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Newly sworn-in Govt ministers start work on vision of ministries

by Staff Reporter
15 Sep 2013 at 04:35hrs | Views
The newly sworn-in Government ministers have started working on the visions of their ministries after they were briefed on Government operations as well as their responsibilities by Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet Dr Misheck Sibanda  yesterday.

Dr Sibanda was assisted by Civil Service Commission chairman Dr Mariyawanda Nzuwah, who appraised the ministers on the human resources element and Central Intelligence Organisation Director General Happyton Bonyongwe who briefed them on security issues.

Dr Sibanda told the ministers that they should start working on the vision before the first Cabinet sitting expected soon.

Ministers of State for the country's 10 provinces and deputy ministers were also taken through the familiarisation briefing after the ministers' session.

Speaking after the briefing, Dr Sibanda said work had already begun for the ministers.
"It is normal that after appointments, we brief them on their responsibilities in terms of what has been done to the ministries they are going to go to, work that has been done and what awaits them," he said.

"We were also telling them the work ahead for instance they have to organise strategic workshops for their ministries so that they work out their visions and missions and also define core values and clients charters for their ministries."

Dr Sibanda said the ministers were given a new socio-economic framework document to scrutinise.
"We also had a draft working paper for them, the new socio-economic framework document that was done by officials which we would want ministers to look at before it is approved by Cabinet. It is a way to say that we have started business," he said.

"The briefing for deputy ministers will be to tell them how they should be working with their ministers as well as heads of ministries. For the ministers, that was a familiarisation kind of briefing not an induction because most of them were here before, merely briefing them on what is expected of them."

Added Dr Sibanda: "Some of them wanted clarification where they were not sure. There were certain areas where we need to refine where  there are some seeming duplications but we will finalise that with the clearance of the President (Mugabe)."

Media, Information and Broadcasting Services Permanent Secretary Mr George Charamba said the Ministers were now aware of the dos and don'ts of Government operations.

"Structurally, ministers had their portfolios interpreted. As you are aware we reduced the ministries from 33 to 24. We have cases where some ministries are now a result of the merging of two ministries. We even have one ministry which is a result of the merging of three ministries meaning those ministers will get briefings from three permanent secretaries to have a fuller picture of the new portfolio.

"Some ministries have lost certain key components while others now have some elements. This tells that there was a lot of re-arrangement in terms of portfolio allocation in Government and it means the ministers need to be briefed enough."

The Government blueprint, he said, would guide the ministries for the next five years.
"Apparently lots of preliminary work was done well before the election to create a framework for the agenda of the incoming Zanu-PF Government," Mr Charamba said.

"I cannot share with you the details but I can assure you there is already a framework in place with inputs from the private sector apart from Government itself. Of importance is that the ministers have been told to work out visions and there has been a timetable that before the next Cabinet sitting the ministries should retreat to work visions for themselves."

President Mugabe this week appointed a leaner 24-member Cabinet that was whittled down by collapsing and merging several ministries.

Source - Chronicle
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