journalist and columnist for the Toronto Sun newspaper said in an interview about Moyo, "If it were not for Jonathan Moyo I would not be here and I am sure I am not the only one who feels like this. Even those who may have been showered with favours by the good professor, I know for certain that they too were burdened by his attentions and demands and right now, a lot are embarrassed that they ever knew him."

Columnist

In recent times since parting ways with Mugabe, Jonathan Moyo has written for some online news publications critical of Mugabe's government. Ironically, most of the editors of these publications are victims of media laws supported or sponsored by Moyo during his days as information minister. He seems to have been embraced and given a platform to express his anger at the government of Mugabe.[31]

He has been readmitted in Zanu PF.

Wikileaks

In May 2011, Moyo sued the Daily News for $60,000 for reprinting former articles about his expulsion from Zanu-PF in 2005. He rejoined later. In September he sued the paper again, this time for a 6 September report which cited a 2007 US diplomatic cable in which Moyo voiced support for sanctions against President Robert Mugabe. In a follow-up article the next day it reported that Moyo had suggested which senior members of the party should be targeted by sanctions.[32]

Quotes

General

"Perennial wisdom from divine revelation and human experience dictates that all earthly things great or small, beautiful or ugly, good or bad, sad or happy, foolish or wise must finally come to an end. It is from this sobering reality that the end of executive rule has finally come for Robert Mugabe who has had his better days after a quarter of a century in power."

War with the media

"The Daily News is a victim of the rule of law which it had been preaching since 1999." He said, celebrating and beaming at the demise of the popular Daily News.[13]

War at home

"If good governance means that black people should forever live as servants and poor and as inferior citizens to white people, we don't accept it" Defending the land reform program.

"Good Riddance" he said after Chief Justice Anthony Gubbay, 68, signed an agreement to go on leave immediately and to retire formally on 1 July 2001 following threats from war veterans led by Joseph Chinotimba.

"We have to secure the gains of the Third Chimurenga in legal terms and Government is considering a number of options. The so-called successful white farmers were made by successive colonial governments. But given the level of the support they enjoyed and the vast tracts of land they commanded, an inescapable conclusion is that they were an inefficient lot. Much of commercial farmland was under-utilised. Moving forward means crafting legislation that consolidates and puts a final seal of legality to the gains we have made through the fast-track programme. We are aware that white commercial farmers who used to be on the land have refused to surrender title deeds to Government."[33]

War with foreigners

"Our problem with Britain and Australia is over the land we took over from their white kith and kin to redistribute to the indigenous black people of this country. ..." Explaining why relations with Britain had become strained.

"We were under pressure from foreigners who claimed that they were Zimbabweans, when they were actually enemies," Defending the government's decision not to award broadcasting licenses to foreign companies.[34]

"I have always had a nagging feeling that for all their propensity for liberal values and civilised norms, these people (South Africans) are dirty. In fact they are filthy and recklessly uncouth. Now the evidence is there for any decent person to see" Justifying his shopping spree in South Africa, when people in Zimbabwe were starving.[35]

"He needs to be told that Zimbabwe will never be a colony again, never" Telling Tony Blair not to interfere in Zimbabwe during the days leading up to the 2002 presidential elections.[36]

References

  1. Information minister fails to gag weekly paper Committee to protect Journalists
  2. "Jail awaits Jono", The Zimbabwean, 19 October 2006
  3. Rachel L. Swarns, "Vote in Zimbabwe Shows Opposition Making Big Gains", The New York Times, 27 June 2000.
  4. "Moyo blows Charamba's cover", The Financial Gazette, 28 July 2005 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  5. 1 2 "Former Harare Information Tsar Jonathan Moyo Has Day In Court", Voice of America, 28 November 2006 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  6. "Mugabe's rule close to a 'nasty, short and brutish' end, says former right-hand man", The Guardian, 28 March 2007 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  7. "Why Give Jonathan Moyo Time and Space", Association of Zimbabwe Journalists, 20 September 2006 (accessed 7 February 2008)
  8. "Moyo  Was It Perostroika or a Palace Coup in Tsholotsho", Africanewsflash
  9. "Propaganda chief who turned Zimbabwe into 'Planet Moyo'", The Telegraph, 23 January 2003 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  10. "Moyo eyes Tsholotsho", The Insider, 2003 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  11. "Jonathan Moyo sued for $25 mln", The Financial Gazette, 17 June 2004
  12. "We have forgiven Moyo but have not forgotten", The Zimbabwe Times
  13. 1 2 "Victim of the law", AllAfrica archive (subscription required)
  14. "Professorial folly", The Herald, 8 July 2006 (accessed 7 February 2008)
  15. "Zimbabwe's Spokesperson", BBC News (accessed 2 July 2008)
  16. "Mugabe Fires Information Minister Jonathan Moyo", Voice of America, 20 February 2005 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  17. "The rise and fall of Jonathan Moyo", Mail & Guardian, 22 February 2005 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  18. "Jonathan Moyo’s terrible legacy", The Financial Gazette, 3 March 2005 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  19. "MDC, Watch Jonathan Moyo", The Zimbabwean, 31 January 2008 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  20. The Minister, AllAfrica archive (subscription required) (accessed 2 July 2008)
  21. "Forgiving Jonathan Moyo", zimgreats.com, 20 October 2007 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  22. Recent OFAC Actions, US Dept. of Treasury, 23 November 2005 (accessed 2 July 2008)
  23. "Mugabe's spin doctor to go solo", BBC News, 19 February 2005
  24. "Mugabe 'can change constitution'", BBC News, 2 April 2005.
  25. "Zimbabwe election results 2008", newzimbabwe.com, 2 April 2008.
  26. Lindie Whiz, "Outright Tsvangirai or Mugabe victory unlikely  Moyo", newzimbabwe.com, 1 April 2008.
  27. "President Mugabe Appoints New Cabinet", The Herald, 10 September 2013.
  28. "Mugabe chides 'divisive' information minister", AFP, 7 June 2014.
  29. "Chombo, Moyo, Tyson reassigned", The Herald, 7 July 2015.
  30. -Student Leader says Moyo the worst politician in Zimbabwe
  31. "Why Mugabe should go now", Zimbabwe Independent, 29 November 2006
  32. Zimbabwe politician sues paper over WikiLeaks revelations Guardian
  33. "Gains", AllAfrica archive (subscription required)
  34. "AIPPA Amendment", AllAfrica archive (subscription required)
  35. "Moyo's bizarre attack on SA", Cape Times, 14 January 2003
  36. "Zimbabwe attacks UK 'colonialism'", BBC News, 3 March 2002
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