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Botswana Deports Zvayi

Politics

August 8, 2008 | By Staff | © zimbabwemetro.com Email This Email This | Post a comment

Botswana on Friday deported a fierce henchman of President Robert Mugabe’s regime, Ceasar Zvayi, the former political editor of the state-run Herald newspaper who had taken up a lecturing post at the University of Botswana.

Zvayi was recently added to the United States and European Union sanctions list.

Zvayi was served with a deportation order and driven to the Plumtree border post where he was deported on Friday.

“Munyaradzi Huni, the political editor of the Herald’s sister paper, the Sunday Mail, said by telephone from Harare that Zvayi had been declared a prohibited immigrant and thrown out of Zimbabwe’s western neighbour,’.

“They were taking him to the border. He should be home soon, but I don’t have much detail about his movements at this time,” said Huni.

Zvayi last week said he would not apologise for supporting Zanu PF as he subscribes to its Pan African values, adding that he would never support the MDC as currently it is constituted, describing it as a counter-revolutionary Trojan horse that is working with outsiders to subvert the logical conclusion of the Zimbabwean revolution.”

“Being at UB does not mean I stop being a Zimbabwean, supporting Zanu PF has no bearing on my qualifications as a journalist or competence as a media practitioner. The maliciousness and childishness of this campaign (to have him deported) is testimony to the fickleness of the people behind it who apparently believe universities employ people on political grounds.

They need only look at the University of Zimbabwe today, whose Chancellor is President Mugabe, but which employs vocal MDC office holders, sympathizers and activists like Dr. Lovemore Madhuku, Dr. John Makumbe, and Eliphas Mukonoweshuro, among others.” said zvayi.

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  1. Well well, I salute Botswana, I really do! Being an economic refugee myself I cannot say how much I appreciate what Botswana has done to Zvayi. He has a farm in Zimbabwe, he must go and work on the farm and produce food for the nation. Secondly why is he leaving Zimbabwe, there are very many open jobs in his field of ’study’ and as patriotic as he is why is he abandoning Zimbabwe to work in a country “with no liberation credentials, as his bosses say”? I hope Botswana’s action sends a message to all those who have been and are still doing what Zvayi earned his reputation doing. May the CIO visit you Mr Zvayi, they are your friends and a number of them may be nervous right now. This time they will want to know why you left and unless you were in Botswana as a CIO undercover then you may be in trouble. Wake up and smell the decay, the winds of change are blowing softly, but blowing all the same.

    Good luck Mr Zvayi, I will follow your progress with much interest! Thank you Botswana for standing with the people of Zimbabwe, thank you.

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