So Jarvis is not only a poor bowler, he abuses Black umpires and when he gets suspended, runs to the minister and the mafia!

Meth over Utseya! Come on senator! I'm sure Vusi and Utseya would confirm either incident. That must be the final nail on the head as far as exposing Coltart and Campbell. I'm seriously upset at these two fools! Imagine how much Taibu would have to say to implicate Coltart & Campbell further.
Anyway Bayhaus, I hope FlowerPower can grasp the import of this. Even before you posted this I'd already expounded Makoni's genuine cries. The racial agenda behind Coltart's motives. There was never any genuine intention to fix anything. Just a sinister objective to remove blacks from the sport via underhanded tactics. Soccer and Cricket are the biggest in Zimbabwe. Soccer has a coach without a selection committee - just like everywhere else in the world - so unless you're Roy Garden, it's obvious cricket is and always has been the target. Now all that's left is for you to tip off Firdose Moonda for an expose! We have interesting developments this side of the border as well that I'm monitoring. Only fewer Makonis & Mangongos!
The clincher:
I missed this fault in Coltart's reasoning. A lawyer who fails to understand the workings of the very sport he claims to be trying to improve. Yet he has the guts to say Makoni's outspokenness proves his unsuitability for the office he holds! Who is out of his depth?Minister Coltart is correct in stating that his directives do not prevent Stephen Mangongo from being appointed national coach, but indirectly they disqualify him because a national coach automatically becomes a national selector. The cricket coach is involved in the selection of teams and minister Coltart knows that. For example, the current 24-man training squad for the West Indies tour was picked by coach Alan Butcher, Zimbabwe High Performance coach and national selector Wayne James and myself.

Be careful Senator, just like Bvute proved himself to the global cricket community, Makoni is a smart man:
My frustration actually stems from minister Coltart’s subtle attempts to reverse the transformation agenda in cricket which he initially resisted as an ordinary legislator. Now that he is the minister in charge of sport, he is using his position to actually regularise that resistance. I have known minister Coltart in cricketing circles well before I became a national selector and his contribution to the game has been nothing more than divisive.
While the directives appear prudent and in the national interest at face value, their racial poison appears upon close scrutiny as they seemingly target only formerly white-dominated sports. I don’t know much about bowling as a sport, but cricket is the only discipline I know a transformation war was waged for the involvement of the current majority black players’ participation.
They are just longstanding demands of people opposed to the transformation of cricket from being a preserve of a few families to a truly national sport, disguised as a Sports and Recreation Commission directive. Is it not ironic that the name of Ethan Dube, who came to the minds of the rebel players in 2004 as a preferred national selector also comes to the minister’s mind in the same capacity nine years later? Or could it be that it’s the same mind? Minister Coltart should not try and fool us with his national interest mantra when in fact he is hell bent on removing all those responsible for the survival of cricket in Zimbabwe during a period he and rebel players and their backers sought to collapse the sport simply because more blacks were becoming involved.