Bureaucrats love inventing fresh alphabet soup to justify endless meetings about governance. Acting Chief Secretary Willard Manungo demanded that the African Peer Review Mechanism merge processes with the New Partnership for Africa’s Development to supposedly enhance operational coherence. He announced this directive during a validation workshop in Masvingo while arguing that creating NEPAD-APRM Zimbabwe would link governance issues directly to sustainable development frameworks.
A continental delegation led by Ambassador Aly El Hefny visited previously to conduct a targeted review, which officials are currently scrutinizing. Manungo insists this alignment fits perfectly with Vision 2030 and the National Development Strategy 2 to ostensibly empower society through accountability. He claimed that benchmarking exercises in Kenya proved that harmonizing these entities actually works.
The gathering included heavyweights like Commissioner James Manzou and Ambassador Albert Chimbindi alongside interim chief executive Rofina Chikava. Engineer Tafadzwa Muguti also showed up while Manungo urged everyone to show loyalty and patriotism when finalizing the document. The Acting Chief Secretary wants the final report to accurately inform policy reforms rather than just collecting dust on a shelf.
A continental delegation led by Ambassador Aly El Hefny visited previously to conduct a targeted review, which officials are currently scrutinizing. Manungo insists this alignment fits perfectly with Vision 2030 and the National Development Strategy 2 to ostensibly empower society through accountability. He claimed that benchmarking exercises in Kenya proved that harmonizing these entities actually works.
The gathering included heavyweights like Commissioner James Manzou and Ambassador Albert Chimbindi alongside interim chief executive Rofina Chikava. Engineer Tafadzwa Muguti also showed up while Manungo urged everyone to show loyalty and patriotism when finalizing the document. The Acting Chief Secretary wants the final report to accurately inform policy reforms rather than just collecting dust on a shelf.