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Nigeria has discovered oil again

Nigeria 🇳🇬 has discovered oil again

Nigeria has confirmed a significant hydrocarbon discovery at the Awodi-07 well, reinforcing its position as Africa’s leading oil producer.



The discovery revealed multiple hydrocarbon reservoirs, prompting further exploration by the NNPC Limited–Chevron Nigeria Limited joint venture, a move expected to strengthen reserves and future output.



After years of setbacks from oil theft and vandalism, Nigeria’s production is steadily rebounding, now averaging 1.7–1.8 million barrels per day.



What sets Nigeria apart is its holistic energy strategy—simultaneously boosting crude production while expanding local refining capacity, a combination that enhances energy security and economic value across the sector.

Russell Wilson is deepening his connection to West Africa—officially starting the process to become a citizen of Benin

🇧🇯 Russell Wilson is deepening his connection to West Africa—officially starting the process to become a citizen of Benin under the country’s Afro-descendant nationality initiative.



According to reports, the NFL quarterback made the announcement during his first-ever visit to Benin in January 2026, coinciding with the country’s annual Vodun Days celebration in Ouidah.



Wilson is applying through the My Afro Origins platform, the official government portal that allows individuals of African descent to prove ancestral ties to the transatlantic slave trade and apply for Beninese citizenship.



The process requires DNA testing, family records, or verified testimonies, and takes roughly three months once the application is approved.



The timing of Wilson’s announcement was symbolic. Vodun Days, held annually from January 8–10, is a spiritual and cultural event designed to reclaim and celebrate Vodun as a legitimate part of African heritage.



Wilson was in attendance not just as a participant but also as Ciara’s supportive husband, who returned to perform at Vodun Days for the first time since she was granted Beninese citizenship in July 2025.

[COMPLEX]

Spanish Pressure Mounts to Remove Morocco from 2030 World Cup Hosting

Spanish Pressure Mounts to Remove Morocco from 2030 World Cup Hosting


In the aftermath of the tense final of the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) between Senegal and Morocco in Rabat, contrasting pressure campaigns have continued.



Moroccan officials and commentators have called on the Confederation of African Football (CAF) and FIFA to impose sanctions against Senegal over the team’s brief walk-off.

https://youtube.com/shorts/D6tOSh9E8HQ?si=EZL1YSYFPOwtCHyi



In contrast, pressure to strip Morocco of its 2030 World Cup co-host status has been most vocal and organised in Spain, where commentators, academics, and influencers have urged FIFA to remove Morocco from the list of hosts.



Similar calls have also surfaced among commentators and opinion platforms in countries such as Portugal and France, citing concerns over security arrangements, accommodation issues, training venue fairness, ticket allocation, and match-day incidents.

NIGERIA PRESIDENT TINUNI ‘IN GREAT SHAPE’ AFTER FALLING AT TURKEY RECEPTION

NIGERIA PRESIDENT ‘IN GREAT SHAPE’ AFTER FALLING AT TURKEY RECEPTION

NIGERIA’S President Bola Tinubu is “in great shape” despite falling over at a reception ceremony in Turkey, one of his aides said.



Tinubu, 73, was being welcomed by his Turkish counterpart at an official ceremony in the capital, Ankara, when he stumbled.



After walking past a line of soldiers and dignitaries Tinubu can be seen on the official video on the Turkish president’s X account moving to his right when he stumbles and falls. The film briefly shows people helping the president before cutting to an aerial shot and 45 seconds later Tinubu and Recep Tayyip Erdogan are seen next to each other.



Tinubu appeared unhurt and aide Sunday Dare said he was able to continue with a bilateral meeting.

Video clips of the incident are being shared on social media.



The last time the president fell over in public, in June 2024, he made a joke about it, saying people thought he was doing a popular dance move.



At that time the incident was described as a “mild misstep” by an aide, and there was also a lot of sympathy for Tinubu, including from leading opposition politician Atiku Abubakar, who called it an “unfortunate incident”.



Another politician, Shehu Sani, said that it showed the president was a human being and no different to anyone else.



Tinubu’s visit to Turkey “is aimed at strengthening the existing cordial relations”, the president’s office has said in a statement.



In an apparent move to allay concerns, in an all capital letters headline, Dare said on X on Tuesday afternoon: “President Tinubu in great shape as state visit proceeds smoothly.



“After a stately welcome ceremony in Ankara [he] proceeded to scheduled bilateral meetings with President of Turkey and other senior government officials from both countries.”

He did not give further details.

Tinubu took office in 2023 after beating Abubakar in a presidential election.

BBC

IRAN ISSUES WARNING ON US CARRIER AS TRUMP’S “ARMADA” HEADS TO GULF

🤯🔥IRAN ISSUES WARNING ON US CARRIER AS TRUMP’S “ARMADA” HEADS TO GULF 🇮🇷⚓ 🇺🇸



According to recent reports, Iran has warned it could target the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier as the vessel heads toward the Persian Gulf region.



Iranian officials claim the Strait of Hormuz is heavily fortified with an estimated 5,000+ naval mines, multiple missile systems, drones, and coastal defense batteries. Military commanders state they are prepared to respond with full force if attacked.

.



President Trump recently indicated Iran was seeking dialogue and “begging for a deal.” Yet now, as Trump confirmed, “We have a big armada heading over to the Gulf…they’re going to be there soon” raising questions about what shifted in the diplomatic landscape.



Military analysts note that both nations possess significant capabilities in this strategic waterway, through which roughly 21% of global petroleum passes.



The coming days may reveal whether this standoff leads to escalation or opens new channels for negotiation.

Kambwili Accuses UPND of Disrespecting Bemba Royalty, Urges Protest Vote in Kasama

🇿🇲 BRIEFING | Kambwili Accuses UPND of Disrespecting Bemba Royalty, Urges Protest Vote in Kasama



Patriotic Front member Chishimba Kambwili has accused the UPND government of showing disregard for the Bemba Royal establishment and the wider Northern Region, using the death of the wife to the Paramount Chief Chitimukulu as a political rallying point ahead of the January 29 Kasama mayoral by-election.



Speaking in Bemba on Radio Mano, Kambwili said the absence of Hakainde Hichilema and Vice President Mutale Nalumango from the funeral was evidence of disrespect, arguing that sending five ministers did not amount to adequate recognition of the Bemba Royal establishment.



He framed the issue as regional neglect and urged Kasama residents to punish the ruling party at the polls.



Kambwili also attacked UPND over delayed farmer payments, describing the government as dishonest and disconnected from rural suffering, and linked the grievance to broader claims of economic failure.



The remarks mark a shift toward explicit regional mobilisation. They come weeks after opposition figures criticised President Hichilema for what they described as divisive messaging, following his remarks in Choma urging voters to support him to avoid a return to cadre violence in Lusaka.


Critics at the time warned against ethnic framing in politics.

With days to the Kasama vote, the rhetoric underscores how the by-election has become a testing ground for regional grievance narratives, even as national leaders caution against ethnic polarisation.

© The People’s Brief | Chileshe Sengwe

The Smiling Strategist or Dividing General? What Does Emmanuel Mwamba Really Stand For?

The Smiling Strategist or Dividing General?

What Does Emmanuel Mwamba Really Stand For?


By Dr. Mwelwa

Every political moment produces its own narrators. Some narrate to illuminate. Others narrate to dominate the conversation. And a few narrate to test the waters—careful not to commit, eager to influence outcomes without bearing responsibility for them.



Ambassador Emmanuel Mwamba’s EMV platform began as a welcome intervention in Zambia’s shrinking democratic space. At its birth, it was hailed as a channel of courage—a voice for those silenced, a refuge for dissent, a megaphone for opposition unity. Many saw it as a necessary counterweight to state power, a platform that would interrogate authority and amplify the people.



But platforms, like swords, reveal their true nature not by how sharply they are forged, but by where they are pointed.



Today, EMV raises uncomfortable questions—not about government alone, but about the opposition itself. And that is where the dilemma begins.



Sun Tzu warned: “If you use spies, do not let them become generals.” In politics, this translates to a simple truth: influence without accountability is dangerous. When a platform becomes powerful enough to shape alliances, destroy trust, and redefine leadership legitimacy, the question is no longer about free speech—it is about responsibility.



So what, exactly, does Emmanuel Mwamba stand for?

He smiles with colleagues on camera, praises them as brothers in struggle, and then—sometimes in the same breath—subjects them to withering critique that weakens their public standing. Is this strategic honesty? Or is it friendly fire disguised as analysis?



The Bible cautions us: “Faithful are the wounds of a friend, but deceitful are the kisses of an enemy” (Proverbs 27:6). The problem with EMV is not criticism—criticism is essential in democracy. The problem is direction. To what end is the criticism deployed? Toward reform and unity, or toward fragmentation and personal positioning?



One cannot escape the central contradiction: EMV claims to build the opposition, yet repeatedly places its sharpest spotlight not on state power, but on opposition leaders—especially those with presidential ambitions. Is this coincidence, or calculation?



Mwamba himself is a declared presidential contender, albeit in ex!le. He cannot campaign on the ground. He cannot test his appeal in Kang’ili, Nshinso, Nkulumashiba, or Matuku. He does not board minibuses in Lusaka, queue at City Market, or feel the daily pulse of survival politics. And yet, from afar, he speaks with certainty about who is relevant, who is misguided, who is strategic, and who must be resisted.



Sun Tzu again reminds us: “A general who commands from the rear without seeing the terrain will misjudge the battle.” Can one accurately arbitrate opposition legitimacy without sharing the risks, constraints, and ground realities of those inside the arena?



Another troubling question emerges: Is EMV a platform, or a political instrument? Platforms ask questions and let the audience decide. Instruments push outcomes. Increasingly, EMV feels less like a mirror and more like a lever—applied selectively.



Why do some opposition figures receive sustained scrutiny while others are treated with restraint? What criteria governs who is interrogated and who is affirmed? Is there an underlying strategy, or are we witnessing ideological improvisation?



Mwamba often speaks the language of principle, yet principles demand consistency. You cannot condemn factionalism while amplifying factional narratives. You cannot decry division while hosting conversations that deepen suspicion and rivalry. Christ himself warned: “Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation” (Matthew 12:25).



The opposition does not need a firing squad disguised as a think tank. It needs a compass.

There is also the unresolved question of alignment. EMV often sounds like a man tasting the political waters—testing multiple futures without committing to any. Is this prudence, or paralysis? Is it wisdom, or fear of backing the wrong horse?



In war, indecision at the top is fatal. In politics, it is corrosive. Followers do not demand perfection; they demand clarity.

So we must ask plainly:
Is EMV building a shared opposition vision—or auditioning for relevance in every possible outcome?
Is it correcting errors—or weakening contenders?
Is it guided by conviction—or by calculation?



None of these questions deny Emmanuel Mwamba’s intellect, experience, or past service. But leadership is not measured by brilliance alone. It is measured by what you strengthen and what you leave broken behind you.



The opposition’s greatest enemy is not disagreement—it is distrust. And any platform that multiplies distrust must reflect deeply on its mission.

In the end, history will not ask how sharp the questions were. It will ask whether the questions helped a people move forward—or merely entertained them while unity slipped away.



As Scripture reminds us: “By their fruits you shall know them” (Matthew 7:16).

The time has come for Emmanuel Mwamba—and EMV—to answer the hardest question of all:



Are you here to build the house, or to test which walls will fall first?

As Long as you are in America Shut up ! Will you

Lily Mutamz Tv

MUNDUBILE BEING INDISCIPLINED FOR DEFYING PARTY ORDERS – MUKANDILA

MUNDUBILE BEING INDISCIPLINED FOR DEFYING PARTY ORDERS – MUKANDILA

I THINK we are now becoming jokers; we are all becoming comedians and of course it is a comedy of errors, says PF faction acting Secretary General Celestine Mukandila.

Mukandila further says Brian Mundubile is being indisciplined for not following party directives.

Meanwhile, former PF Deputy Secretary General Mumbi Phiri says it is sad that Mundubile has decided to technically knock himself out of the PF presidential race.

On Friday, Mundubile filed his nomination for the Dan Pule-led Tonse Alliance chairmanship against the circular from the Given Lubinda-led PF and Tonse Alliance faction.

Later in the day, Mundubile clarified his chairmanship bid, saying it should not be misconstrued as him leaving the PF.

Reacting to that in an interview, Sunday, Mukandila said Mundubile was in contempt of the direction of the PF.

“Honourable Mundubile knows for certain that the Patriotic Front gave a position and the Tonse Alliance chairperson gave a position that that is an illegal procession. Even him deciding to continue patronising with those colleagues, he is in contempt of the procedure or the direction of the Patriotic Front and the chairman of the Tonse Alliance, Honourable Given Lubinda, he is in contempt of that. At this point, let’s start becoming very realistic. And let’s look at things as they are. The reality is the chairman of the Alliance is Honourable Given Lubinda, who is also the president of the Patriotic Front,” he said.

“And he is the president of the anchor party which is the Patriotic Front. So unless our colleague has forgotten that he was seconded into the Tonse Alliance by the Patriotic Front, then can we consider his statement even serious? I think we are now becoming jokers. We are all becoming comedians. And of course, it’s a comedy of errors”.

Mukandila said Mundubile, having being a member of the central committee, was bound by the collective responsibility of the PF.

“I think at this point it is extremely important to start asking very basic questions with regards to leadership as well as governance. First things first, we must understand what the principle of collective responsibility entails. The principle entails that decisions made by the collective body or authority will bind all of us. And Honourable Brian Mundubile is, or should I say was, a member of the central committee of the Patriotic Front and is bound by collective responsibility of the Patriotic Front. And secondly, it’s important to start understanding the fact that members of the Patriotic Front that found themselves in the Tonse Alliance were seconded by the Patriotic Front. And their appointments were done upon secondment from the Patriotic Front president who then was Edgar Chagwa Lungu,” he said.

“And that does not in any way create independence of the membership of the Alliance by any individual. I was seconded to the Tonse Alliance as National Youth Chairman. And at no point did I do anything independent of my sending authority or my seconding authority, which is the Patriotic Front. The letter of appointment I received was coming from the president of the Patriotic Front, a member of the Patriotic Front seconded to the Tonse Alliance. And at any point whatsoever, the Patriotic Front being the anchor party and being the sponsor or the seconder of these names would decide to withdraw them. And besides, just recently, a renewal of names was submitted to the Tonse Alliance”.

Mukandila questioned Mundubile’s decision to defy the party, arguing that if the PF had deemed the Pule-led Tonse elective conference scheduled for January 31 illegal, Mundubile had no business going against that position simply because he held a post in the alliance.

“So it’s important to start understanding the basic principles. Now, the basic principles of leadership should never be misunderstood to be political stances or political manoeuvres, no. It’s simply basic principles of leadership, collective responsibility, and understanding the strength upon which you stand in the alliance, which is the secondment from the Patriotic Front. If the Patriotic Front today indicates that we are not participating in this because it is illegal, who are you to indicate that you are going to participate because you have a position? And yet that position is because of the secondment of the Patriotic Front,” he said.

“Even president Edgar Lungu was seconded to the Tonse Alliance by the Patriotic Front. It’s the Patriotic Front Central Committee that seconded president Edgar Lungu to go into the Tonse Alliance. And that is why the engagement of the Patriotic Front to the Tonse Alliance was based on the rules of engagement of the Patriotic Front into the Tonse Alliance. And there was a team from the Patriotic Front Central Committee that was composed to come up with these rules of engagement. So no one should go out there and claim independence of their position in the alliance. You are seconded by the party and you can be recalled at any time. No one is indispensable”.

Mukandila said the party ran on the premise of rules, adding that those who could not take the heat should leave.

He further said failure to follow party processes and procedures was indiscipline.

“So for me, I would say I think it is a test for leadership. It is a test for understanding what exactly leadership entails. It is a test for understanding exactly the principles of leadership. Going forward, we can’t run anything on the premise of a banana rule. No, we are not a banana republic. We are not a banana organisation. The Patriotic Front runs on the premise of rules and procedures and regulations. We are guided by those principles of leadership. And those that cannot withstand the heat in the kitchen, let them leave, it is as simple as that,” Mukandila said.

“We must differentiate division from indiscipline. Failure to follow rules and regulations of a political party is indiscipline. It does not in any way show division. Let’s be realistic and real. Failure to follow party processes and procedures or party directives is not division, it amounts to indiscipline. Let us call a spade a spade. And no one should tell you that the party is divided in any way. The party is not divided, we are moving in unison. It is those that are indisciplined that are making such statements”.

Asked then if the party was going to take any action, Mukandila said a direction would be given after the Kasama mayoral by-election.

“The Tonse Alliance agreed to have a Council of Leaders meeting on the 5th of February, after the Kasama election. And that shall happen, we shall have a Council of Leaders meeting and a direction shall be given,” said Mukandila.

Meanwhile, speaking when she called in on Emmanuel Mwamba Verified, Phiri wondered how Mundubile decided to file directly for the Tonse chairmanship against the written rules of taking the winner of the PF presidency there.

“I’m just surprised with what’s happening [in the PF]. And you know the sad part is this is what [Michael] Sata used to say that educated people are cowards. It’s true, his words have come to pass. This Tonse Mundubile has gone to from the rules that were written, you are the ones who launched Tonse, PF as the anchor party, we were supposed to elect a president amongst ourselves as PF, then whoever emerges as winner to be taken to Tonse. Now I’m wondering how my learned lawyer has gone directly to Tonse and filed his nomination,” she wondered.

She further urged party structures to remain united as things would be fine.

“Pule cannot today say that he is also legit to call for a meeting. If you remember that meeting I attended, that one where the youths wanted to beat us, isn’t it the same Pule who, when Sylvia Chalikosa, Given Lubinda and Raphael Nakacinda went to wake him up, lowered himself and said only Lubinda can call for a meeting? It’s him who said that. So what has changed? As I conclude, I’m urging our party structures, we have been united for all these years. Miles [Sampa] brought confusion, you didn’t follow him. [Robert] Chabinga who has the papers was never followed, just relax, things will be fine,” said Phiri.

“In the last Central Committee meeting which I attended, it was allowed that all those presidential candidates who want to meet the structures, they are free to do so as long as they write to the secretariat, then the secretariat writes to the provincial chairperson. That’s how team Makebi has started moving around and no one is stopping him. No one has stopped anyone from talking to the structures, so Mundubile shouldn’t rush, those who rush, crash. And I feel so sad that Mundubile can technically knock himself out of the race. Anyway, we are watching and we are waiting to see what will happen next”.

News Diggers

Miles Sampa, the Law, and the Performance of Victimhood

🇿🇲 ANALYSIS | Miles Sampa, the Law, and the Performance of Victimhood

Miles Sampa’s last night appearance on Diamond TV was a good performance. It was shaped for an election season where emotion often outruns evidence. Every line of his claims was calibrated to recast a legal problem into a political grievance, and to turn personal discomfort into national outrage.



At the centre of Sampa’s account is a familiar claim. He insists his arrest followed direct political instruction from President Hakainde Hichilema, arguing that the Inspector General of Police ultimately answers to the Head of State. In his framing, the law did not act on its own. Power did.



He opened by dwelling on detention conditions. Overcrowded cells. Mosquitoes. Cockroaches. Open toilets. He said he refused to eat for two days to avoid using them. The description was vivid and intentional.



“Allow me to thank President HH for sending me to jail
 everybody used to tell me your political CV is useless, you don’t have jail. Here I am, the President has gifted me.”



The line drew laughter and sympathy, but it also revealed the strategy. Custody was not presented as an injustice to be corrected. It was presented as political currency. Jail became a credential, not a consequence.



From there, Sampa moved to the Cyber Crimes Act, calling it “draconian” and promising its repeal if he ever leads the country. His position was absolute.

“Let the people talk. Let them say what they want
 you cannot gag people.”



He went further.

“Even lies, let the public judge.”

This is where the argument breaks down. Freedom of expression does not exist without responsibility, especially during elections. Every democratic system places limits where speech threatens public order or electoral integrity. By-elections are regulated processes, not open mic sessions.



Sampa was not detained for expressing an opinion. He was detained after announcing the existence of a fake polling station during the Chawama by-election, a claim later rejected by the Electoral Commission. He apologised publicly for that statement. The apology matters. It acknowledges the information was false.



One cannot apologise for spreading false election information and later claim persecution for speaking truth.
two positions cannot coexist.



His criticism of cyber laws also carries selective memory. Restrictive legal frameworks around security and communication did not emerge in a vacuum. Many were enacted or reinforced during periods when opposition figures now crying foul exercised state power themselves. The discomfort today is less about principle and more about position.



Sampa also described Chawama as violent territory. He claimed he was almost killed by “UPND thugs” armed with pangas and said police saved his life.



“Chawama was a difficult campaign
 I was almost killed there.”

The allegation is serious, yet no corroborating police statement or case reference was presented during the interview. What remains is narrative escalation, where a by-election becomes proof of systematic repression.



On accusations of betraying Edgar Chagwa Lungu, Sampa leaned on reconciliation. He said the two resolved their differences and that Lungu encouraged opposition unity. This has become a recurring theme across PF-aligned politics. Lungu’s name is invoked as moral authority long after voters rejected his leadership.



Reconciliation, however, does not rewrite history. Electoral defeat does not transform into moral victory simply because time has passed or death has intervened.

What unfolded on Diamond TV was not a legal argument. It was a repositioning exercise. A man facing accountability chose to shift the arena from the courtroom to public emotion. The state became the villain. The law became oppression. Personal discomfort became national crisis.



He apologised for spreading false election information. The law was triggered. The courts will decide.



As campaigns start, this distinction matters. The real question is not whether politicians should speak freely. It is whether falsehoods during elections should carry no consequence at all.

Victimhood can mobilise. Accountability still governs.

© The People’s Brief | Editors

THE ARCHITECT OF ACCOUNTABILITY: DEFENDING THE INTEGRITY OF EMMANUEL MWAMBA

THE ARCHITECT OF ACCOUNTABILITY: DEFENDING THE INTEGRITY OF EMMANUEL MWAMBA



In the tapestry of democracy, the most valuable thread is often the most uncomfortable one. Dr. Mwelwa’s recent critique of Ambassador Emmanuel Mwamba and the EMV platform characterizes the Ambassador as a “Dividing General.” However, a factual look at the landscape of Zambian politics reveals a different reality: Emmanuel Mwamba is not a divider of the house, but a rigorous inspector of its foundation.



The primary accusation against EMV is that it directs “withering critique” at fellow opposition leaders. In any mature democracy, leadership is not a gift, it is a responsibility that must be earned through scrutiny.



EMV has hosted diverse voices, from constitutional lawyers like John Sangwa SC to economists like Dr. Grieve Chelwa. These are not “partisan hits”; they are intellectual audits.


The Defense: To suggest that the opposition should be immune to internal critique is to advocate for the very “echo chambers” that stifle growth. If an opposition leader cannot withstand a “verified” interview, how will they withstand the immense pressure of state machinery?



Dr. Mwelwa suggests that because Ambassador Mwamba is in “exile,” he is disconnected from the “pulse” of the people. This ignores the reality of 21st-century political engagement.



EMV platform provides a voice for the voiceless at a time when traditional media spaces are increasingly constricted.One does not need to board a minibus to understand that the price of mealie meal is high or that the rule of law is under threat. By leveraging digital space, Mwamba has ensured that the “democratic flame” stays lit even when the wind blows hard against physical gatherings in Zambia.



The article asks if EMV is “auditioning for relevance.” On the contrary, Emmanuel Mwamba’s “Project 2026” focuses on policy-driven alternatives rather than mere personality worship.
Real unity is built on shared values, not shared silence.



By interrogating various contenders, Mwamba is helping the Zambian voter identify the most robust alternative to the status quo. This is the hallmark of a Strategist, not a divider. A general who ignores the flaws in his own ranks is the one who leads his troops to certain defeat.


Emmanuel Mwamba’s contribution to the Zambian political discourse is an essential exercise in intellectual honesty. He is not “testing which walls will fall”; he is pointing out the cracks so that the house can be reinforced before the storm of 2026.


We seek an opposition that is refined by fire, not one that is fragile and allergic to the truth. In this regard, Ambassador Mwamba is a vital asset to our democratic survival.


“Iron sharpens iron; so one person sharpens another.” (Proverbs 27:17)
THE COST OF SILENCE IS HIGHER THAN THE PRICE OF CRITIQUE: WHY ZAMBIA NEEDS THE TRUTH, UNFILTERED AND VERIFIED.



The Struggle Continues

Sensio Banda
Former Member of Parliament
Kasenengwa Constituency
Eastern Province

MAKEBI  ZULU OUTSHINES MUNDIBILE – Given Mutinta

By Given Mutinta

MAKEBI OUTSHINES MUNDIBILE

Brian Mundubile, one of the Patriotic Front’s (PF) presidential candidates, filed his nomination under a Tonse breakaway external alliance structure before the internal party selection process is done, raising serious questions about his commitment to PF internal democracy and organisational discipline.



Mundibile’s action suggests a willingness to circumvent established PF internal protocol for personal gain or political expediency



In PF democratic politics, the party constitution and regulations serve as the social contract among its members.

When a person such as Mundibile bypasses these foundational rules, it signals his potential predisposition towards treacherous or convenience-driven decision-making, traits antithetical to sound PF governance, and can get Mundibile expelled.



This is a clear indication that Mundibile does not respect the PF processes designed to build consensus within their own organisation because he has no respect for his party’s constitutional processes in spite of being a lawyer.



Makebi Zulu, another PF presidential candidate, exemplifies a principled approach to leadership by deciding to wait for the formal PF conference to elect its standard-bearer.



By prioritising the established PF internal mechanisms, Zulu demonstrates an understanding that legitimacy flows from proper procedure.

This patience and deference to organisational structure are hallmarks of a mature politician who values long-term party stability over short-term opportunism.



In Zambian politics, where building coalitions and having democracy within parties can be unstable, Zulu’s promise to wait for the due process to happen shows that he understands the need for unity that comes from legitimate means.



This adherence to established law within the party context serves as a strong indicator that Zulu would similarly respect national statutes and constitutional mandates if elected president.

A leader who respects the rules when they are inconvenient is a leader worthy of trust.



The distinction between Mundibile and Zulu’s actions has direct implications for their potential performance as president.

A leader who shortcuts internal party rules, as suggested by Mundubile’s reported filing, may be inclined to disregard checks and balances at the national level.



This tendency can lead to executive overreach and the erosion of democratic institutions.

Political science consistently shows that leaders who operate outside established norms, even for ostensibly positive outcomes, often create precedents for instability.



Makebi Zulu’s conduct, however, suggests a commitment to the rule of law.

A president who knows how important it is to follow the established path to power is more likely to govern through established institutions, respecting the independence of the courts, the oversight of Parliament, and the rule of law.



This procedural consistency is vital for national predictability and economic confidence.

Therefore, the manner in which political aspirants navigatez the internal selection process provides crucial data points regarding their character and governing philosophy.



Brian Mundubile’s alleged bypass of PF internal rules contrasts sharply with Makebi Zulu’s commitment to awaiting the formal party conference.

Zulu’s action of adhering strictly to the PF procedural framework positions him as a candidate who values order, internal democracy, and the rule of law.



Such demonstrated principles are not mere political posturing; they are essential precursors to effective, stable, and legitimate national leadership.



Therefore, the procedural rectitude displayed by Makebi Zulu strongly suggests he possesses the necessary temperament and commitment to institutional respect required to serve as a good and reliable president.

CAN KALABA PUT ASIDE HIS POWER APETITE LIKE KAMBWILI?

CAN KALABA PUT ASIDE HIS POWER APETITE LIKE KAMBWILI?

By James Phiri, Kwamutonyo
The Candidates Editor

Chishimba Kambwili has openly stated that he is ready to set aside his presidential ambitions if doing so would help build a strong, united opposition capable of confronting UPND in the 2026 General Elections. That alone separates him from the circus of ego-driven politicians masquerading as national leaders.



Kambwili is not alone. Fred M’membe has also said he is willing to shelve his ambitions for the sake of opposition unity. In a political landscape poisoned by vanity and delusions of grandeur, such admissions are rare and telling.



In Zambia today, leadership ambition has been reduced to a joke. Anyone with a bank account, a smartphone, and access to WhatsApp believes they are presidential material. This explains the explosion of comic political parties run by individuals with no structure, no ideology, no national appeal yet all demanding to be President. Zambia is drowning in political comedians, not leaders.



If leadership means humility, self-awareness, and the maturity to accept that no one is divinely ordained to rule, then it is painfully obvious that only Kambwili and M’membe have demonstrated even a trace of leadership maturity.



Now let us talk about Harry Kalaba.

Can Kalaba who runs what is essentially a WhatsApp-group party, ever put aside his obsessive hunger for power? Can he step down for the sake of unity, the way Kambwili and M’membe have indicated? The answer is simple: No chance.



Kalaba’s political ego far outweighs his actual political relevance.

Between Kalaba, Kambwili, and M’membe, who commands real political influence? Who has the capacity to mobilise, to threaten UPND, to shake the system? Certainly not Kalaba.



Kalaba has been in opposition since 2018, after resigning from Edgar Lungu’s cabinet and abandoning PF. Eight long years later, what exactly does he have to show for it?
No electoral breakthroughs.
No mass following.
No national momentum.



His only measurable “achievement” is registering two political parties at the Registrar of Societies. That is not political growth. That is paperwork.



Kalaba enjoys a privilege no serious opposition leader in Zambia enjoys. He is tolerated by Hakainde Hichilema. He is allowed to move freely, hold rallies, mobilise, and posture like a presidential contender without interference. Contrast this with the treatment of Makebi Zulu or Fred M’membe—men who are hounded, blocked, harassed, and denied basic freedoms by Zambia Police.

Makebi cannot even host sympathisers at his own private residence. M’membe is treated like a criminal for exercising democratic rights. Meanwhile, Kalaba is given police permits, protection, and political breathing space.



Why?Because Kalaba poses no threat.

UPND does not fear Kalaba. They fear impact. They fear mobilisation. They fear relevance. And Kalaba has none of these. His political harmlessness is precisely why he is allowed to roam freely. That tolerance has inflated his ego, making him believe like Brian Mundubile, UPND’s favourite opposition pet, that he is destined for State House while everyone else must line up behind him.



Let us be clear: Hakainde cannot give Kambwili the freedom he gives Kalaba.He cannot give M’membe that freedom either.

Why? Because Kambwili and M’membe matter politically. They have weight. They have followers. They disrupt narratives. Kalaba does not.



So when we state these facts—facts that are publicly visible and undeniable—Kalaba’s attack dogs bark, insult, and foam at the mouth. But insults do not erase reality.They can shout all they want.They can cry victim all they want.But they cannot run away from the truth.Kalaba’s greatest political asset is not his popularity.It is his irrelevance

Principle Is Not Division: A Response to Dr. Mwelwa’s Misreading of Ambassador Emmanuel Mwamba

Principle Is Not Division: A Response to Dr. Mwelwa’s Misreading of Ambassador Emmanuel Mwamba



By Thandiwe KetiĆĄ Ngoma

Dr. Mwelwa’s article presents itself as a reflective meditation on unity, leadership, and democratic ethics. In substance, however, it is a carefully stylized reaction to one uncomfortable position that Ambassador Emmanuel Mwamba has consistently articulated on principle that an illegal process cannot produce a legal outcome. That, plainly, is the real grievance.



This position is not personal. It is institutional. It is grounded in responsibility. As Patriotic Front Publicity and Information Chairperson, Ambassador Mwamba is not at liberty to romanticize illegality or remain silent in the face of procedural abuse. His duty is to defend the party’s constitution, decisions, and lawful directives, regardless of who is inconvenienced in the process. That is the context Dr. Mwelwa’s article avoids.



For clarity, because Dr. Mwelwa’s article is notably silent on key facts, Hon. Brian Mundubile is the Member of Parliament for Mporokoso, elected on the Patriotic Front ticket. PF is not a peripheral opposition player. It is the anchor party of the Tonse Alliance, the coalition within which this dispute has arisen.



Following internal disagreements, Dr. Dan Pule and leaders of smaller opposition parties convened a virtual meeting in which they purported to expel PF, the anchor party, from the Tonse Alliance, while selectively accepting individual PF members into a newly improvised alliance of their own making. This action was procedurally defective and legally incoherent. An alliance cannot lawfully remove its anchor party and retain legitimacy, least of all through a virtual meeting convened by parties with no authority over PF’s internal structures.



In response, the PF Central Committee issued a clear directive that no PF member was to associate with or participate in the breakaway Tonse arrangement. Hon. Brian Mundubile chose to defy that directive. He aligned himself with the illegal Tonse led by Dr. Dan Pule, participated in determining which PF individuals would be accepted into that formation, and went further by filing to be appointed Chairperson of the illegal Tonse, all in open defiance of the party under whose banner he holds parliamentary office.



These are not opinions. They are facts.

When Ambassador Mwamba states, in his capacity as PF Publicity and Information Chairperson and speaking strictly on principle, that such a process is illegal, he is not waging personal battles or positioning himself for advantage. He is articulating a principled institutional position that rules matter, structures matter, and legitimacy flows from procedure, not popularity.



The Tonse formation currently being promoted under the leadership of Dr. Dan Pule, as Ambassador Mwamba has explained, has no legal standing. It lacks PF authorization, violates alliance norms, and rests on the false premise that individuals can substitute for institutions. No amount of political enthusiasm can convert that illegality into legitimacy. Calling this out is not division. It is fidelity to principle.



Dr. Mwelwa directs his critique at Ambassador Mwamba, yet avoids the central contradictions raised by this situation. He does not address why party discipline is condemned when it restrains ambition, why defiance of lawful directives is celebrated as courage, or why the enforcement of rules is portrayed as sabotage. This selective indignation does not strengthen democracy. It weakens it.



Unity without legality is fiction. Cohesion without rules is performance. Leadership without accountability is illusion. What unsettles Ambassador Mwamba’s critics is not his tone or his location, but his refusal, as PF Publicity and Information Chairperson speaking on principle, to pretend that disorder is strategy or that illegality can be dressed up as unity.



This critique exists because Ambassador Mwamba drew a clear line grounded in law, party constitution, and principle, and some are angered because they cannot cross that line without being exposed. History does not reward those who confuse ambition with legitimacy, and it will not forget those who defended rules when it was inconvenient to do so.



An illegal process cannot and will never produce a legal outcome. That is not division. That is not politics of exile. That is principle.

EDITORIAL | John Sangwa and the Line He Must Never Cross

🇿🇲 EDITORIAL | John Sangwa and the Line He Must Never Cross

John Sangwa’s recent decision to step into ordinary spaces and engage people directly is not a stunt. It is a late but necessary correction. Politics does not begin in court filings, legal seminars, or elite conversations. It begins where people live. That reality has now caught up with him, and to his credit, he appears to be listening.



When Sangwa burst onto the political scene last year, he arrived with confidence and intellectual force. For a brief moment, parts of the opposition were excited. Then the distance set in. Not because Sangwa lacked value, but because he did not fit neatly into their narrow political project. That project is not reform. It is not policy. It is not vision. It is survival.



Most of the opposition figures dominating today’s airwaves are politically descended from the Patriotic Front. They carry PF instincts even when they wear different logos. Their politics is built around grievance, anger, and one overriding fixation: removing the current president. Not replacing ideas. Not competing on solutions. Just removing a man.



Listen to them carefully on radio and television. The anger is loud, but the substance is missing. There is no coherent plan for jobs. No serious alternative on education. No credible anti-corruption framework. No economic vision that survives scrutiny. The entire message collapses into one tired slogan: change government.



Zambians rejected that emptiness in 2021. Decisively. That rejection did not happen by accident. It happened because people were exhausted by politics driven by fear, intimidation, and personal survival. The former president, Edgar Chagwa Lungu, was not voted out because of bad luck. He was rejected because of how power was used, how institutions were treated, and how the country was governed.



Today, when PF-linked figures speak about Lungu, they speak as if Zambia did not live under that reign. As if arrests, intimidation, selective justice, and economic drift never happened. As if memory must be suspended. Death does not rewrite history. It does not turn failed leadership into sainthood. It does not absolve brutality. Lungu is now invoked almost as a political deity, a spirit to be summoned for mobilisation. That is dishonest politics, and it insults the intelligence of the electorate.



John Sangwa must never reduce himself to that.

He is not PF. He has no obligation to inherit their baggage, their grief politics, or their obsession with resurrection narratives. PF politics today is built around mourning, not meaning. Around grievance, not governance. Around identity, not ideas. It is backward-looking and emotionally manipulative, and it has no future.



The context has also changed. Tribal mobilisation, once a reliable campaign tool, is now a criminal offence. And suddenly, those who thrived on it are crying about freedom of speech. What they are really mourning is the loss of a weapon. Division is no longer protected politics. That is not repression. That is accountability.



This is why Sangwa’s path matters. He has real assets. He understands institutions. He has professional credibility. He has networks that extend beyond party nostalgia. But none of that will matter if he chooses to orbit a political culture that has already been rejected by the people.



If he aligns himself with PF-style opposition figures, he will be swallowed by their failure. They will not build him. They will drain him. Their politics is not about Zambia’s future. It is about personal relevance in a country that has moved on.



Zambia does not lack opposition noise. It lacks an alternative government. Free education is policy. Debt restructuring is policy. Social protection is policy. Anyone who opposes these must answer a simple question: what replaces them. Silence is not a plan.



The uncomfortable truth is that, right now, Zambia has no credible alternative government-in-waiting. That vacuum is real. It will not be filled by shouting, nostalgia, or myth-making.



John Sangwa still has a choice. He can build a new political language, grounded in listening, humility, and policy clarity. Or he can become another angry voice shouting from the ruins of a rejected past.



Yesterday’s engagement with ordinary people was not a photo opportunity. It was a warning. It was also an invitation.



If Sangwa listens, this path can grow. If he imitates PF politics, it will end him before it begins.

Zambia has moved on. Those who refuse to move with it will be left talking to themselves.

© The People’s Brief | Editor-in-Chief

M’MEMBE CRITICIZES HIGH COST OF LIVING, CALLS FOR POLICY SHIFT

M’MEMBE CRITICIZES HIGH COST OF LIVING, CALLS FOR POLICY SHIFT

Socialist Party President Dr Fred M’membe has warned that Zambia’s high cost of living is worsening due to misguided economic policies and intolerance of dissent.

He said citizens who question government on rising prices, mining concessions, and tax waivers are unfairly branded as unpatriotic or economically ignorant.

Dr M’membe argued that excessive tax incentives and continued borrowing are depriving the country of resources that could create millions of jobs and improve public services.

He noted that when salaries are converted into dollars, the impact of the weak kwacha exposes the depth of economic hardship in an import dependent economy.

He stressed that foreign investment should be driven by strong infrastructure, quality education, reliable energy, and good governance not costly tax giveaways.

EAT THEIR FOOD, MONEY BUT VOTE WISELY
 Kalaba tells the people of Kasama ahead of thursday’s Mayoral by – election

EAT THEIR FOOD, MONEY BUT VOTE WISELY


 Kalaba tells the people of Kasama ahead of thursday’s Mayoral by – election.

KASAMA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 27,2026 [ SMART EAGLES]

CITIZENS First party President Harry Kalaba has implored the people of Kasama to accept all the goodies being offered to them by the UPND Government ahead of thursday’s mayoral by – election and teach them a lesson by voting for the CF candidate Aaron Zimba.

Speaking on Radio Mano last night, Mr. Kalaba said the people of Kasama should ask themselves where the UPND have been for them to resurface during the by – election and start dishing out money and mealie meal in order to buy their vote.

He said the people of Kasama should vote wisely and avoid making a mistake of voting for the UPND, a party he said has failed to deliver meaningful development in the country.

“The Kasama mayoral by – election is litmus test for the 2026 General elections, I am saying to the people of Kasama that eat the food the UPND is offering to you and vote wisely on thursday. Ask the UPND where they have been all this while for them to resurface now and start dishing out money and mealie mealie in order to buy votes. The only person who will bring meaningful development in Kasama is Aaron Zimba because he has experience being the former councillor for Mulilansolo ward and he knows how the people live here,” Mr. Kalaba said.

“UPND has destroyed alot of things in the country and only Citizens First party is coming to control and make meaningful changes. CF is the only party that has life and puts Zambians first and we are coming to liberate the citizens, ” the CF leader said.

And Mr. Kalaba said the money the UPND is busy dishing out in Kasama could have been used to pay farmers who supplied maize to the Food Reserve Agency and provide medicines in hospitals.

“If the UPND was serious, this money they wasting on dishing out and cooking nshima for electorates in Kasama during campaigns could have been used to pay farmers. This money they wasting on nshima could also have been used to buy medicines for the people of Kasama including upgrading roads, and my wish is for the UPND to lose this by election, the person who must win is Aaron Zimba,” Mr. Mr. Kalaba said.

Fault Lines Deepen as Chama North MP Backs Mundubile

🇿🇲 BRIEFING | PF Fault Lines Deepen as Chama North MP Backs Mundubile

Patriotic Front Chama North Member of Parliament Yotam Mtayachalo has openly threatened to realign PF structures in his constituency in support of Brian Mundubile, escalating an already volatile internal contest within the opposition party.



Speaking amid growing tension in PF ranks, Mtayachalo said no threat of expulsion would deter Mundubile’s leadership ambitions, arguing that attempts to block rival candidates lack both moral and procedural authority.



He suggested that those issuing warnings do not currently possess the power to expel any sitting PF Member of Parliament.



The intervention sharpens a legitimacy battle unfolding around the Tonse Alliance, now split between competing centres of authority. Mundubile is aligned with a faction challenging the stewardship of Given Lubinda, whose bloc insists it remains the lawful anchor of the alliance.



Behind the scenes, several traditional leaders from the Northern Circuit are reported to be encouraging PF figures to rally around Mundubile, adding regional weight to the dispute.



The episode underlines a widening crack in PF discipline at a critical moment. With competing claims over party authority, alliance legitimacy, and leadership succession, the opposition’s internal struggle is increasingly playing out in public, reshaping battle lines just months before the 2026 general elections.

© The People’s Brief | Goran Handya

Political Realignment in South Africa: Inside Information Suggests MK Party and EFF Could Join Forces While the ANC and DA May Form a Coalition – A Possible New Power Map That Could Shape the Country’s Future

Political Realignment in South Africa: Inside Information Suggests MK Party and EFF Could Join Forces While the ANC and DA May Form a Coalition – A Possible New Power Map That Could Shape the Country’s Future



There is growing talk in political circles, backed by what some analysts call “inside information”, that South Africa may soon see a dramatic realignment of forces. The expectation is that Jacob Zuma’s MK Party and Julius Malema’s EFF could move closer and possibly form a political bloc or coalition, while on the other side the ANC and the DA may deepen cooperation and formalise a governing partnership.



If this happens, it would mark a historic shift. An MK–EFF alliance would bring together two parties that position themselves as radical, anti-establishment and strongly critical of the current economic system. Both draw support from communities that feel left behind by the democratic project, and both speak strongly on land, state control of key industries, and resistance to what they call “Western influence” in South African politics and the economy. Such a bloc could become a powerful opposition force, mobilising the streets, Parliament and public opinion, especially among the youth and working class.



On the other side, an ANC–DA coalition would represent a centrist and institutional stability axis. The ANC, still the largest party, brings liberation history, broad national reach and control of state machinery. The DA brings strong support in urban areas, business confidence, and a focus on governance, accountability and market-led growth. Together, they would aim to present themselves as a stabilising force, protecting the Constitution, attracting investment, fixing the energy crisis and keeping the country economically afloat.



This possible two-bloc future would mean South Africa’s politics could become more clearly divided:
– A reformist, stability-driven centre led by the ANC and DA.
– A radical, populist, anti-status quo bloc led by the EFF and MK Party.



Experts say this is no longer just theory. Coalition politics after the 2024 elections has shown that no single party can rule alone. Power is now built through alliances, negotiations and strategic partnerships. The question is no longer only “who wins the most votes?” but “who can build a coalition that reflects the future direction South Africans want?”



So the real debate for citizens becomes deeper than party loyalty:

Who truly has the future of South Africa at heart?
Who is focused on jobs, economic growth, stability and protecting democratic institutions?
Who is focused on radical change, redistribution, and challenging the current economic order?
Who can unite the country, and who can inspire it?



Whether it is an ANC–DA partnership promising stability and reform, or an MK–EFF alliance promising radical transformation, the choices being shaped now could define South Africa’s political and economic path for the next decade.

RESPECT OUR SPECIAL FORCES – KATELE

RESPECT OUR SPECIAL FORCES – KATELE

FORMER Minister of Home Affairs Dr Katele Kalumba has poured scorn on Zambia Army Commander Lieutenant General Geoffrey Zyeele for publicly announcing the deployment of special forces (commandos) to areas where people are illegally mining gold.

And Patriotic Front (PF) presidential aspirant Makebi Zulu has strongly condemned recent remarks made by Lt Gen Zyeele regarding illegal miners.

Dr Kalumba said in an interview at the weekend it was wrong for the Army Commander to announce the deployment of elite soldiers because it was supposed to be a covert operation that should have remained a top secret.

“For me, as a former member of the Defence Council, I feel it is wrong for the Army Commander to announce the deployment of special forces. This is top secret. It is a covert operation,” he said.

Dr Kalumba said Zambia’s military doctrine was not a single published public document, such as those of major powers, but derived from its Constitution, legislation and defence policy statements.

The army was not supposed to be unleashed on civilians unless there were special circumstances that threatened state security.

He said it was the job of the police to stop illegal mining and not the army. What Lt Gen Zyeele was doing could cause chaos in the country.

“The primary role of the Zambia Defence Forces is to protect and defend the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Zambia against external aggression, as this is the standard principle for nations,” Dr Kalumba said.

The military had no direct standing mandate to police such activities as internal economic crimes like illegal mining, timber lumbering and many others.

Dr Kalumba said, however, said there were exceptional circumstances where the military might become involved if such activities degenerated into a national security concern.

He cited Article 116, where the President could invoke the same law to deploy the military in cooperation with the police service to preserve public security and enforce the law in situations where the police capacity was overwhelmed.

The Defence Forces were not a police force to administer economic crimes.

“Its involvement is exceptional, conducted jointly with and in support of the police and typically requires high-level authorisation,” Dr Kalumba said.

He said the Property Protection Police, a specialised unit within the Zambia Police Service, whose role was defined and distinct from both regular police duties and military functions, should have been engaged instead of the army.

Dr Kalumba said Zambia’s military doctrine was conventional with a primary external defence force and lacked the mandate for policing internal economic crimes.

“Military involvement in economic crimes only occurs under exceptional, legally defined circumstances through joint operations where the Zambia National Service (ZNS) is often the lead military component acting in support of the police to address large-scale organised crimes,” he said.

And PF presidential aspirant Makebi Zulu has condemned Lt Gen Zyeele over his statement on illegal miners.

Zulu, a renowned constitutional lawyer, described Lt Gen Zyeele’s statement as unfortunate, irresponsible and disturbing which lacked professional military judgment.

He said threats or any use of terms such as “exterminate” and “fumigate” in reference to citizens was dehumanising and dangerous.

“Such rhetoric evokes memories of atrocities like the holocaust in Germany and the genocide in Rwanda. Zambia, as a nation that upholds human rights and the rule of law, must never normalise such expressions,” he said.

The Mast

MWILA URGES ELECTORATE TO VOTE OUT MPs WHO VOTED FOR BILL 7

MWILA URGES ELECTORATE TO VOTE OUT MPs WHO VOTED FOR BILL 7

Former PF Secretary General Davies Mwila has challenged MPs who voted for Bill 7 to openly justify their actions to the voters in their constituencies instead of denying that they did not vote for Bill 7 that was widely rejected by the church and other stakeholders before its enactment into law.

“This is not a time for MPs to deny that they did not vote for Bill 7 for fear of losing elections. They should be truthful during the ongoing campaigns in their constituencies by admitting that they voted for Bill 7,” Mr Mwila says.

He named Kalulushi MP Kampamba Mulenga as one of the opposition MPs denying to the people of Kalulushi that she did not vote for Bill 7 contrary to the well-documented truth at Parliament and on the ground.

“What is My Offence?” – VeryDarkMan Claims Arsenal Blocked Him After Loss to Man Utd

“What is My Offence?” – VeryDarkMan Claims Arsenal Blocked Him After Loss to Man Utd

Social media critic Martins Otse, popularly known as VeryDarkMan (VDM), has cried out after discovering that the official Instagram account of Premier League giants Arsenal FC has blocked him.



The Discovery

On the evening of Sunday, January 25, the activist posted a video clip demonstrating that he was unable to view the North London club’s page, while he still retained full access to the account of their rivals, Manchester United.



The Context

The incident occurred shortly after Arsenal suffered a painful 3-2 defeat against Manchester United at the Emirates Stadium a match that saw the Gunners miss a crucial chance to climb the league table. VDM, a staunch supporter of the Red Devils, had been trolling the losing side before discovering the block.



He captioned his reaction:

“You all won’t believe this 😂😂 Arsenal admin just blocked me 😭😭😭😭 What is my offence
. United for life”



Fan Theories

The development has sparked debate among netizens. While some believe the block was a direct result of his relentless trolling following the match, others speculate it might be connected to his recent high-profile online feud with Wizkid, a global music star with strong ties to the Arsenal fanbase.

“She Denied Me Visitation”—Man Claims to be Calvin Bassey’s Biological Father, Pleads for Access

“She Denied Me Visitation”—Man Claims to be Calvin Bassey’s Biological Father, Pleads for Access

A viral video from a live session hosted by Hellen Ati allegedly the baby mama of socialite Cubana Chiefpriest has sparked a fresh debate online after featuring a man claiming to be the biological father of Super Eagles and Fulham defender Calvin Bassey.



The Allegation

In the emotional clip, which surfaced on Monday, January 26, the man, identifying himself as Kingsley Ikenna from Anambra State, broke down in tears while narrating a long-standing family rift. He alleged that his ex-wife has deliberately blocked him from seeing his adult sons, including the football star, for years.



The backstory

Ikenna explained that the family originally lived in Italy before moving to England. However, complications arose regarding their immigration paperwork. He claimed that when he suggested returning to Italy to resolve the issue, his wife refused. Unable to work legally in the UK, he was forced to return to Italy alone.



Blocked Access

He alleged that following his departure, his ex-wife cut off all contact and denied him visitation rights. He insisted that his current public plea is not motivated by Calvin’s fame or money but by a genuine desire to reconnect with his children after failed private attempts.

Calvin Bassey recently featured for the Super Eagles in the just-concluded AFCON tournament in Morocco. The video has drawn mixed reactions from Nigerians, with some expressing sympathy for the man’s tears, while others remain skeptical of his timing.

Zulu King Misuzulu kaZwelithini Sparks National Debate by Calling for the Removal of the Word “Natal” from KwaZulu-Natal Province, Claiming It Is a Colonial Name While Experts Warn of Division and Backlash

Zulu King Misuzulu kaZwelithini Sparks National Debate by Calling for the Removal of the Word “Natal” from KwaZulu-Natal Province, Claiming It Is a Colonial Name While Experts Warn of Division and Backlash



The Zulu King, Misuzulu kaZwelithini, has caused a wave of discussion and controversy after announcing his plan to remove the word “Natal” from the name of KwaZulu-Natal province. The King says that “Natal” represents a colonial legacy and that the province should instead be called “KwaZulu,” reflecting its pre-colonial Zulu identity and heritage.



This announcement was made during a commemoration of the historic Battle of Isandlwana, where Zulu forces defeated the British in 1879. According to the King, restoring the name KwaZulu is a way to reclaim indigenous sovereignty and honor the Zulu nation’s history.



However, the move has been met with significant backlash from historians, cultural experts, and political commentators. Critics argue that the name change could ignore the province’s full history, marginalize non-Zulu communities, and create division among residents. They also stress that KwaZulu-Natal has been a unifying name since 1994, combining both Zulu heritage and the region’s colonial past



Legal experts have pointed out that changing the province’s name would require extensive public consultations, approval from the provincial legislature, and a constitutional amendment at the national level—a process that could take years to complete.



As the debate unfolds, the nation is being forced to confront questions about cultural identity, historical memory, and the balance between honoring indigenous heritage and maintaining inclusivity in a diverse province.

Blocking the Way” – Portable Accuses Wizkid, Davido, and Burna Boy of Monopolizing the Industry

“Blocking the Way” – Portable Accuses Wizkid, Davido, and Burna Boy of Monopolizing the Industry

Fresh off his release from custody, controversial street-hop artist Portable has launched a scathing attack on the titans of Nigerian music, accusing them of stifling the growth of upcoming artists.



The Monopoly Allegation

Speaking during an Instagram live session, the “Zazu” crooner called out the industry’s heavyweights specifically Wizkid, Olamide, Davido, and Burna Boy. He argued that their dominance over the last decade has created a ceiling that prevents new talent from truly shining.



Fake Life Accusations

Beyond the gatekeeping claims, Portable also took aim at their perceived wealth. He alleged that the luxurious lifestyles displayed by these superstars are often fabricated for public perception, citing instances where they reportedly claim free gifts are expensive purchases.



He said:

“Wizkid, Olamide, Davido, and Burna Boy have been at the top for over 10 years and blocking the way for other artistes to come up
 they also lie a lot, they can say they bought a chain for 1 billion dollars, whereas it might have been given to them for free.”

GOVT PROBES MISSING NTUMPA UNIVERSITY FUNDS

GOVT PROBES MISSING NTUMPA UNIVERSITY FUNDS

THE Government has launched investigations into the disappearance of funds allocated for the construction of Ntumpa University in Northern Province.



Finance and National Planning Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane disclosed this in Kasama after touring the proposed university site in Lukashya Constituency.



Dr. Musokotwane expressed dismay at the absence of meaningful development nearly a decade after the project was launched.



The Minister said he was shocked to find that only a small wall had been erected on the vast land designated for the institution, despite the strategic importance of the university to the region’s socio-economic development.



Dr. Musokotwane noted that Ntumpa University, planned as a major public higher learning institution, was initiated by the previous government in 2017 on approximately 400 hectares of land.



He said construction stalled the following year, with no clear explanation provided to date.

The Finance Minister stated that government will engage investigative agencies to establish how much funding had been released for the project and to identify the contractors involved.



He criticised the alleged mismanagement of public resources, stating that it was unacceptable for leaders entrusted with developing rural communities to divert funds meant for national development.



Dr. Musokotwane further stressed the need for collective responsibility in safeguarding public finances, warning that the country’s progress would remain elusive without integrity and accountability.


Meanwhile, a local resident Joseph Mumbi called for full transparency, urging the previous administration to account for the missing funds and explain why the project was abandoned.



This is according to a statement issued to ZNBC news by Northern Province Principal Public Relations Officer Sandra Mulenga.

ZNBC

LUBINDA’S TONSE ALLIANCE RE-ADMITS NCP

LUBINDA’S TONSE ALLIANCE RE-ADMITS NCP

The Given Lubinda led Tonse Alliance has re-admitted the New Congress Party which had left the opposition grouping.



The late former President Edgar Lungu had picked NCP to be the Purpose Vehicle Party but he ditched the grouping.

Sources within the Patriotic Front (PF) have told Zambian Eye that the Lubinda led Tonse Alliance intends to use NCP as Purpose Vehicle Party.



TONSE ALLIANCE COMMUNIQUÉ

..Tonse re-admits NCP…

26.01.2026

RE: Outcomes of the Tonse Alliance Council of Leaders (CoL) Meeting Held on Monday, 26th January 2026 at Eagle’s View Event Centre – Lusaka



The Tonse Alliance Council of Leaders convened on Monday, 26th January 2026 at Eagle’s View Event Centre. The meeting was chaired by Hon. Given Lubinda, Chairperson of the Tonse Alliance and President of the Patriotic Front.



The Council met to deliberate on the following agenda items:

1. Consideration and admission of new political parties and Civil Society Organisations into the Tonse Alliance.



2. Consideration of applications for re-admission by former members of the Alliance.

– ADMISSION TO TONSE ALLIANCE

Following deliberations, the Council resolved as follows:



A. NEW ADMISSION

The following political parties and Civil Society Organisations were admitted into the Tonse Alliance:



1. Resolute Party

2. Democratic Union

3. Citizens Democratic Party

4. Exodus Party for Peace and Prosperity

5. Revolutionary Communist Party

6. Leadership Development Party



7. Youth Advocates for Development in Africa (YADA)

8. Borderless Africa University Club

9. Youth With Initiative

10. Hope of Refuge

11. Youth Leadership and Dialogue Programme



B. RE-ADMISSIONS

The Council further approved the re-admission of members who had earlier resigned :

1. New Congress Party (NCP)

2. United for Better Zambia (UBZ)



The Council of Leaders reaffirmed its commitment to strengthening the Alliance through inclusive, disciplined, and purpose-driven participation, anchored on the shared objective of delivering a credible alternative government for the Republic of Zambia in response to the people’s expectations.



Issued by:
Ephraim Shakafuswa
Spokesperson
Tonse Alliance

Why Nixon Chilangwa and Chitotela and Others are not supposed to be in Prison- Amb. Emmanuel Mwamba

Amb. Emmanuel Mwamba Wrote;

Why Nixon Chilangwa and Chitotela and Others are not supposed to be in Prison



…It would seem that the accused were attacked by the villagers in retaliation of their alleged attack on two of their own and the reported harassment….



I came across this Judgment that convicted UPND cadres that hacked two Kawambwa residents and were driving the Mahindra which was burnt by the angry villagers.



The UPND cadres were convicted and jailed but were released on bail-pending appeal.

That matter has never come up for trial in the High Court.

Meanwhile the same facts were presented differently in a matter before Magistrate Martin Namushi.



Kawambwa Magistrate Martin Namushi convicted Nickson Chilangwa and Ronald Chitotela, but only sentenced Chilangwa. He committed Chitotela to the High Court for sentencing because the offense of arson carries a minimum sentence of 10 years, which is outside a magistrate’s jurisdiction.



What happened that day?

The UPND cadres were prosecuted and convicted in 2022,August for the assault.

Luapula Province youth chairperson Nelson Kalembwe and four others were jailed for 2 years for an incident that happened on election day.


Particulars of the offence was that Nelson Kalembwe, John Lukwesa, Sunday
Chola, Ivyn Mutono and Thomas Chafye on the 12th day of August, 2021 at
Kawambwa in the Kawambwa District of the Luapula Province of the Republic of
Zambia jointly and whilst acting together did assault Evans Mulenga thereby
occasioning actual bodily harm


In the second count particulars allege that Nelson Kalembwe, John Lukwesa,
Sunday Chola, Ivyn Mutono and Thomas Chafye, on the 12th August, 2021 at
Kawambwa in the Kawambwa District of the Luapula Province of the Republic of
Zambia jointly and whilst acting together did assault Francis Mwenya thereby
occasioning him actual bodily harm.



The truth is,those criminals almost killed 2 villagers on Poll Day..
On their way back,they found that the villagers had set the Mahindra on fire as a reaction to the hacking of their kinsmen by these UPND cardres…



On the elections Day 12th August,2021, 5 UPND cardres beat up two local people in Kawambwa….over 30 km from the Boma….The idea was to instill fear in the voters  identified as PF. The UPND thugs were using the Mahindra in their mischief for transport. In the process,they harassed other motorists who then reported to the police that there were cadres  misbehaving…Police made a follow up and intercepted the Mahindra.



At that point,2 people had been hacked …The PF leaders Kalumba and Chilangwa received the report too and followed up with the police…At the point of interception,the UPND cardres were rounded up those that wanted to run away met villages who had by now organized themselves…The 5 cadres were put in a police cruiser …police then proceeded to pick the victims of the assault under  the hands of the cadres  beyond the point of interception…At that point ,Kalumba and Chilangwa headed back to the Boma… On the way back from picking the assault victims…



The system quickly pushed for their bail pending appeal…That appeal has never been heard to date…

Hon. Ronald Chitotela was never at the scene with his brothers…



Davy Kaniki was the one driving Chilangwa and Kalumba.. They both left the scene before the Mahindra was set ablaze by the irate villagers.

Below were the findings of the Court in the Assault Case:



“It is therefore not possible that PW1 was at the scene were the Mahindra was set on fire as the same was found burning on the way back from picking the assault
victims.”



“The third accused seemed to suggest in cross examination that PW1 pulled him
on the beards at the time of meeting the Police. However, there is evidence that is not challenged that PW1 was picked from Kabanda by Police after the accused had already been apprehended and at that time PW1 had already been beaten.”



“The assertion by A3 is an obvious impossibility and if indeed someone pulled him on the beards then this is a serious case of mistaken identity or simply an attemptnto confuse or mislead the Court.”

“A5, in cross examination, seemed to suggest that PW1 hit him with the Pajero (Chitotela’s vehicle).”



However, the evidence on record shows that the Pajero left in the Kawambwa
direction and the driver actually met Police and told them about the dreaded Mahindra whose occupants were harassing other motorists.”



“There is no report of the Pajero getting back to Kabanda polling station from where Police actually picked the injured PW1. This is again a case of mistaken identity or willful misleading of the Court by the accused that PW1 was at the scene where the Police met the accused person in the Mahindra and in fact he was already beaten
by them” J25-



The accused persons said they were given Medical Report Forms because they had also been beaten but no arrest had been made.

“This is probably because the accused persons do not really know which people beat them up from the mob that attacked them after word went round that they were harassing members of the public and had actually assaulted two of the villagers into unconsciousness.”



“It would seem that the accused were attacked by the villagers in retaliation of
their alleged attack on two of their own and the reported harassment.”

“From the tempo of the defence, the accused wanted to drag this Court into the issue of the Mahindra by linking the complainants to the case that is before another Court.”



“The accused were harassing members of the public and had actually assaulted two of the
villagers into unconsciousness.”

“It would seem that the accused were attacked by the villagers in retaliation of their alleged attack on two of their own and the reported harassment.”



“From the tempo of the defence, the accused wanted to drag this Court into the issue of the Mahindra by linking the complainants to the case that is before a
deferent Court. I refuse to be drawn into another case before another Court.”



“PW4, the officer in charge, told the Court that on the way from picking the victims of the assault, they found the fire and the Mahindra was burning. This evidence
was not challenged inbcross examination.”



However, A1 in defence said that Mr. Chilangwa started the fire before the Police Land cruiser had left. This is an
obvious afterthought and A1 was not being truthful in the quest to run away from the liability.”

“A1 kept mentioning that he did not know the complainants while insinuating that the complainants were part of the many Cadres that attacked them at the vehicle.” J26-



“The complainants told the Court they were attacked at home by the accused and
the Police met the accused coming from the direction of the assault.”

“There was only one UPND vehicle in the area whose occupants were reported to have been harassing people and beat up the two complainants.”



“The question of
mistaken identity does not arise under the circumstances.”

“From the evidence on record 2 accused persons camped in Pambashe and were joined by 3 others on the morning of the Polls.”

“The assertion that they delivered
the vehicle to the UPND Candidate has been disproved.”



“It seems that the intention to harass people was hatched well in advance to cause intimidation.”

“Therefore, the accused executed their common intention through harassing motorists and beating the complainants. In this regard, it is immaterial which specific role the accused played.”

A Ticket of Brian Mundubile and Chifumu Banda Is Non-Controversial — It Can Give the Tonse Alliance a Better Chance and a Proper SPV

A Ticket of Brian Mundubile and Chifumu Banda Is Non-Controversial — It Can Give the Tonse Alliance a Better Chance and a Proper SPV



By Dr. Kingsley B. Chinyama
Brussles | 25.01.2026

As Zambia edges toward another decisive political moment, the central question before the opposition is no longer whether change is necessary, but how that change can be made credible, inclusive, and electorally viable. For the Tonse Alliance, success will depend on presenting a ticket that reassures the undecided voter, consolidates the base, and avoids reopening wounds that fragment the opposition vote. In this context, a Brian Mundubile–Chifumu Banda ticket stands out as a non-controversial, strategic choice, one that offers the alliance a proper vehicle to compete and win.



First, politics is about arithmetic before it becomes poetry. Elections are won by coalitions broad enough to cut across regions, generations, and political histories. A Mundubile–Banda ticket speaks directly to this logic. It is not built on provocation or personality cults, but on political balance. It avoids extremes and instead offers a calm, steady alternative that can attract traditional party loyalists while remaining acceptable to floating voters who are fatigued by constant political drama.



Second, credibility matters. Voters are increasingly skeptical of experimental politics and last-minute political marriages that feel opportunistic. What gives this ticket strength is its predictability and seriousness. It does not frighten the business community, civil servants, churches, or cooperating partners. At the same time, it does not alienate grassroots supporters who want leadership that understands both governance and opposition struggle. In short, it is a ticket that looks like government-in-waiting, not a protest slate.



Third, the non-controversial nature of this ticket is precisely its advantage. In a polarized environment, controversy mobilizes opponents faster than it mobilizes supporters. The Tonse Alliance does not need a ticket that excites Twitter for a week but bleeds votes on election day. It needs a ticket that lowers political temperatures, keeps the alliance intact, and forces the ruling side to campaign on record rather than fear-mongering. Mundubile and Banda do exactly that: they deny opponents an easy attack line.



Fourth, unity within the alliance is non-negotiable. The Tonse Alliance is strongest when it acts as a coalition of shared purpose rather than competing egos. A Mundubile–Banda ticket minimizes internal resistance because it does not appear to privilege one faction at the expense of others. It creates space for all alliance partners to see themselves in the project. That internal peace is not cosmetic; it translates into coordinated campaigns, disciplined messaging, and higher voter turnout.



Finally, Zambia’s current mood favors stability with reform, not chaos with slogans. Citizens want leadership that can fix the economy, restore confidence, and govern competently from day one. A non-controversial ticket reassures voters that the transition will be orderly and focused on delivery, not revenge or experimentation. That reassurance is what converts dissatisfaction with the status quo into actual votes.



In conclusion, the Tonse Alliance does not need the loudest ticket, it needs the right one. A Brian Mundubile and Chifumu Banda ticket offers balance, credibility, unity, and electability. It is a proper vehicle for a serious political project and a realistic path to victory. In a contest where margins will matter, being non-controversial is not a weakness; it is the strategy.

Kingsley Chinyama

USA WILL NO LONGER FUND CORRUPT GOVTS – US Ambassador to Zambia Michael Gonzales

US WILL NO LONGER FUND CORRUPT GOVTS – GONZALES

US Ambassador to Zambia Michael Gonzales says his government will now only fund nations that are taking steps to fight corruption and grow their economies.


He says the US approach to foreign assistance had previously failed to spur development, and had instead enabled and perpetuated dependence and corruption by leaders in recipient countries.



Further, Ambassador Gonzales says the US government is not like China, as its engagements with nations are sincere and without hidden agendas or anything that comes at the partner’s expense.



In an article titled ‘Breaking the Cycle of Foreign Assistance Enabling Corruption’, posted on the US Department of State website, Ambassador Gonzales stated that, too often, what was needed for economic growth and development was not more money, but sound reforms.



“While the hundreds of billions of dollars in U.S. foreign assistance spent over the years have dramatically improved many people’s lives and livelihoods around the world, too often the United States’ approach to foreign assistance failed to advance U.S. interests, failed to spur systematic development, and enabled and perpetuated dependence and corruption by leaders in recipient countries.

Since 1991, the United States has provided more than $200 billion in foreign assistance to Africa, yet the African Union reports that African countries lose an estimated $88 billion each year through tax evasion, money laundering, and corruption. Too often, what is needed for economic growth and development is not more money, but sound reforms that incentivise enduring private investment and growth,” he stated.



“Instead of insisting on mutual accountability to use U.S. assistance to address the causes of poverty and underdevelopment, too often we funded outputs to allay the symptoms. In so doing, we failed both the American taxpayer and the citizens of developing countries who looked to their governments and ours to help create the conditions to realise a better future”.



He stated that in the past, the US government did not have a consistent policy as to whether its assistance was charity or a foreign policy tool.

Ambassador Gonzales added that this lack of clarity had helped to perpetuate corruption and bad governance.



“For decades, the United States did not have a consistent policy as to even whether assistance was charity or a foreign policy tool. We did not require a committed partner, a coherent business plan, equity collateral at risk, or funding subject to performance-based disbursements.

We infantilised recipient governments instead of having candid discussions on mutual performance expectations. Too often our approach to developing countries – frequently perpetuated by the excuses of those same governments – reflected the soft bigotry of low expectations.

We excused away the lack of political will as ‘capacity constraints’, dismissed it with ‘we shouldn’t expect too much’, and did not challenge them when governments acted in contrast to their professed commitments,” Ambassador Gonzales stated.



“Too often, we were content to confuse governments’ commitments for actions. We misinterpreted our access to leaders as influence with those leaders. We mischaracterised aid projects’ outputs as outcomes and program objectives as results. We misconstrued governments’ permission for us to expend aid as evidence that they shared a commitment to advance professed objectives.

Perhaps worst, we failed to acknowledge when leaders of aid recipient countries demonstrated over and over through their actions that they prioritised their personal interests over, and at the expense of, the interests of their own country and citizens. Virtually never did we withhold assistance funds because host governments failed to deliver on their commitments, instead we responded by providing even more aid ‘because they have needs’.

By trying to save people from bearing the brunt of the bad governance and corruption of their leaders, we helped perpetuate that very same corruption and bad governance. Quite simply, we violated the central maxim of international development: the donor cannot want development more than the recipient. By doing so, we fuelled moral hazard”.



Ambassador Gonzales stressed that American foreign assistance was not charity but a tool to advance the country’s diplomacy, security and prosperity.



“American foreign assistance is not charity but a tool to advance American diplomacy, security, and prosperity. To accomplish these goals, we must focus our assistance and insist on administering it with host-government buy-in and mutual accountability for outcomes. This, in turn, will leave space for market driven growth that will also help close off the means by which malign international actors exploit developing economies and workers.

We should not be dissuaded by detractors who will attempt to vilify a more transactional approach as ‘neocolonialism’. Quite the opposite is true. By insisting on systematic reforms that spur transparent and accountable growth and allow governments to retain funds to support their people, the United States can do more to catalyse actual economic development and the upliftment of developing countries’ societies – and advance tangible U.S. interests – better than we have in recent decades. It is the dependency-oriented, NGO-driven old model of development that is fundamentally colonial in mindset – refusing to respect development nation sovereignty, determinism, or agency,” he stated.



Ambassador Gonzales stated that the US government will now favour nations that are taking steps to fight corruption and grow their economies.



“Operationalising this approach involves adopting investment-oriented goals, requirements, and incentives: A Serious Host Nation: Secretary Rubio has been clear, ‘Americans should not fund failed governments in faraway lands
we will favour those nations that have demonstrated both the ability and the willingness to help themselves’.

If a government is not already taking steps to stem corruption and grow the economy when its own funds are at stake, we should have no expectation that they will be better stewards of U.S. funds. Without an aligned host-government, we should focus our resources elsewhere,” he stated.



“The Right Focus: Our purpose is not to give money away, but to catalyse systemic reforms that enable sustainable growth and opportunities for the U.S. and recipient country. Neither governments nor donors create growth; instead,

our roles are to foster conditions for the private sector to invest, create jobs, spur growth, and pay taxes to fund public services. Hence, U.S. foreign assistance should focus on curbing corruption and overcoming and remediating binding constraints to growth to lay the foundation for a transparent, level, and accountable business enabling environment”.



The US envoy added that it was important for his government and the recipient government to craft a bespoke package.



“The Right Resources: Again, our purpose is not to give assistance away, and the history of both corruption and assistance has shown that money is not what is most lacking to spur development.

So, building on an analysis of binding constraints to growth and a business plan that we have confidence in, it is incumbent on the United States and the recipient government to craft a bespoke package of technical assistance interventions to inform and enable the reforms needed.

This should not be an approach of letting a thousand flowers bloom, and it must not be built around the question of ‘how can we help?’ Instead, we must start with the questions ‘what are the outcomes we want to achieve in the American interest and what needs to happen to realise them?’ and build an assistance program around that,” he added.



“Performance-Based Funding: Too often, once development projects were approved, donors’ focus turned inward to implementation, achieving outputs, and keeping funds flowing even if receiving governments actively undermined them.

Gradually, funding agencies have begun shifting to performance-based disbursements. By requiring a host government to demonstrate – through its actions, not merely its rhetoric – that it remains politically and financially committed to achieve professed objectives, we ensure that U.S. assistance achieves greater  and courage to acknowledge our mistakes, to embrace candid lessons learned, and to do better.

America’s generosity in doing business with those who help themselves remains as strong as ever. We are not turning away from less developed nations, instead now is the time to lean in to lend a useful hand to those who are sincere and treat them as mature stakeholders. In engaging valued, sincere nations, nothing should be imposed, hidden, given as ultimatums, or come at the partner’s expense; we are not China.

Foreign assistance that delivers for the American people and our partners must be founded on sincere, voluntary, and transparent engagement. But it must be backed by tangible action and, if a recipient nation proves through their actions that they are not committed to our professed shared objectives, our allegiance must first be to the American people to be stewards of their resources,” stated Ambassador Gonzales.



“Having dedicated my life and career to Africa and the developing world, I am invigorated by the massive potential these nations possess, and I have witnessed how the United States can help turn that potential into a reality that benefits both nations.

By restructuring our approach to foreign assistance and engaging developing countries based on national interest, we can help curb the corruption that deprives families of the hope of that better future. We can deliver lasting and systematic growth alongside recipient countries. And, we can deliver tangible value for the American people through a more secure and prosperous world”.

News Diggers

GLOBAL INVESTORS VISIT ZAMBIA AS CONFIDENCE GROWS POST-DEBT RESTRUCTURING

GLOBAL INVESTORS VISIT ZAMBIA AS CONFIDENCE GROWS POST-DEBT RESTRUCTURING



President Hakainde Hichilema says Zambia is witnessing renewed global investor confidence following the successful completion of its 36-month debt restructuring programme.



Earlier today, the Head of State hosted a high-level delegation of global investors led by JP Morgan and Chase, accompanied by representatives from leading financial institutions based in London, Geneva, Boston, Dubai, Luxembourg and the United States.



President Hichilema explained that the visit comes at a time when the country’s economy is entering a growth phase, adding that the investors are expected to engage with public, private and multilateral partners to explore opportunities in priority sectors.



He noted that the areas of interest include energy, mining, agriculture, infrastructure and financial services, which he described as key pillars of Zambia’s national development strategy.



The President reaffirmed the government’s commitment to maintaining a stable and predictable investment climate, stating that Zambia remains focused on reforms that encourage joint ventures and public-private partnerships.



He said these efforts are aimed at ensuring investments translate into real and lasting benefits for citizens.



President Hichilema said the presence of the delegation was a strong signal that Zambia is once again open for business and attracting serious global capital and emphasized that the government would continue to pursue policies that create “a competitive investment environment that delivers tangible benefits to the Zambian people.”

ZAM ENDS ‘BEGGING BOWL’ CULTURE AT MUSICIANS FUNERALS

ZAM ENDS ‘BEGGING BOWL’ CULTURE AT MUSICIANS FUNERALS

Details in the statement…..

The National Executive Committee of the Zambia Association of Musicians – ZAM is hereby announcing a significant transformation in the Association’s welfare policy. Effective immediately, ZAM is transitioning from a traditional, reactive contribution model to a proactive, insurance-backed social protection framework.



1. Cessation of “Begging Bowl” Contributions.

In line with our goal of restoring respect and dignity to the music industry, ZAM will no longer facilitate funeral contributions (commonly known as “begging bowls”) for members or non-members. We have observed the financial pressure and public embarrassment that these unplanned collections bring to bereaved families and the industry at large.



This practice is hereby replaced by structured, professional insurance policies.

2. Automatic Membership Cover (The Best Life Policy)

We urge all musicians to formalize their status by paying their yearly subscription fees. To provide immediate value, your membership now comes with an automatic funeral insurance cover underwritten by Best Life Insurance.



An automatic K5,000 funeral cover upon payment of annual ZAM subscription fees.

Members have the flexibility to “Top-Up” their cover directly with Best Life for higher tiers:
Ruby Plan: Benefit of K10,000.
Emerald Plan: Benefit of K15,000.



Certain tiers also include Hospital Cash Protection (K1,500/year), ensuring support if an artist is hospitalized and unable to work.



3. Supplementary Comprehensive Cover (The FSG MoU)

Recognizing that a dignified send-off often requires more than financial cash, the Executive has signed a landmark Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with FSG Zambia. We strongly recommend all members sign up for this supplementary policy to cushion the impact of bereavement.



FSG policies typically go beyond cash to provide professional services, including:

1. Provision of quality caskets/coffins.

2. Professional mortuary services and body collection.

3. Hearse services and transport for mourners.

4. Funeral logistics (tents, chairs, and programs).



By planning today, members ensure their loved ones are not burdened with high logistics costs during a time of grief.



This decision is not intended to discourage the spirit of “Ubuntu” or helping one another. Help can still be rendered in an individual capacity as colleagues.



However, as an Association, we are moving away from the “begging bowl” life that reduces the status of our artists.



Death is inevitable. Planning for it is not just a financial decision; it is an act of responsibility toward those we love and a commitment to the dignity of the Zambian music industry.



We reiterate our call to all musicians to utilize the MoUs and policies we have secured. Let us embrace the future of a professional, self-sustaining, and respected creative sector.

Edmond Mbanga Miti
Publicity Secretary/Spokesperson.
#SunFmTvNews

23-year-old medical student who failed medical exam twice fakes attack and chops off his own foot to secure admission under disability quota

A 23-year-old medical aspirant, who lodged an attempted murdÂŁr complaint, claiming unidentified assailants had amputated his foot while he was asleep, might have deliberately severed his foot to secure admission in a medical college through disability quota, Jaunpur police said.

According to police, an attempt to murdÂŁr case was initially registered after a man named Akash Bhaskar lodged a complaint on Sunday, stating some assailants attacked his younger brother, Suraj Bhaskar, a resident of Khalilpur village, and severed his left leg from the midfoot region.

However, during the course of investigation, police said they found evidence suggesting that the injury was self-inflicted and carried out with the intention of securing admission in a medical college under the disability category, officials said.

“A diary was recovered where the victim had written ‘I will become an MBBS doctor in 2026,’ and had also mentioned the word ‘amputation’ in his notes. These findings, along with his statements, led the police to question his version of events,” officials said, adding the victim was reportedly under mental stress having failed to clear National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET-UG) twice.

Police said they found no sign of forced entry into the victim’s house and their suspicion grew based on the evidence collected so far.

Suraj is currently undergoing treatment and his condition is stated to be stable, police said.

According to officials, the complainant alleged that his brother was attacked on the intervening night of Saturday and Sunday when the assailants attacked Suraj and fled the spot, leaving him unconscious. He was rushed to the hospital and a complaint was lodged at the Line Bazaar police station.

However, based on electronic evidence and technical analysis, the police found no indication of forced entry into their house.

They said that as per the complainant, the attack happened between midnight and 5 am, which should have resulted in heavy blood loss, something that was not found at the spot. After searching the area, they also recovered a syringe with anaesthetic drug, raising further suspicion, officials said.

The police also found that the victim had a minor disability in his hand and had earlier visited Banaras Hindu University (BHU) to obtain a disability certificate. However, the certificate was not issued as the percentage of disability was found to be below the required limit.

Based on the evidence collected so far, police said the investigation suggests that the youth may have allegedly amputated his foot using a grinder machine, commonly used in house construction and other works.

They are currently seeking legal opinion to determine what sections of criminal law could be levelled against him, officials said.

BURUNDI FIRM TARGETS ZAMBIA FERTILISER PRODUCTION

BURUNDI FIRM TARGETS ZAMBIA FERTILISER PRODUCTION

President Hakainde Hichilema has welcomed plans by Burundi-based Itracom Fertiliser Limited to establish a one-million-metric-tonne fertiliser production plant in Zambia.



President Hichilema says the proposed investment aligns with the Government’s agenda to strengthen the agriculture sector through increased local fertiliser production.



He says he was encouraged that engagements held during the 2024 State Visit by Burundi President Evariste Ndayishiye are now yielding concrete economic cooperation.



President Hichilema said this when Itracom Fertilizer Limited Chairperson Adrien Ntigacika paid a courtesy call on him at State House today.



Mr. Ntigacika said the fertiliser manufacturing plant is expected to create about 5,000 jobs for local people.



He added that the company is motivated by Zambia’s availability of key raw materials, which will support the production of high-quality organic fertiliser and position the country as a major supplier within the region.



Meanwhile, Burundi’s Ambassador to Zambia Evelyne Butoyi thanked President Hichilema for creating a favourable environment for investment.

ZNBC

Chamisa come back raises stakes

Opposition leader Nelson Chamisa has announced his political comeback, stirring excitement in a country where opposition politics has been struggling to stay relevant.

Chamisa, who abruptly left the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) in January 2024 over alleged Zanu-PF infiltration, unveiled his new political plan, “Agenda 2026,” on Friday. He described the initiative as a movement—not a political party—aimed at uniting citizens, reclaiming democratic agency, and preparing for a future citizens’ government. The plan also includes promoting a “moral revolution” and re-engaging the international community.

Chamisa’s departure from the CCC followed the emergence of Sengezo Tshabangu, a suspected Zanu-PF proxy, who began recalling elected opposition representatives shortly after the 2023 elections. At the time, Chamisa said he would not “swim in a river with hungry crocodiles,” referring to party members he accused of being sell-outs.

Since Chamisa’s exit, other opposition figures struggled to fill the political vacuum. Pashor Raphael Sibanda, a recalled opposition politician, said: “His return restores real opposition power and legitimacy. His absence exposed a vacuum, his return settles it.”

Reactions on social media have been a mix of excitement and cautious optimism. Supporters praised Chamisa’s boldness and expressed willingness to participate in grassroots mobilisation, while some demanded clarity on internal democracy and accountability. A few critics questioned whether his return would be effective, citing past leadership decisions and perceived reluctance to directly confront President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Political analyst Reuben Mbofana welcomed Chamisa’s return as a potential boost for democratic contestation but cautioned: “The key question now is what has fundamentally changed since he stepped aside two years ago. A comeback without a radically different strategy risks being merely cosmetic.”

Chamisa’s return comes at a politically sensitive time, with Zanu-PF loyalists seeking to extend President Mnangagwa’s tenure beyond constitutional limits, raising the stakes for opposition unity and strategy ahead of upcoming electoral contests.

Two-year-old girl dröwns in living room in Lusaka flooding incident

Two-year-old girl dröwns in living room in Lusaka flooding incident👇🏾

ZAMBIA POLICE SERVICE PRESS STATEMENT


DR0WNING INCIDENT IN LUSAKA

January 26,2026

The Zambia Police Service in Lusaka reports a dr0wning incident involving a two-year-old girl, Loveness Gwanda, in Kuku Compound, Lusaka.



The incident occurred between 01:00 hours and 02:00 hours on January 26, 2026, and was reported to Misisi Police Post by the child’s mother, Chisala Kalusha, 32, of Kuku Compound.



Preliminary investigations indicate that on the night of January 25,2026, the mother left the child with her siblings in the sitting room and went to bed.



Around 02:00 hours, the mother discovered that rainwater had flooded the sitting room, submerging the sofas, and that the child had dr0wned.

The matter was reported to the police, who visited and processed the scene.



The child was rushed to the University Teaching Hospital (UTH), where she was pronounced dÂŁad on arrival.



The body is currently at the UTH Mortuary, pending postmortem examination and burial.



An inquiry has been opened to determine the full circumstances of the incident.

Issued by:
Godfrey Chilabi
Police Public Relations Officer
Zambia Police Service

South Africa province halts private school transport amid permit crackdown after tragic bus crash

South Africa province halts private school transport amid permit crackdown after tragic bus crash



By: TRT Africa

Private scholar transport operators in Mahikeng, in South Africa’s NorthWest Province, have suspended operations after provincial authorities began confiscating vehicles over permit compliance.



It follows heightened scrutiny of scholar transport safety following a crash in Gauteng that killed 14 learners.



Authorities last week intensified a crackdown on school transport safety in Gauteng, impounding over 60 vehicles for various offences, including operating without valid permits and roadworthiness certificates.



Two drivers were arrested for overloading during the inspections.

#SunFmTvNews

Prophet Walter Magaya Arrested Outside Harare Magistrate Court

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Prophet Walter Magaya Arrested Outside Harare Magistrate Court

Prophet Walter Magaya was arrested today at the Harare Magistrate Court’s parking lot.

He was apprehended by the Criminal Investigations Department (CID).

Authorities have not yet disclosed the reasons for his arrest, promising to provide details in due course.

Arrest follows court postponements
Prophet Magaya was leaving the court with his legal team when the arrest occurred, H-Metro reveals. He was at the Harare Magistrates Court for his rape trial.

His rape trial was postponed to tomorrow, while his fraud trial was deferred to 27 March, pending High Court indictment.

Walter Magaya’s Rape Case
According to court documents, the allegations against Magaya go back to 2013, when he reportedly met one complainant for a prayer session. Prosecutors allege that he made sexual advances and subsequently committed rape at a hotel in Harare, with further incidents claimed to have taken place on two additional occasions involving the same woman.

Magaya is also facing separate allegations of sexual assault in 2018 concerning another woman in South Africa. Court papers state that the complainant was allegedly brought to South Africa under the pretext of conducting business related to machinery and raw materials. Prosecutors claim that, with the assistance of his aides, Magaya allegedly assaulted the woman during the trip and again later in October 2018 at his Marlborough offices in Harare.

Records show that the complainant attempted to report the incidents at Waterfalls and Harare Central police stations in 2018, but the matter reportedly did not proceed at the time, allegedly due to Magaya’s influence.

He was arrested on 1 November 2025 during a surprise raid.

Rapper Kanye West apologizes for ‘reckless’ antisemitic comments

Controversial rapper, Kanye West has publicly apologized for his history of “reckless” antisemitic comments, attributing his behavior to an undiagnosed brain injury and mental health issues.

Over the years,Kanye has made various antisemitic and racist statements. In one post, he declared he was a Nazi and praised Adolf Hitler.

In a full-page advertisement in The Wall Street Journal titled “To Those I’ve Hurt,” he said in part: “I am not a Nazi or an antisemite. I love Jewish people.”

In the advertisement published Monday, he said: “I regret and am deeply mortified by my actions in that state, and am committed to accountability, treatment, and meaningful change.”

Kanye wrote that the right frontal lobe of his brain was injured in a car accident 25 years ago. “It wasn’t properly diagnosed until 2023,” he said. The “medical oversight caused serious damage to my mental health and led to my bipolar type-1 diagnosis.”

“I lost touch with reality,” he wrote, adding that he “became detached from my true self.”

“In that fractured state, I gravitated towards the most destructive symbol I could find, the swastika, and even sold t-shirts bearing it,” Ye wrote, referring to the symbol appropriated by Nazi Germany and modern white supremacists.

Ye wrote that he “fell into a four-month long manic episode of psychotic, paranoid, and impulsive behavior” in early 2025. He then hit “rock bottom a few months ago” and, at the encouragement of his wife, Bianca Censori, sought out “help.”

He said he found a “new baseline and new center through an effective regime of medication, therapy, exercise, and clean living.”

“I’m not asking for sympathy, or a free pass, though I aspire to earn your forgiveness,” said Ye, who is set to release a new album Friday. “I write today to simply ask for your patience and understanding as I find my way home.”

In 2023, the Anti-Defamation League, a leading Jewish advocacy group, said it had documented at least 30 antisemitic incidents nationwide that “directly reference Ye.”

Ye has previously apologized for his antisemitic comments. In a December 2023 Instagram post written in Hebrew, Ye wrote in part: “It was not my intention to offend or demean, and I deeply regret any pain I may have caused.”

He then doubled down in the February tirade on X, saying in part: “I’m never apologizing for my Jewish comments.

62-year-old doctor has died in Mpongwe after collapsing during an alleged s3xual encounter at guest hous

A 62-year-old doctor has died in Mpongwe District on the Copperbelt Province after collapsing during an alleged sexual encounter at a named guest house.


Copperbelt Police Commissioner Mwala Yuyi identified the deceased as a medical doctor from Luanshya District.
Mr Yuyi said the deceased checked into the guest house on January 24, 2026, around 15:00 hours, in the company of a 50-year-old female friend.


He said the deceased later complained of inadequate air circulation in the room before collapsing.
Mr Yuyi explained that the receptionist was alerted after the female companion informed her that the deceased had collapsed.


“When the receptionist went to the room, she found the man naked and unresponsive. She called male colleagues who assisted in dressing the body in a boxer. The female friend reportedly became frightened and attempted to flee but was restrained. The matter was later reported to Masaiti Police Station,” Mr Yuyi said.


He said the deceased was found lying on his back with no visible physical injuries.
“The body was inspected and no physical injuries were observed. It was lying facing upwards and was later clothed by lodge staff,” he said.


Mr Yuyi said the body has since been deposited at St Theresa’s Mission Hospital mortuary, while the female friend has been detained at Masaiti Police Station to assist with investigations.
(Mwebantu, Tuesday, 27th January, 2026)

EGYPT TO RESTRICT CHILDREN’S SOCIAL MEDIA USE

EGYPT TO RESTRICT CHILDREN’S SOCIAL MEDIA USE

EGYPT’S Parliament is looking into ways to regulate children’s use of social media platforms to combat what lawmakers called “digital choas,” following some western countries that are considering banning young teenagers from social media.



The House of Representatives said in a statement late Sunday that it will work on a legislation to regulate children’s use of social media and “put an end to the digital chaos our children are facing, and which negatively impacts their future.”



Legislators will consult with the government and expert bodies to draft a law to “protect Egyptian children from any risks that threaten its thoughts and behavior,” the statement said.



The statement came after President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi on Saturday urged his government and lawmakers to consider adopting legislation restricting children’s use of social media, “until they reach an age when they can handle it properly.”



The president’s televised comments urged his government to look at other countries including Australia and the United Kingdom that are working on legislations to “restrict or ban” children from social media.



About 50% of children under 18 in Egypt use social media platforms where they are likely exposed to harmful content, cyberbullying and abuse, according to a 2024 report by the National Center for Social and Criminological Research, a government-linked think tank.



In December, Australia became the first country to ban social media for children younger than 16. The move triggered fraught debates about technology use, privacy, child safety and mental health and has prompted other countries to consider similar measures.



The British government said it will consider banning young teenagers from social media while tightening laws designed to protect children from harmful content and excessive screen time.



French President Emmanuel Macron urged his government to fast-track the legal process to ensure a social media ban for children under 15 can be enforced at the start of the next school year in September.

Africanews