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The amendments are consistent with the best practices in other countries like Uganda, Georgia and South Africa. At the core of the proposed amendment is the restoration of confidence in the central bank, which confidence is non-existent at the moment
An increase in the capacity of mine manufacturing from 10 percent to 30 percent will have a direct impact on the growth the minister (Finance Minister Tendai Biti) is anticipating and I think it can be achieved
This Act prescribes that the Minister of Finance is a governor of Zimbabwe's fiscal agent to both the World Bank family and the IMF
Principals to the GPA have agreed that there will be a new set up where representatives of the GPA, Cde Patrick Chinamasa from Zanu-PF, Mr Tendai Biti from MDC-T and Professor Welshman Ncube from MDC together with the three chairpersons of the select committee as well as the Minister of Constitutional a...
If someone is to ask me to bring back the Zimbabwe dollar, then there will be a vacancy on the sixth floor at the Government Complex and I will go back to my law firm (Honey and Blanckenberg)
We think that it is important not to let the economic advantages that Morgan Tsvangirai and Tendai Biti (Finance Minister) bring to the case to be exploited and used by (President) Robert Mugabe and others to secure further control of government
It’s a very simple issue. We have a debt of over US$5 billion largely caused by mismanagement, corruption and theft. Zimbabwe can’t pay this debt. It would be immoral to use our little resources to pay debts when our schools, hospitals and roads are in a bad state ... Those opposed to the debt relief st...
We think that it is important not to let the economic advantages that Morgan Tsvangirai and Tendai Biti bring to the case to be exploited and used by Robert Mugabe and others to secure further control on government
This is fiction, it’s a myth. The reality is we are a poor little struggling failed state ... Poverty is there, even in leading oil-producing countries in Africa such as Nigeria and Angola, it’s there in South Africa and China, which has been the fastest growing economy in the world for many years.
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Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti displays the briefcase containing the 2010 National Budget to the media upon his arrival at the Parliament Building in Harare December 2, 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti presents the 2010 National Budget in Parliament Building in Harare December 2, 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti displays the briefcase containing the 2010 National Budget to the media upon his arrival at the Parliament Building in Harare December 2, 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai leaves after addressing the parliament in the capital Harare, December 1, 2009, ahead of the 2010 National budget to be presented by Finance Minister Tendai Biti (not pictured) tomorrow.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai addresses the parliament in the capital Harare, December 1, 2009, ahead of the 2010 National budget to be presented by Finance Minister Tendai Biti (not pictured) tomorrow.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai addresses the parliament in the capital Harare, December 1, 2009, ahead of the 2010 National budget to be presented by Finance Minister Tendai Biti (not pictured) tomorrow.
View Photo »Businessmen inspect tobacco leaves, mostly for export, at Tobacco Sales Floor Ltd. in Harare May 7, 2009.
View Photo »Businessmen walk past tobacco leaves, mostly for export, at Tobacco Sales Floor Ltd. in Harare May 7, 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwean farmers sit on bags of tobacco leaves, mostly for export, at Tobacco Sales Floor Ltd. in Harare May 7, 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwean Finance Minister and Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party Secretary-General Tendai Biti gives a press conference in Harare on May 6, 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe (C) talks to South African businessman Patrice Motsepe (L) and Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti in Harare, April 6, 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Finance Minister and Oppositon Movement For Democratic Change (MDC) Secretary-General Tendai Biti speaks during the opening of the Short-Term Emergency Recovery Programme (STERP), meant to ease the current economic crisis facing the country, in Harare March 19, 2009, Zimbabwe...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe (L) talks to Finance Minister and Opposition Movement For Democratic Change (MDC) Secretary-General Tendai Biti after opening the Short-Term Emergency Recovery Programme (STERP), meant to ease the current economic crisis facing the country, in Harare M...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's new finance minister Tendai Biti talks at a news conference in Harare Wednesday Feb. 18, 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's new Finance Minister Tendai Biti (L) signs documents as President Robert Mugabe watches after his swearing-in at State House Harare, February 13, 2009. Mugabe on Friday began swearing-in cabinet ministers to serve in a unity government.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe (R) congratulates new Finance Minister Tendai Biti after his swearing-in at State House in Harare, February 13, 2009. Mugabe on Friday began swearing-in cabinet ministers to serve in a unity government.
View Photo »Newly appointed Finance Minister Tendai Biti waits outside the State House in Harare before taking oath on February 13, 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) Secretary-General Tendai Biti (C, in glasses) leaves the Magistrate's court in Harare February 6, 2009.
View Photo »Movement for Democratic Change general secretary Tendai Biti leaves the court in Harare, Friday, Feb. 6, 2009. A judge ended the treason trial of a top opposition leader Friday, an indication that President Robert Mugabe's party wants a proposed coalition government to work.
View Photo »Movement for Democratic Change general secretary Tendai Biti leaves the court in Harare, Friday, Feb. 6, 2009. A judge ended the treason trial of a top opposition leader Friday, an indication that President Robert Mugabe's party wants a proposed coalition government to work.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) Secretary-General Tendai Biti (C) follows proceedings inside the parliament in Harare February 5, 2009.
View Photo »Tendai Biti, a senior member of the main opposition party in Zimbabwe speaks in parliament on a motion to pass a constitutional amendment bill in Harare, Thursday, February, 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwe opposition secretary-general Tendai Biti leaves the magistrate's court in Harare on February 5, 2009, for the remand hearing on treason charges.
View Photo »Zimbabwe opposition secretary-general Tendai Biti leaves the magistrate's court in Harare on February 5, 2009, for the remand hearing on treason charges.
View Photo »Zimbabwean opposition leader and Prime Minister designate Morgan Tsvangirai (R) addresses a new conference at party head offices in Harare, January 30 2009.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti presents the 2010 National Budget in Parliament Building in Harare December 2, 2009.
View Photo »The amendments are consistent with the best practices in other countries like Uganda, Georgia and South Africa. At the core of the proposed amendment is the restoration of confidence in the central bank, which confidence is non-existent at the moment
An increase in the capacity of mine manufacturing from 10 percent to 30 percent will have a direct impact on the growth the minister (Finance Minister Tendai Biti) is anticipating and I think it can be achieved
This Act prescribes that the Minister of Finance is a governor of Zimbabwe's fiscal agent to both the World Bank family and the IMF
Principals to the GPA have agreed that there will be a new set up where representatives of the GPA, Cde Patrick Chinamasa from Zanu-PF, Mr Tendai Biti from MDC-T and Professor Welshman Ncube from MDC together with the three chairpersons of the select committee as well as the Minister of Constitutional a...
If someone is to ask me to bring back the Zimbabwe dollar, then there will be a vacancy on the sixth floor at the Government Complex and I will go back to my law firm (Honey and Blanckenberg)
We think that it is important not to let the economic advantages that Morgan Tsvangirai and Tendai Biti (Finance Minister) bring to the case to be exploited and used by (President) Robert Mugabe and others to secure further control of government
It’s a very simple issue. We have a debt of over US$5 billion largely caused by mismanagement, corruption and theft. Zimbabwe can’t pay this debt. It would be immoral to use our little resources to pay debts when our schools, hospitals and roads are in a bad state ... Those opposed to the debt relief st...
We think that it is important not to let the economic advantages that Morgan Tsvangirai and Tendai Biti bring to the case to be exploited and used by Robert Mugabe and others to secure further control on government
This is fiction, it’s a myth. The reality is we are a poor little struggling failed state ... Poverty is there, even in leading oil-producing countries in Africa such as Nigeria and Angola, it’s there in South Africa and China, which has been the fastest growing economy in the world for many years.
There are no results for this module. Edit the module to change the search term used to query Twitter.
