Zimbabwe’s Minister of Information, Jonathan Moyo, is suing Munn Marketing for Z$100-million (about R109 000) for allegedly distributing in Zimbabwe the <i>Sunday Times</i> of South Africa — a newspaper he is also suing for carrying an allegedly defamatory article. Moyo said the article insinuated that he does not care about the people of Matabeleland.
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/ 22 October 2004
Zimbabwe Minister of Information Jonathan Moyo this week came under withering attack from opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) MPs in Parliament for abusing public media to further his political ambitions. MDC MPs said Moyo has become a "dangerous" politician who should be reined in by both Zanu-PF and MDC legislators.
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/ 3 September 2004
President Robert Mugabe on Thursday finally accepted US ambassador to Zimbabwe Christopher Dell after negotiations with the US government. Mugabe had said Dell would not be welcome to Harare after the remarks which had been spun in the official press to look like demands for "regime change".
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/ 3 September 2004
Outspoken Bulawayo Archbishop Pius Ncube secretly met Prince Charles and briefed him about Zimbabwe’s deepening economic and social crisis at the royal’s London home. Archbishop Ncube, a fierce critic of Mugabe, told Prince Charles that Mugabe was slowly joining the elite squad of tragi-comic African dictators.
Controversy surrounding Zimbabwean Information Minister Jonathan Moyo’s purchase of the Patterson farm in the Mazowe district has deepened amid disclosures that he violated government policy and set a bad precedent for land reform. Moyo is also entangled in a row over the subdivision of a farm in Hwange where illegal poaching is reported to be rampant.