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Saviour Chishimba  fully support Lt. Gen Geoffrey Choongo Zyeele…. clarification of what he meant by the Minister of Defence misplaced

ARMY COMMANDER ON FIRM GROUND AND RESPECT FOR DEFENSE AND SECURITY



We, in the United Progressive People (UPP), fully support Lt. Gen Geoffrey Choongo Zyeele, the Army Commander and we find the clarification of what he meant by the Minister of Defence to be misplaced.



The context in which every word was uttered is very clear. The rules of engagement are unambiguous. Anyone anywhere who attempts to point a weapon at military or law enforcement officers invites the use of lethal force to disable or neutralise him. There is nothing arguable about this.



The main remit of our statement has nothing to do with the issues related to mining, which we shall address in a separate statement.



Over the years, a dangerous trend has sadly emerged in our country whereby political players drag the commanders of defence forces, police and correctional services command, and our hardworking members of the intelligence community into politics. This is an exposition of how indiscipline among all of us has reached alarming levels. We urge all “politicians” to immediately desist from this unpatriotic culture.



All who are properly initiated in the art of government understand that it’s the holders of policy making positions (the President and Ministers) at whose command defence and security wings operate. Thus, all political rhetoric must be restricted to fellow politicians.



Defence and security personnel deal with sensitive security (external and domestic threats – counterterrorism and intelligence), economic, environmental, cyber threats, among others. Whereas it’s possible for those “who may be close” to intelligence to have basic details, it’s only the President and Commander in Chief who has A1 intelligence (firsthand and detailed). Therefore, it’s very careless of all political players to directly confront commanders who operate with sensitive intelligence that ordinary political players do not have.



The northern border areas of North Western, Copperbelt and Luapula Provinces are delicate and many Zambians are not even aware that there have been historic moments that rebels in the Katanga Region have crossed into Zambia and killed some Zambians, but the swift and effective actions of our military have quietly vanquished such external threats. UPP fully supports the decisions of our commanders to stop internal and external threats.



We can learn from Israel where whenever there is an internal or external security threat, all opposition political parties dissolve to be part of the government of national unity to confront the threats as a united people.



The UPP-led Government will implement a mandatory conscription of the youth into the army and this will also be part of rebuilding the lost security consciousness among many Zambians.

Saviour Chishimba
Party President
UPP

John Sangwa Takes Politics to the Ground

🇿🇲 BRIEFING | John Sangwa Takes Politics to the Ground

The Movement for National Renewal has shared images from Lilanda in Matero showing its leader, lawyer John Sangwa, engaging residents in an informal community setting.



Sangwa, who entered politics with a sharp legal and elite-facing profile, appears to be recalibrating his approach by spending time in densely populated communities and listening directly to everyday concerns. The interaction focused on livelihoods, jobs, waste management, access to food and overcrowded schools, issues residents say shape their daily lives.



The outreach marks a shift from courtroom-style politics to grassroots exposure. Sangwa has long been respected for his constitutional clarity and public interest litigation, but the realities of electoral politics are increasingly clear. Ideas alone do not move votes. Presence does.



The Matero visit suggests an acknowledgement that national politics is won on the ground, not in seminars or legal arguments.

For Sangwa and the MNR, the challenge now is whether this late turn toward grassroots engagement can translate into trust, structure and momentum in communities where politics is shaped by lived hardship rather than policy theory.

Reality has arrived. The test is whether adaptation follows.

© The People’s Brief | Goran Handya

THINGS ARE BAD – CATHOLIC PRIEST

THINGS ARE BAD – CATHOLIC PRIEST

IT is a shame that Zambians have continued to suffer under the UPND government, with farmers sleeping overnight at commercial banks corridors, skyrocketing prices of fertiliser, fuel and mealie meal, a Catholic priest has said.

Father Michael Elvis Chimfwembe says Zambians have been enduring the hard and excruciating hardship in the last four years and has described the government interventions as nothing little more than voter enticements rather than real solutions.

Fr Chimfwembe, a curate at St John the Evangelist Cathedral Parish under the Kasama Archdiocese, said rising fuel, fertiliser and mealie-meal prices, coupled with unpaid farmers spending nights at commercial banks in desperate attempts to access funds, was painting a grim picture that contradicted official statistical economic growth and assurances.

Fr Chimfewmbe said this during Sunday Holy Mass to observe the Third Sunday in Ordinary Time Year A at Saint John the Evangelist Cathedral Parish of Kasama Archdiocese.

“To me, this is a shame. Let us not pretend as Christians that things are okay when our brothers and sisters are suffering,” Fr Chimfwembe said. “If you are in a better position yourself, don’t think everyone else is.”

He said that farmers had been among the hardest hit, noting that despite repeated assurances from politicians in government that money was available in banks, many farmers had been forced to queue for days, exposed to harsh
weather, hoping to access their funds.

“Politicians (in government) appear on television saying money is there, but if that is true, why are farmers lining up in the sun?” he asked.

“Some of them did not even celebrate Christmas or New Year with their families. They slept at bus stations and banks, asking themselves, ‘If I go back home, will I still find the money?’”

Fr Chimfwembe warned that the continued neglect of farmers could have dire consequences for national food security.

“I am afraid that if this continues, next year we may not even have enough food to feed the people of Zambia,” he said.

He also raised concern over the plight of civil servants, particularly in the education sector, saying many teachers remained demotivated due to stagnant salaries and prolonged acting appointments.

“When I move from one school to another, I hear the same complaints. The cost of living is high, yet salaries are stuck. Some have been acting head teachers since 2015. They are called ‘Ba Sir’ out of respect, but their salaries leave much to be desired,” Fr Chimfwembe said.

Fr Chimfwembe dismissed recent improvements in electricity supply as temporary and politically motivated, warning citizens not to be deceived.

“The epileptic supply of electricity… make no mistake, this is an election year. The consistent power supply you are seeing now is meant to entice you,” he said.

“After elections, you will see the real picture. Don’t throw away your power bank.”

He warned that claims the Kariba Dam was full could be misleading, warning that it would have to dry no sooner than the August general elections would be over.

“You and I must speak a message of hope and consolation,” he said. “We must not keep quiet while people suffer.”

Daily Nation Zambia

ARMY COMMANDER MISUSED WORD ‘EXTERMINATE’ – DEFENSE MINISTER

ARMY COMMANDER MISUSED WORD ‘EXTERMINATE’ – DEFENSE MINISTER

Minister of Defence Ambrose Lufuma has clarified that Army Commander Lieutenant General Godfrey Zyeele misused the word “exterminate” when addressing the issue of illegal mining activities in Mufumbwe.



Lufuma said that exterminating people is not an option under the current government, stressing that the Zambia Army’s mandate is to peacefully remove and guide illegal miners out of the affected area, not to harm them.



His remarks follow a viral video in which Lt Gen Zyeele was heard stating that the Commander-in-Chief had directed the army to “exterminate” illegal miners. In the video, the Army Commander said the directive was clear, adding that while the army did not intend to use force, it would do so if deemed necessary, acknowledging that such actions could result in consequences including injuries or loss.


The Minister’s clarification seeks to reassure the public that the government remains committed to lawful and humane approaches in dealing with illegal mining activities.

LUNGU STOPPED BELIEVING IN PF AFTER MILES BETRAYED HIM – ZUMANI ZIMBA

LUNGU STOPPED BELIEVING IN PF AFTER MILES BETRAYED HIM – ZUMANI ZIMBA

EDGAR Lungu lost faith in the PF after he was betrayed by Boba TV content creator Miles Sampa and other senior party leaders in 2023, his former political advisor Zumani Zimba has revealed.



Sampa was declared president of the PF at a controversial extraordinary general conference in October 2023, after complaining that the convention to elect a new PF president had taken too long.



According to Zimba, it was at that moment that, Lungu who led Zambia from 2015 to 202 felt betrayed, humiliated, and politically stranded.



He said many PF leaders currently claiming to be the party’s custodians mocked Lungu as a “former president without a party.”

“From that point, he never truly believed in PF again,” he said.



Zimba added that the betrayal and lack of loyalty drove Lungu to seek alternatives, including the United Kwacha Alliance (UKA), where he was later disrespected by ‘young and inexperienced politicians who started thinking he was their level.’



“ECL was forced to humble himself and make company with politicians he thought were different from PF traitors in view of what happened in 2023 with Miles Sampa and his team.”



“Before long, UKA disrespected and failed him terribly, as young political players who had never been councillors, MPs, permanent secretaries, ministers, or SAPs started addressing him as ‘Comrade Lungu’ and treating him as their equal. Some of us did not accept these political insults for our father,” he explained.



Zimba stressed that the Tonse Alliance was created specifically for Lungu and his loyal followers, adding that the alliance was never about PF, as some narratives suggest.



“For ECL, the PF top leaders were not his priority, but his PF loyalists and supporters countrywide, as well as other opposition leaders. This is where we engineered the #ECLMovement,” said Zimba.



“The noise makers in PF we see today did nothing to remove the shame and embarrassment around ECL.”

He said most of these PF leaders viewed Lungu as a dangerous political rival and competitor, as they also aspired to be PF president.



“They indirectly endorsed Miles Sampa in trading PF to UPND, and ECL was fully aware of it,” claimed Zimba.



Zimba stated that the only people who stood by Lungu during his difficult times, apart from himself, were Prof. Dan Pule, the late FDD leader Edith Nawakwi, former PF Secretary General Raphael Nakachinda and Sean Tembo.

Kalemba

FORMER PF SG QUESTIONS BILL 7 DENIALS

FORMER PF SG QUESTIONS BILL 7 DENIALS

FORMER Patriotic Front Secretary General Davis Mwila has called on Members of Parliament who voted for Bill 7, now Constitution Amendment Number 13 of 2025, to be open with their constituents.



Speaking to journalists in Lusaka, Mr. MWILA said MPs should clearly state their positions on Bill 7 instead of misleading the electorate.



He said honesty and truthfulness are essential in public office, adding that voters have a right to know the actions and decisions taken by the leaders they elected.


Mr. MWILA claimed to have evidence showing how certain Members of Parliament voted on the Bill and questioned why some are now denying their involvement.



He named Kalulushi Member of Parliament Kampamba Mulenga as one of those who voted in favour of the Bill, expressing surprise at her public denial.

ZNBC

BLACK MAMBA: ZAMBIA’S INVISIBLE TERROR OF THE 1990s

BLACK MAMBA: ZAMBIA’S INVISIBLE TERROR OF THE 1990s
In 1996, Zambia discovered that fear did not need a face. It only needed a name.
That name was Black Mamba.
It arrived without a manifesto, without leaders, without public demands. Yet within months it had shut down supermarkets, emptied public buildings, paralysed parts of Lusaka and justified one of the most aggressive security crackdowns since the end of one-party rule. What Black Mamba was supposed to be, and what it actually did, remain two very different stories.



Black Mamba emerged at the most politically sensitive moment of the Chiluba presidency. The government was forcing through constitutional amendments that would prevent former president Kenneth Kaunda from contesting elections again. Opposition resistance was rising, civil society was restless, and legitimacy was fragile. Into this pressure cooker came a wave of bomb scares and crude explosive incidents, quickly attributed to a shadowy “terror organisation”.



The public was told Zambia was under attack.

The first reported actions associated with Black Mamba were threats, not bombs. In early 1996, anonymous warnings circulated claiming senior government figures would be targeted if constitutional changes were not reversed. The language was dramatic and apocalyptic, but vague. No responsibility was claimed publicly, only whispered attribution by state officials. It was enough to seed panic.



By May 1996, the threats turned physical. On 17 May, a small explosive device damaged part of the perimeter wall near State House, President Chiluba’s official residence. The blast caused limited damage but enormous political impact. The symbolism mattered more than the explosion itself. It sent a message that nowhere was untouchable.



Days later, the fear spread to civilian spaces. On 24 May 1996, a bomb threat forced the evacuation of the Shoprite Checkers supermarket in Lusaka, one of the city’s busiest shopping centres. Shoppers fled, police cordoned off the area, and the capital briefly froze. Around the same period, the Times of Zambia offices were also targeted with a similar threat. No bombs were found, but the objective had already been achieved: disruption, anxiety, spectacle.



The pattern was unmistakable. These were not attacks designed to kill large numbers of people. They were designed to be seen, to be talked about, to dominate headlines and conversations.


June escalated matters further. A series of crude devices were reported in Lusaka and parts of the Copperbelt, including Ndola and Kitwe. Then, on 6 June 1996, tragedy struck at Lusaka International Airport. While attempting to defuse a suspected explosive device, a bomb disposal expert was killed and another seriously injured. This was the moment when Black Mamba stopped being an abstract fear and became deadly real, regardless of who had planted the device.



The government responded with force. Senior figures from the opposition UNIP were arrested and charged with treason and murder, accused of being behind Black Mamba and its campaign of terror. Among those detained were prominent party leaders, held for months as the country watched one of the most serious political trials in its post-independence history unfold.



Yet when the case finally reached court, the Black Mamba story began to unravel.
The prosecution failed to produce evidence of an organisation. There were no training camps, no command structure, no financial records, no proven link between the accused and the bomb incidents. Witness testimony was weak and often contradictory. By November 1996, the remaining defendants were acquitted. The court found no proof that Black Mamba, as presented by the state, existed in the way claimed.



And just like that, Black Mamba vanished.
No more bomb scares followed. No further warnings were issued. The terror organisation that had supposedly threatened the nation dissolved the moment it was no longer politically useful. There was no official explanation, no independent inquiry, no accounting for who planted the devices, who made the calls, or who benefited from the fear.
What remains undeniable is what Black Mamba did, regardless of who controlled it. It created an atmosphere of siege. It justified sweeping arrests and prolonged detentions. It distracted public attention at a critical constitutional moment. It reminded citizens how fragile Zambia’s young democracy still was.



Black Mamba did not behave like a conventional terror group. It issued no demands. It did not seek mass casualties. Its actions were calibrated—just enough violence, just enough fear, just enough ambiguity. The terror lay not in destruction, but in uncertainty.



To this day, Black Mamba stands as one of Zambia’s most unsettling political episodes, not because of the bombs that went off, but because of the silence that followed. An invisible organisation was blamed for visible fear, and when the fear had served its purpose, the organisation dissolved into history, leaving only unanswered questions.



In that sense, Black Mamba was less a group than a moment—a dark intersection of politics, power and panic, when the line between security and manipulation quietly disappeared.
#tztpost 🇿🇲

GILBERT LISWANISO BRUSHES OFF ECZ COMPLAINT OVER PREMATURE ELECTION RESULTS CLAIM

GILBERT LISWANISO BRUSHES OFF ECZ COMPLAINT OVER PREMATURE ELECTION RESULTS CLAIM



UPND National Youth Chairman Gilbert Liswaniso says he is not worried about reports lodged against him with the Electoral Commission of Zambia –ECZ- over allegations of prematurely posting election results before the commission’s official announcement.


A complainant, identified as John Bwanga, has written to the ECZ accusing Mr. Liswaniso of unlawfully transmitting unsolicited results from the Chawama parliamentary by-election.



But in an interview with Phoenix News, Mr. Liswaniso says members of the public are free to report him, stating that as far as he is concerned, he has not committed any offence.


He has explained that the information he shared on Facebook consisted of results as announced at individual polling stations, and not the final constituency tally declared by the ECZ.



Mr. Liswaniso has questioned why he was being singled out, especially at a time when Matero PF Member of Parliament Miles Sampa is appearing before the courts for allegedly spreading false information over the existence of a fake polling station, which he claimed was mounted by the ECZ.



Meanwhile, UPND Lusaka Province Chairman Obvious Mwaliteta has described the move to report Mr. Liswaniso as petty, saying such actions should not be entertained.

PN

DON’T FORGET TO VOTE FOR ME AGAIN IN AUGUST, NUNDWE URGES CHURCH

DON’T FORGET TO VOTE FOR ME AGAIN IN AUGUST, NUNDWE URGES CHURCH

PF faction Acting President Given Lubinda has urged the church to work with Chawama FDD member of parliament Bright Nundwe in order to develop the constituency.



Meanwhile, Nundwe has called on the church to vote for him again during the August polls.

Speaking during a church service at St Luke’s UCZ in Chawama, Lubinda said it was important for Nundwe to thank the church for voting for him as member of parliament.



“I stood here and said that on 15th January, as the Tonse Alliance, we have a candidate Bright Nundwe who is under the Forum for Democracy and Development (FDD). We were asking from God through you people, and on the 15th of January, people of Chawama did exactly what we were asking for. And many of us when coming to ask, we humble ourselves but when we are given, we don’t go where we ask from.

And so, we decided to come back to say thank you to God, before we started entering the markets. Before Nundwe starts going in the communities to thank people, we decided that we first scold him to come say thank you to God because St Luke’s Congregation was the last place that he came to ask for votes,” said Lubinda.



“We also attended the 07:30 mass at Regina Pacis Parish today, and then continued with attending the 10:00 service here. We came to say thank you to God who allowed Bright Nundwe to be voted for as Chawama MP. As an acting president of the Patriotic Front (PF), I want to urge Nundwe to follow what the church says. Even when he is working for people, he should always know that it is God who sent him. I won’t say much other than to say, well done, the person you have chosen has come so that he can work for you. But you have to work with him, he can’t manage to work alone. When you work with him, you will see that Chawama will improve. I came to show gratitude. Thank you for giving Bright Nundwe your support, thank you for giving the Tonse Alliance your support. We want to say that we keep our promises and this promise made by Bright Nundwe, I will make sure that from his first salary, he will bring us back here to come and witness his promise of giving the choirs the new uniforms”.



And Nundwe promised to work with the people of Chawama.

“I have come here to show gratitude for the support that you have shown us. It wasn’t an easy thing, our friends were passing through all the areas but God passed through you people and directed that this is the person you vote for. I am going to be your servant, we may not do everything but within my capacity, I am pretty certain that I will do the best for you. This is my church. When I just reached, I told the acting president of the Tonse Alliance and PF Honourable Given Lubinda that the choir’s uniform doesn’t look right. This is not an insult but I said there are too many assorted colours here. Then as my first assignment, I want to buy uniforms for the choirs. You will be able to choose the colours yourselves,” said Nundwe.



“I am a very serious child of God. The Bible reminds me that when the wicked rule, people murmur but when the righteous rule, people rejoice. Leadership does not come from a sort of direction, it comes from above, a maker of the heavens and the earth. Lastly, I want to kneel down to appreciate you for the vote you gave.

May God continue to bless you, may God continue to bless this church. We will work together as a team. That day when it comes again in August, do not forget this face [of] Bright Nundwe. I am almost born and bred in Chawama constituency, this is my constituency”.



Nundwe was joined by PF Deputy Secretary General for Politics Miles Sampa, PF Members of the Central Committee (MCC) and other party officials.

News Diggers

US AMBASSADOR CALLS FOR OVERHAUL OF FOREIGN AID APPROACH IN AFRICA

US AMBASSADOR CALLS FOR OVERHAUL OF FOREIGN AID APPROACH IN AFRICA

The United States must fundamentally restructure its foreign assistance strategy to advance American interests and drive genuine development in recipient countries, according to US Ambassador to Zambia Michael C. Gonzales.



In a strongly-worded statement, Gonzales argued that despite $200 billion in US aid to Africa since 1991, the current approach has “enabled and perpetuated dependence and corruption” while failing to spur systematic development. He noted that African nations lose an estimated $88 billion annually through tax evasion, money laundering, and corruption.



The ambassador criticised decades of aid policy for “infantilising recipient governments” and reflecting what he called “the soft bigotry of low expectations.” Too often, he said, Washington confused governments’ commitments for actual actions and failed to hold leaders accountable when they prioritised personal interests over their citizens’ welfare.



Gonzales outlined a new investment-oriented approach centered on mutual accountability and performance-based disbursements. Key principles include requiring host governments to demonstrate political will through their own financial commitments, developing focused national strategies rather than aspirational plans, and withholding funds when governments fail to deliver on reform commitments.



“American foreign assistance is not charity but a tool to advance American diplomacy, security, and prosperity,” Gonzales wrote, emphasising that aid should catalyse private sector growth rather than simply alleviating symptoms of poor governance.



The approach represents a significant departure from traditional development models, prioritising what Gonzales described as transparent engagement with “sincere” partner nations willing to help themselves.

Possibility of Tonse working with PF remains – Zumani

‎Possibility of Tonse working with PF remains – Zumani
‎… once we have a candidate the PF also picks up a presidential candidate, will sit down together and maybe negotiate who should be president and running mate



‎By Mubanga Mubanga

‎Former political advisor to late sixth president Edgar Lungu, Chris Zumani Zimba, says there is a possibility of PF working with Tonse Alliance in the August 13, 2026 elections, once both parties have elected their presidential candidates.



‎But Zimba said acting PF president Given Lubinda does not have powers to expel PF Mporokoso member of parliament Brian Mundubile because the current party president is Robert Chabinga.



‎Last Friday, Mundubile filed his nominations for the position of Tonse alliance chairperson. This was despite the party led by Lubinda urging its members not to take part in the Tonse Alliance affairs.



‎https://dailyrevelationzambia.com/there-is-possibility-of-pf-tonse-working-together-in-august-2026-elections-zimba/

HH did not send me to compete with Mweetwa for Choma-Central – Mwiinde

‎HH did not send me to compete with Mweetwa for Choma-Central – Mwiinde


‎‎By Mubanga Mubanga

‎UPND deputy youth chairperson Trevor Mwiinde says President Hakainde Hichilema did not send him to stand in Choma-Central to unseat area member of parliament and Information minister Cornelius Mweetwa.



‎Reacting to Citizens First (CF) leader Kalaba who asserted that President Hichilema sent Mwiinde to Choma to compete with Mweetwa, Mwiinde described the assertion as false.



‎https://dailyrevelationzambia.com/hh-did-not-send-me-to-compete-with-mweetwa-for-choma-central-mwiinde/

MALAWI TO DEPLOY 731 SOLDIERS TO DRC FOR UN PEACEKEEPING MISSION

MALAWI TO DEPLOY 731 SOLDIERS TO DRC FOR UN PEACEKEEPING MISSION

The Malawi Defence Force (MDF) will deploy 731 soldiers to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) in March as part of a United Nations peacekeeping mission.



The soldiers will serve under the MONUSCO Force Intervention Brigade, which is mandated to help restore peace and protect civilians in the conflict-affected eastern parts of the DRC.



The troops recently completed a 17-week pre-deployment training programme at Chikala Hills in Machinga District.

Speaking at the training ground, George W. Phiri, the Chief of Military Operations at MDF Joint Force Headquarters, urged the soldiers to maintain high levels of discipline, professionalism, and respect for international laws while on the mission.



Major General Phiri said Malawi remains one of the largest troop-contributing countries to the DRC because of the efficiency, discipline, and professionalism demonstrated by Malawian soldiers during previous peacekeeping deployments.



Participation in UN peacekeeping missions comes with financial allowances paid directly to the soldiers, which many use to improve their livelihoods, including investing in assets such as housing and vehicles, komanso kugwira makaladi.



In addition, the Government of Malawi receives compensation from the United Nations for deploying troops, making peacekeeping missions an important source of foreign exchange for the country.



Malawi has a long history of contributing troops to UN peacekeeping operations and is widely regarded as a reliable and professional partner in international peace and security efforts.

CAF Under Pressure After Referee Audio Leak From AFCON 2025 Final

🚨 CAF Under Pressure After Referee Audio Leak From AFCON 2025 Final

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) is facing mounting pressure to take decisive action following the release of referee audio from the AFCON 2025 Final between Morocco and Senegal.



The leaked audio reveals that match referee Jean-Jacques Ndala briefly considered ending the match after Senegalese players walked off the pitch in protest following a late penalty awarded to Morocco after a VAR review.


The controversial decision sparked chaos inside the stadium, with Senegal’s players and technical staff expressing anger over what they described as a clear injustice. Senegal head coach Pape Thiaw later defended his team’s actions, stating that the walk-off was an emotional reaction to what they believed was a decisive and unfair call at a critical moment of the final.


The incident has drawn global attention. Gianni Infantino, President of FIFA, strongly condemned the walk-off, emphasizing that abandoning the pitch and any form of disorder have no place in football, especially on the biggest continental stage.



CAF, in an official statement, denounced what it described as “unacceptable behavior” by players and officials during the match and confirmed that it is reviewing all available footage and audio recordings to determine possible disciplinary sanctions.



Meanwhile, Morocco has escalated the situation further, announcing plans to pursue legal action against CAF and FIFA, arguing that the walk-off disrupted the integrity of the final and may have unfairly influenced the outcome of the match.



As pressure intensifies from fans, football bodies, and national federations, CAF is now expected to deliver a ruling that could set a historic precedent for how protests, VAR controversies, and match abandonment are handled in African football.

DANNY PEDDLE ADVISES PROPHET DM SIAME TO TRADEMARK ‘INYANCED’ THROUGH PACRA

DANNY PEDDLE ADVISES PROPHET DM SIAME TO TRADEMARK ‘INYANCED’ THROUGH PACRA



By TROY MUKUPA

LUSAKA, ZAMBIA – Renowned musician Danny Mukwisa, also known as Danny Peddle, has advised Prophet DM Siame to register the word ‘inyanced’ as a trademark through the Patents and Companies Registration Agency (PACRA).



The word, coined by Prophet Siame during a radio interview, has gone viral on social media and has been widely adopted by netizens.



Speaking on Money FM Radio, Peddle, who is also the Zambia Music Copyright Protection Society (ZAMCOPS) board Vice Chairperson, stated that registering the trademark would give Prophet Siame exclusive rights to the word and safeguard it as his brand for future creative and commercial ventures.



Mwikisa said this is why it is important that the concerns raised over the copyright draft bill, which is available for review on the PACRA website, citing provisions that could compromise artists’ rights and undermine the creative industry, are ironed out so that industry players like Prophet DM Siame can benefit from their creations.



Prophet Siame, who sparked debate earlier this year over his use of artificial intelligence in music production, uttered the word ‘inyanced’ during a live radio interview on Sun FM, sparking a social media frenzy.



The word, a playful twist on the English “enhanced”, has become a popular internet meme and is widely used in captions and brand messaging.

TANZANIA JUST LAUNCHED EAST AFRICA’S LARGEST FRESHWATER VESSEL — BUILT BY TANZANIAN HANDS!

TANZANIA JUST LAUNCHED EAST AFRICA’S LARGEST FRESHWATER VESSEL — BUILT BY TANZANIAN HANDS!



The MV Mwanza has set sail! At 92.6 meters long, this massive ship can carry 1,200 passengers, 400 tons of cargo, and 20 vehicles across Lake Victoria.



This isn’t just a ship — it’s a statement.

President Samia Suluhu Hassan’s vision, brought to life. Tanzanian firm Songoro Marine Transport led the construction alongside international partners. From blueprint to launch, Tanzania proved Africa can build world-class infrastructure.



The MV Mwanza will connect Tanzania, Kenya, and Uganda — boosting trade, creating jobs, and uniting East Africa like never before.



While others import, Tanzania BUILDS.

Economy, Business, VIP, and VVIP cabins. A clinic on board. Modern facilities throughout.



This is what “Made in Tanzania” looks  like.

#MVMwanza

African hype media

WIFE OF UGANDAN OPPOSITION LEADER BOBI WINE IN HOSPITAL AFTER SOLDIERS RAID HER HOUSE

WIFE OF UGANDAN OPPOSITION LEADER BOBI WINE IN HOSPITAL AFTER SOLDIERS RAID HER HOUSE



THE wife of Ugandan opposition politician Bobi Wine has been speaking to journalists from her hospital bed in Kampala, describing what she says was an overnight raid on her home by soldiers searching for her husband.



Barbra Itungo Kyagulanyi said she was strangled and held at gunpoint during the raid.


“One of the main reasons was to look for my husband because his phone has been home. I switched it on yesterday because there is a password I was looking for and then that was like at around 3[pm]. So, I think they got a signal of his phone and then they were sure he was home. But he had left his phone behind.”



Wine said in a post on X on Saturday that “hundreds of soldiers” raided his home in his absence, looting it and assaulting his wife. “They put my wife on gunpoint, asking her to reveal my whereabouts,” he wrote. “They strangled her and insulted her.”



Kyagulanyi said the soldiers physically assaulted her in an attempt to get her to give them information about her husband.

“[One of the men] held me by my hair, lifted me up, we have poles in the sitting room, and hit my head on the pole and slit my mouth. So, when he hit me, he pulled me down and sat me down. Then he pushed my head and I went down and they sat on me. I could feel four bodies seated on me. Then he said, will you give me the password? I said again in Runyankore, you have already done enough. You are not getting the password.”


Bobi Wine went into hiding after last week’s presidential election. Yoweri Museveni won a seventh term in office, a result Wine denounced as “blatant theft.”



Post-election crackdown
Museveni’s son Muhoozi Kainerugaba, who heads the country’s army, has vowed to hunt down Wine and kill him.



Kainerugaba said earlier this week that 30 opposition supporters have been killed since the election and 2,000 arrested.



“We have arrested more than 2,000 thugs that Kabobi thought he could use,” wrote army chief Muhoozi Kainerugaba on X, using his nickname for Wine. “So far, we have killed 30 NUP terrorists,” he added, referring to Wine’s party, the National Unity Platform.



Police on Thursday detained a key ally of opposition figure Bobi Wine, accusing him of participating in bouts of violence in a remote part of central Uganda during last week’s election.



Muwanga Kivumbi, a lawmaker who is a deputy president of Wine’s National Unity Platform party, is likely to face criminal charges for his alleged role in violence in his constituency that left seven people dead, said police spokesman Kituuma Rusoke.



Wine’s lawyer has called on the United Nations and the international community to demand immediate, verifiable guarantees of Wine’s safety to ensure he can return to his family without harm.



Observers said the election was marred by an internet shutdown lasting days and the repression of the opposition.

UN chief Antònio Guterres has said he is following the situation in Uganda with concern.

Africanews

CAPT. IBRAHIM TRAORE BANS HOLLYWOOD ACTION MOVIES IN BURKINA FASO

CAPT. IBRAHIM TRAORE BANS HOLLYWOOD ACTION MOVIES IN BURKINA FASO


“For decades, we Africans have been made to believe that Americans are always the saviors, swooping in to rescue people from “bad guys” in Africa, the Middle East, or any nation that refuses to play along with their manipulative games.



Through the powerful propaganda machine known as Hollywood, many of our children have grown up stereotyping Muslims as terrorists. They’ve done the same to figures like Muammar Gaddafi of Libya, Ken Saro-Wiwa of Nigeria, and Patrice Lumumba of the Democratic Republic of Congo. But the truth can never stay hidden forever.



On this note, I am determined to set the record straight and ensure that the young children of Burkina Faso do not grow up with a distorted, propagandized version of true African history. As the saying goes: A man who does not know his history is not a man.


Therefore, I hereby place a ban on Hollywood action and historical movies in Burkina Faso!

Long live Burkina Faso!
God bless Africa!”

-Capt Ibrahim Traore

Ugandan Lawyer Joshua Okello Patrick Vows Legal Battle Against US Over Potential General Muhoozi Sanctions

*Ugandan Lawyer Joshua Okello Patrick Vows Legal Battle Against US Over Potential Muhoozi Sanctions*



*KAMPALA* – Prominent Ugandan lawyer and public interest litigator Joshua Okello Patrick (popularly known as “Jokel”) has issued a stern warning to the United States government, vowing to take legal action if it proceeds with imposing sanctions on General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, the Chief of Defence Forces (CDF).



*A “Sacred Duty” to Defend Sovereignty*

Joshua, a Soroti-based Lawyer  and self-described “Ugandan Watchman,” argues that foreign-imposed sanctions on national leaders are a direct violation of Uganda’s sovereignty. Following the January 15, 2026, general elections—which he described as a “masterclass in patriotism” led by Muhoozi—Joshua stated that he is prepared to use his legal expertise to block what he terms “external interference”.



*“The United Kingdom and United States have provoked the wrong people,”* Joshua declared in a recent public statement. “I act as Uganda’s watchman, ready to defend our leaders and the nation when foreign countries meddle in our affairs”.



*History of Challenging Western Sanctions*

This is not Joshua’s first foray into international legal disputes. He has established a reputation for “public interest litigation” by challenging Western powers: 



*Suit Against the UK:* In May 2024, Joshua sued the UK Attorney General at the High Court in Kampala over sanctions imposed on Speaker of Parliament Anita Among.



*ECHR Appeal:* When initial efforts in Uganda faced hurdles, he escalated the case to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in June 2024, accusing the court of “racism” for delays in hearing the matter.



*Defending Leadership:* Most recently, in October 2025, he filed criminal charges against an exiled music promoter for allegedly spreading false information regarding General Muhoozi, Capt. Mike Mukula and President Museveni.

*Legal Strategy and “Mandamus” Orders*

Joshua’s potential legal strategy agai

How Helen Zille’s Investigation Exposed the Savage Beating That Killed Steve Biko and Revealed the True Face of the Regime
The Lie That Shook Apartheid

How Helen Zille’s Investigation Exposed the Savage Beating That Killed Steve Biko and Revealed the True Face of the Regime
The Lie That Shook Apartheid:

In 1977, the apartheid government told the world that Steve Biko had died after a hunger strike. A simple story. A convenient lie.

But the truth was horrific.

Biko had been brutally assaulted by security police, left with massive head injuries, chained, transported naked for hundreds of kilometres, and denied proper medical care. He didn’t die by accident. He was beaten to death by a system built on violence.

One young journalist refused to accept the state’s version.

Helen Zille, then a reporter at the Rand Daily Mail, investigated the case, spoke to doctors, studied records, and exposed that Biko’s injuries were consistent with savage police brutality — not starvation. Her reporting shattered the official cover-up and forced the world to confront what really happened inside apartheid prisons.

At a time when telling the truth could get you banned, jailed, or killed, she chose courage over silence.

Steve Biko was murdered.
The regime lied.
And the truth broke through.

🕯️ Never forget. Never rewrite history.

ECL’s Name, No Rules: Inside Tonse Alliance’s Growing Crisis

🇿🇲 VIEWPOINT | ECL’s Name, No Rules: Inside Tonse Alliance’s Growing Crisis

The opposition space is fragmenting in real time, and the cracks are no longer subtle. What was once marketed as a united front under the Tonse Alliance banner is now a contested arena of ego, procedure, memory, and raw political survival. At the center of the latest rupture is a basic question the alliance has failed to answer clearly. Who exactly owns the Edgar Lungu legacy, and by what rules is that ownership exercised.



Zambia Must Prosper leader Kelvin Fube Bwalya, speaking on the Emmanuel Nkhoma Podcast, did not soften his words. He described developments in Tonse Alliance as “fraud,” “imingalato,” and “ubufufuntungu,” arguing that the alliance has abandoned its own rules in the rush to coronate a successor to former president Edgar Lungu.



KBF says his party has formally written to the Tonse Alliance faction led by Dan Pule, demanding that the process of selecting a flag bearer be anchored in clear procedures rather than improvisation



At the core of KBF’s complaint is the undefined nature of the so called ECL Movement. He argues that registered political parties within Tonse have held conferences, adopted constitutions, and elected leadership, while the ECL Movement has done none of this yet enjoys disproportionate influence.



“How can a movement that is not registered have more delegates than registered parties,” he asked, warning that the alliance risks practicing the same illegality it accuses President Hakainde Hichilema of committing.



KBF also directly questioned the authority of Zumani Zimba, accusing him of arbitrarily selecting who represents the ECL Movement. He noted the inconsistency of elevating figures such as Brian Mundubile and Mutotwe Kafwaya, while excluding others widely known to have been close to Lungu, including Makebi Zulu, Mumbi Phiri, Godfridah Sumaili, and Raphael Nakacinda. In KBF’s framing, this is not organization.



It is gatekeeping disguised as consensus.

The historical irony is difficult to miss. The Patriotic Front itself fractured after Michael Sata’s death because succession rules were unclear and power was settled through muscle rather than process. That disorder eventually produced Edgar Lungu, who went on to lose power in 2021 by more than one million votes. Today, the same PF lineage is being repackaged inside Tonse, again without a clear constitutional anchor.



The difference is that now multiple presidential hopefuls are competing to wear Lungu’s memory like a campaign talisman.



Even Mundubile’s own position exposes the contradiction. He has filed nomination papers under Tonse Alliance while insisting publicly that he remains PF. That dual posture reflects a broader opposition dilemma. Everyone wants the moral authority of the PF base and the emotional weight of Lungu’s name, but no one wants to submit fully to a disciplined structure that might limit ambition.



This is not about ideology. It is about control. The Tonse Alliance is becoming a marketplace where legitimacy is negotiated informally, delegates are allocated politically, and rules are invoked selectively. KBF’s warning cuts deeper than personal grievance. Without agreed criteria, transparent representation, and enforceable procedure, the alliance risks collapsing under the very weight of the legacy it is trying to exploit.



The opposition often argues that the ruling party thrives because state institutions are bent to serve power. What KBF is now saying is that Tonse is bending its own rules to serve ambition. This contradiction is not theoretical. It is visible. And unless resolved, it will continue to shrink trust inside the alliance long before voters are asked to trust it with the country.

© The People’s Brief | Editors

CHRIS ZUMANI MUST SHUT UP HE HAS CAUSED ENOUGH DAMAGE TO THE PF- Mathew  chalwe Bwalya

ZUMANI MUST SHUT UP HE HAS CAUSED ENOUGH DAMAGE TO THE PF

– He caused the loss of the Patriotic Front in 2021 Genera Elections.



-Before that he spent his whole life insulting ECL, please produce those screen shots.

-He is working with State House to remove the Patriotic Front from the 2026 Ballot and from Tonse Alliance.



– How long shall we tolerate his insults and schemes?

Dear Editor,

I read an article by former State House Special Assistant for Politics Zumani Zimba claiming that President Edgar Lungu was thankful to him for creating Tonse Alliance.



He also took time to insult Amb. Emmanuel Mwamba that he was hosting hostile figures like Laura Miti and Dora Siliya on his Podcast thereby causing pain to the former President.



Zumani Zimba has annoyed a lot of Patriotic Front members especially how he caused the loss of election the Party suffered in 2021. It is best that he shuts up.


Zumani just joined the Patriotic Front in 2019 and before that he spent his entire life insulting President Edgar Lungu.

He should not compare himself to Amb. Emmanuel Mwamba who has sacrificed for the party since 2002.

He should continue with his treacherous activities with Levy Ngoma and the UPND and not try to annoy us further.



Recently, Zumani has engineered the expulsion of the Patriotic  Front from Tonse Alliance where he claimed he is the Architect.



He should tell the PF members why he spends a lot of time with former High Commissioner to Audtralia Amb. George Zulu and State House Special Assistant for Politics, Levy Ngoma, the people fighting hard to vanquish the Patriotic Front.



Zumani has no idea who President Edgar Lungu and the heart he had for Zambia. President Lungu could forgive people like Zumani himself who used to pour unimaginable insults on him.

Mathew  chalwe Bwalya
Member of the Patriotic Frank since 2004

Why Oliver Sepiso Shalala  should be the UPND Media Director- George N. Mtonga

By George N. Mtonga

Why Oliver Sepiso Shalala  should be the UPND Media Director.



There are career politicians in Zambia and there are party members and then ideologists. Who is a UPND ideologist? A UPND ideologist is a UPND member who supports the party based on its stated ideological goals. As a liberal, Oliver is committed to the rule of law, the zambian constitution, free markets, free education  and public heath. These are beliefs that dont and wont change.



As media director, he would be more strategic in communicating our party beliefs. He would be useful in that world, and can easily deploy media assets all over the country.



Even when you see him now, oliver responds to  every issue. Drafts up a rebuttal, provides guidance and engages in debates with anyone and everyone.



This is what a party.media director needs to be. In fact, knowing that he is out there allows some of us who are equally party ideologists to be comfortable that even if we miss something oliver will be there to catch it.



UPND needs more communicators!!

Oliver for UPND media director makes sense.

What is Happening in Tonse Alliance is Fraud, Ubuchenjenshi and Imingalato- KBF

KBF on Tonse Alliance

What is Happening in Tonse Alliance is Fraud, Ubuchenjenshi and Imingalato



Zambia Must Prosper (ZMP) President, Kelvin Fube Bwalya appeared on Dr. Emmanuel Nkhoma Podcast called “Zambia Decides” and made various remarks.



On Tonse Alliance he said;

● Former President Edgar Lungu left United Kwacha Alliance(UKA) and moved to Tonse Alliance because of the disrespect he was treated with by some constituent members.



● President Edgar Lungu met me and we held five meetings. He regretted some actions against me in 2021. We reconciled.

●President Lungu invited me in Tonse Alliance.



● What’s happening in Tonse Alliance “Ubuchenjenshi”.

● ZMP party helped significantly in campaigns in the Chawama by-elections.
But what’s happening in Tonse Alliance now is “Imingalato”.



● For example we made a decision to expel the Patriotic Front. But some individuals have been brought back.


● Tonse Alliance National Coordinator Zumani Zimba has chosen and picked his friends and presented them as the ECL Movement.



●“You want me to agree that Mutotwe Kafwaya was closer to ECL than Makebi Zulu? That Brian Mundubile was closer to ECL than Mumbi Phiri? What criteria has been used to leave those that were close to ECL but pick those individuals and present them as the ECL movement?”

EMMANUEL MWAMBA’S COMPARISON OF MAIZE PRODUCTION BETWEEN SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN PROVINCES LACED WITH LIES: AS USUAL!

EMMANUEL MWAMBA’S COMPARISON OF MAIZE PRODUCTION BETWEEN SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN PROVINCES LACED WITH LIES: AS USUAL!


By Shalala Oliver Sepiso

Emmanuel Mwamba this evening said that “since 2011, Northern Province has overtaken Southern Province in Maize production”.



It’s is not true that from 2011 Northern Province overtook Southern Province in Maize production.

From 2011 to 2026, Southern Province has always beaten Northern Province in Maize production except in drought years.



In the 2024/2025, Southern Province produced 454,000 metric tonnes of Maize while Northern produced 450,000 metric tonnes of maize. This was because of the good rains of 2004 into 2025, which saw Southern rebound sharply from the 2024 drought.



The year before, 2023/2024 farming season saw Southern produced a paltry 24,300 metric tonnes of maize while Northern had 191,000 (sold to FRA). These figures were because of the severe drought in the year, with Southern hit hardest of all provinces in Zambia.



2022/2023  saw Southern with 489,000 and 330,000 was produced in Northern Province which often faces higher rainfall but also higher leaching of its soils.



In the 2021/2022 season, there was a higher production in Southern than there was in Northern Province.

So over the years under UPND, Northern has not beaten Southern in maize production except in the year of drought in 2024 only.



But it is clear that in the years under UPND, the production numbers in Southern Province have been very high compared with those in the PF days.

Now let’s look at the 10 years PF was on power.

Emmanuel Mwamba claimed thay Northern Province overtook Southern in 2011. In reality, in 2010/2011, Southern Province produced 639,541 while Northern Province (then combined with Muchinga Province) produced only 400,000 metric tonnes of maize. So Emmanuel Mwamba lied.



In fact, official ZamStats figures also show that 2011/2012, 2012/2013 and 2013/2014 all saw Southern Province produce more maize than Northern Province.

It is only in 2014/2015 and 2015/2016 when Northern Province beat Southern in Maize production due to another drought.



Let us agree that Southern Province is traditionally one of the top three maize producers but is highly vulnerable to drought (e.g., 2023/2024, 2018/2019). It can produce over 600,000 MT in good years and plummet below 50,000 MT in drought years.



Let us also agree that Northern Province is always Consistent and has High Potential (especially when combined with Muchinga) such that it often competes for the top position due to more stable rainfall. In recent years, it has often outperformed Southern Province in drought years but doesn’t beat it in a normal rainfall years.



Now Agriculture is not just maize. It also includes animal husbandry.

Southern Province consistently holds the highest cattle population in Zambia (approx. 1.75 million as of 2024), significantly outpacing Northern Province. The 2024 Integrated Agricultural Survey confirms that Southern Province has the highest cattle population. Historically, this province has dominated in cattle numbers, supported by suitable ecology, often holding over 1 million head of cattle throughout the 2010s.



Northern Province, Zambia, has an estimated 170,000 to 189,359 head of cattle, representing roughly 6% to 10% of the country’s total population, with significant herds in Mbala and Mungwi districts. The region has high potential for ranching and dairy farming due to favorable climate and water resources.



While Southern Province leads, Northern Province has experienced a notable, sharp increase in cattle numbers since 2021, recording a 9.5% growth rate between 2021 and 2022, signaling a, rapid expansion in the region. Historically, cattle numbers in the northern part of the country have been much lower than in the southern region.

According to a 2022 livestock census report, from 2021 to 2022, there was a 9.5% growth in Northern Province, which was one of the highest in the country, trailing only behind Muchinga Province at 21.1%. It is clear that there has been a significant upward trend in cattle numbers in the Northern Province since 2021. The 2022 livestock census report noted that while national growth was modest (1.4%), regional growth was strong in the North, with a 9.5% increase, pointing to a robust expansion in cattle numbers in that region.


This trend indicates that while Southern Province remains the leader in absolute numbers, Northern Province is experiencing a significant surge in, cattle, farming activity since the UPND took over power in Zambia.

Let’s use correct numbers when talking about these things.

WHO REALLY EARNS THE MOST IN ZAMBIA? (MONTHLY PAY BREAKDOWN)

🇿🇲 WHO REALLY EARNS THE MOST IN ZAMBIA? (MONTHLY PAY BREAKDOWN)

💼 MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT (MP)
➡️ K32,000 – K35,000 per month
(Includes allowances; many are non-taxable)



🏛️ PERMANENT SECRETARY (PS)
➡️ K50,000 – K60,000 per month
(Top civil servant, controls ministry budgets)



⚖️ JUDGES (High Court / Supreme Court)
➡️ K45,000 – K65,000 per month

🏥 SPECIALIST DOCTORS (Government)
➡️ K40,000 – K70,000 per month



⚡📡 CEOs OF STATE-OWNED COMPANIES (ZESCO, Zamtel, ZCCM-IH Subsidiaries)
➡️ K150,000 – K350,000+ per month

⛏️💰 PRIVATE SECTOR TOP EARNERS (Mining, Banking, Multinationals)
➡️ K80,000 – K300,000+ per month



📌 THE TRUTH:
• MPs are not the highest paid
• Permanent Secretaries earn more than MPs


• SOE CEOs and mining executives earn up to 10× more than MPs
• The real money is in executive management & scarce skills

KALYAPELO SUNDAY COMMENDS ZAMBIA ARMY OVER KIKONGE GOLD MINE OPERATION

KALYAPELO SUNDAY COMMENDS ZAMBIA ARMY OVER KIKONGE GOLD MINE OPERATION



A resident of Zambezi District in North-Western Province, Kalyapelo Sunday, has thanked the Zambia Army for its swift response in removing illegal miners from Kikonge Gold Mine, saying the operation has brought relief to an area that had been plagued by serious criminal activities and loss of lives.



He noted that for a long time, people were afraid to access the mine due to daily incidents of violence and insecurity.



Mr. Sunday explained that although some people have questioned the involvement of the military instead of the police, the situation at Kikonge required urgent and decisive action. He said the number of people at the mine had grown to over 100,000—far exceeding the population of some districts such as Mufumbwe—with individuals coming from different parts of Zambia and neighbouring countries, making the situation difficult to manage through normal policing.



He further raised concern over national security after the Zambia Army Commander displayed images of a foreign national wearing a military uniform at the site, describing this as evidence that the situation was dangerous and required firm intervention.



Mr. Sunday has also expressed worry over statements by some opposition leaders suggesting they would allow illegal mining if voted into power, questioning how such a move would be implemented. He emphasized that the government has already provided a legal pathway through the licensing of small-scale miners, which he described as the correct approach.



He concluded by praising the government under President Hakainde Hichilema for its commitment to law, order, and the safety of citizens, stating that despite criticism on social media, many Zambians continue to support and appreciate the President’s leadership.

Zambia, Zimbabwe ignore climate change risks, proceed with hydro project on drying Zambezi River

Zambia, Zimbabwe ignore climate change risks, proceed with hydro project on drying Zambezi River



•There were serious misgivings about the viability of the long-stalled hydroelectric project on the Zambezi River due to the worsening effects of climate change



•Zambia and Zimbabwe are moving forward with the Batoka Gorge Hydro Electric Scheme on River Zambezi despite concerns.



•The $4.5 billion project aims to generate 2,400 MW, but declining water levels due to climate change raise doubts about its viability.



•Both governments remain committed, citing feasibility studies supporting the project’s sustainability.



The governments of Zambia and Zimbabwe are brushing aside concerns about the worsening effects of climate change, with the two southern African nations recently pledging $220 million each in seed capital for the construction of the Batoka Gorge Hydro Electric Scheme (BGHES).



The decision by the two countries to commit the $440 million — about 10 per cent of the project’s expected cost of $4.5 billion — was taken at a December 29, 2025 meeting of the Council of Ministers of the Zambezi River Authority (ZRA), the bi-national body that manages water resources on the shared river. The ZRA will manage the proposed project, just as it already manages the bi-national Kariba Dam and its hydropower station.

TONSE CALLS FOR COUNCIL OF LEADERS’ MEETING ON MONDAY 26th JANUARY 2026

TONSE CALLS FOR COUNCIL OF LEADERS’ MEETING ON MONDAY 26th JANUARY 2026



NOTICE: TONSE COUNCIL OF LEADERS (CoL) MEETING



Members are hereby notified that a Tonse Council of Leaders (CoL) meeting will take place on Monday, 26 January 2026, (details  with held), starting at 14:00 hours.



The meeting will be chaired by the Acting Tonse Chairman and Acting President of the Patriotic Front, Hon. Given Lubinda.



Issued by:
Ephraim Shakafuswa
Spokesperson – Tonse Alliance

IShowSpeed Faces Editing Challenges After Massive Crowds in Liberia

Breaking News:

IShowSpeed Faces Editing Challenges After Massive Crowds in Liberia


Popular streamer IShowSpeed is struggling to edit his Liberia videos due to overwhelming crowd disruptions during filming. The large and loud crowds caused constant interruptions and shaky footage, making the editing process slow and difficult.



Now posting about Ivory Coast 🇨🇮, IShowSpeed praised Liberia as the best country on his African tour, with more fans showing up there than anywhere else.


His PR team confirms the Liberia video will be released soon, before he arrives in Ghana. However, they are still sorting through a huge amount of footage because the crowd was so massive, capturing all key moments remains a challenge.



Congratulations to Liberia 🇱🇷 we set records!!!

TRUMP DEMANDS DEM LEADERS COOPERATE AS MINNESOTA RIOTS ERUPT

📢 Breaking: TRUMP DEMANDS DEM LEADERS COOPERATE AS MINNESOTA RIOTS ERUPT

Minneapolis is burning again, and the same Democrat leaders who let it spiral in 2020 are standing there shrugging while federal officers get tackled in the street.



This time, anti-ICE rioters formed an “autonomous zone,” drove police out, and turned a U.S. city into a playground for radicals.



Trump’s response?

He didn’t mince words.

He demanded Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, and every blue-city boss stop playing politics and start cooperating with federal law enforcement to restore order and protect Americans.



Meanwhile, Congress got a clear marching order too: Trump is calling on them to “immediately pass Legislation to END Sanctuary Cities.



” Democrats call these places “sanctuaries,” but out on the actual streets, the only people feeling protected are criminals and activists who know local politicians will look the other way.



According to federal reports, Border Patrol shot Alex Jeffrey Pretti after he pulled a gun on agents — and instead of waiting for facts, professional agitators instantly used it as a pretext to riot.



Fires, attacks on ICE, police run out, and a viral clip of a federal officer tackled by a mob while the same crowd claims to be resisting “fascism. ” Corporate media sanitizes it all as “clashes” and “unrest,” but if this were January 6 footage, they’d call it an insurrection and demand life sentences.

Prepare for the worst, hope for the best: why Zambia’s 2026 election is like no other before it- Sishuwa Sishuwa

Prepare for the worst, hope for the best: why Zambia’s 2026 election is like no other before it

By Sishuwa Sishuwa

Voters in Zambia head to the ballot box on 13 August this year to choose political leaders in a general election that might see Hakainde Hichilema becoming the latest casualty of the anti-incumbent election wave that has recently seen the defeat of sitting presidents in other African countries such as Botswana and Malawi. Unlike previous ones, the 2026 election is unique for five major reasons.

The absence of a former president

This will be the first election in over thirty years of multiparty democracy in which no former president would play an active role in deciding its outcome. Following the death of Edgar Lungu in June 2025 and Rupiah Banda in March 2022, Zambia has no ex-president who is alive. In nearly all previous polls since 1996, when Kenneth Kaunda boycotted the election after he was barred from running, former presidents have supported presidential candidates who have generally ended up as winners or finished in second place. For instance, in the 2001 election, Kaunda, who had been defeated by Frederick Chiluba of the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) in 1991, urged voters to support Anderson Mazoka of the opposition United Party for National Development (UPND). Mazoka narrowly lost the contest to the Chiluba-backed MMD candidate Levy Mwanawasa. In 2006, the support of Chiluba, who was facing corruption charges in court, helped Michael Sata of the opposition Patriotic Front (PF), who pledged to drop the corruption cases, to run incumbent president Mwanawasa much closer than expected.

After Mwanawasa died in office in 2008, Chiluba, following Sata’s abandonment of the earlier pledge to drop the corruption cases, switched sides and endorsed Rupiah Banda, Mwanawasa’s vice-president, who narrowly defeated the PF leader in the ensuing presidential by-election. Chiluba died in June 2011, three months before the general election in which the only living ex-president Kaunda rallied behind Sata, who defeated incumbent president Banda. Following Sata’s death in office, Banda endorsed the governing PF candidate Edgar Lungu in both the ensuing 2015 presidential by-election and the scheduled general election of 2016, helping him to narrow victory over the UPND’s Hakainde Hichilema on both occasions. After Kaunda died in June 2021, Banda, the only surviving former president, endorsed no one, and this helped Hichilema to finally beat Lungu in the last general election. Before his death, Lungu himself had vowed to identify and back an opposition challenger against President Hichilema. Whoever wins the next election would have to do so without relying on the campaign support or established power of an ex-president, a title that Hichilema hopes he will not assume after 13 August.

No strong or established opposition challenger

This year’s election also differs from those before in that it will feature no strong opposition challenger with an established support or power base. In all previous polls since 1991, there has always been at least one major opposition political figure generally seen by voters as more likely than the others to unseat the incumbent. For instance, ahead of the 1991 transition elections, Chiluba, who had come through the ranks of organised labour and was leader of the Zambia Congress of Trade Unions for close to two decades, was widely considered the voter’s choice against the incumbent president. Kaunda occupied this role of the main opposition challenger in 1996 (which explains why president Chiluba moved quickly to exclude him), as did Mazoka in 2001, Sata in 2006, 2008 and 2011, and Hichilema in 2015, 2016, and 2021.

Ahead of the August poll, there is no single opposition leader who can be said to occupy this position. Such is the fragmented and poor state of the current opposition parties that none of their leaders won more than 0.6 percent of the total votes in 2021 when 98 percent of the presidential votes were shared between Lungu and Hichilema. This explains why Lungu, in the absence of a strong opposition, became the opposition over the next few years. His death, alongside State-instigated factions in his former ruling party, has dealt a severe blow to the strength of the opposition. However, it has also placed Hichilema in an awkward position.

Faced with an electorate disenchanted by his generally poor record in office and with about three months remaining before the dissolution of parliament in May, the incumbent president does not know who his main challenger would be, making it difficult to target them for possible destruction. Such is the growing revulsion against Hichilema’s leadership that many voters may decide to adopt an ‘anyone but Hichilema’ voting attitude. Outright opposition to one candidate rather than genuine support for the candidate voted for appears to be becoming the norm across democracies in the world. This was certainly the case in Malawi and Botswana, and there is emerging evidence that it might be the case in Zambia this year.

For instance, in the second half of 2025, elements of the Zambia Security and Intelligence Services conducted a ‘privately’ commissioned and nationwide opinion poll that asked voters to indicate their voting preference between Hichilema and an unspecified candidate simply known as “The Alternative”. In six of the country’s ten provinces, at least 70 percent of voters chose “The Alternative”, with the Copperbelt leading the table of discontent at 76 percent. This high rate of disapproval shows the vulnerability of Hichilema – who in recent weeks has also had to fend off growing speculation about his health– to defeat, even in the absence of a clear opposition challenger. Since he has shown very little interest in changing for the better and improving his record on governance, Hichilema’s fate would largely depend on the ability of the opposition to present a credible presidential candidate and articulate an alternative national vision that resonates with the concerns of most voters.

In the cited confidential survey by the Office of the President, the concerns of voters across much of the country appear to be the same: deepening ethnic-regional divisions, widespread corruption in government, the high prices of basic goods and services, lack of adequate farming inputs and delayed payments to farmers, load shedding or erratic electricity supply, prioritisation of programmes and projects that do not benefit ordinary citizens, and the pervasive perception that Hichilema is in office to primarily enrich himself and serve the commercial interests of foreign entities led by mining companies. However, the growing consensus among independent observers that Hichilema might lose the election unless he rigs it on a big scale is not yet matched by a similar unanimity on who will emerge victorious.

Partisan figures in charge of the electoral commission

The election will also be the first national poll to be conducted by an electoral management body that is led by individuals with widely known ties to the ruling party and who are consequently seen as serving partisan interests. Since its creation in 1996, the Electoral Commission of Zambia (ECZ) has been led by nonpartisan and impartial professionals who commanded the respect of political players and the public more generally while the chairperson has always been a former judge of the high court or supreme court. This record explains why Zambia’s democracy has endured in comparison to others elsewhere in Africa and was made possible by the ability of successive presidents to resist the temptation to use their temporary control of institutions to maximum partisan advantage. It is what in part led to Hichilema’s election in 2021.

Ahead of this election, he has changed the nonpartisan character of ECZ in several ways. For instance, the president appointed his former personal lawyer Mwangala Zaloumis to the commission. He then proceeded to promote Zaloumis as the chairperson of the commission. Legally speaking, Zaloumis is qualified to hold the position, as Section 5 (2) of the Electoral Commission of Zambia Act of 2016 provides that “A person qualifies for appointment as the Chairperson or Vice-Chairperson if that person has held, or is qualified to hold, the office of judge of a superior court.”

Even though Zaloumis has never held judicial office, the minimum number of years of legal practice experience required for appointment as a superior court judge is ten, which she exceeds. What is highly problematic is her proximity to Hichilema. Before Hichilema, successive presidents only appointed independent individuals who had previously held judicial office to chair the electoral body because such individuals – whether retired or plucked from the courts –were perceived as impartial and apolitical. Unfortunately, the president has abandoned this established democratic norm that has undergirded elite and popular perceptions of legitimacy of the country’s democratic system over the last three decades.

As if Zaloumis was not enough, Hichilema further chose Mcdonald Chipenzi, another known supporter of the ruling UPND, as a commissioner on the electoral body. Currently, the ECZ has four commissioners, all of whom come from the region where Hichilema hails from. In addition, 50 percent of the commission’s leadership is made up of individuals with known ties to the sitting president or party in power. Combined, these factors may erode voter confidence in the election or trigger violent protests in the event of a narrow and disputed victory by Hichilema.

A partisan army commander who behaves like the ruling party’s head of security

The ability of the military to stay out of politics has been one of the crucial factors that have helped sustain Zambia’s democracy even in shaky moments and enabled peaceful transitions of power. In Zambia, the military did not emerge from a liberation army. This has shaped its nonpartisan character, in addition to having a crop of apolitical and professional military commanders appointed by successive presidents who exercised greater restraint in deploying their institutional prerogatives for partisan goals. Since the appointment of Kingsley Chinkuli, the country’s first indigenous army chief in December 1970, successive army commanders have gone to greater lengths to protect this identity of the army. This has included respectfully refusing to comply with unlawful orders of their commander-in-chief especially those relating to any attempt to getting soldiers to deal with domestic policing, to kill civilians, and to intervene in support of the incumbent when it dawns on the president that they have lost the election.

This professional and nonpartisan character of the Zambia Army endured until September 2024 when Hichilema dismissed the highly regarded Lieutenant General Sitali Alibuzwi from his post as army commander and hired corruption-accused Geoffrey Zyeele as his replacement. Zyeele had been retired ‘in the national interest’ in 2016 by then President Lungu for alleged partisan conduct in favour of the UPND. After the 2021 transfer of power, Hichilema recalled his co-ethnic from retirement, promoted him to the rank of Major General, and appointed him deputy army commander. To obscure the long-term political motives behind the appointment, the President chose Alibuzwi, the then deputy army commander who had been promoted to the position by Lungu in 2019, as the head of the military.

Although it was the first time that both the army and deputy army commanders came from the same region, the appointment of Alibuzwi was widely seen as merit-based owing to his professionalism, commitment to integrity, and the respect that he commanded among soldiers. The same could not be said about Zyeele, who was soon to be implicated in a major corruption scandal, one that forced the Anti-Corruption Commission to place the deputy army chief under investigations. Like most cases of corruption involving members of Hichilema’s inner circle, the case went nowhere. This murky history explains why opposition politicians rejected Zyeele’s promotion as army commander when Hichilema elevated him. In what has become his trademark response to public concerns, the president simply ignored these objections.

When removing Alibuzwi, the president gave no reason for the decision. However, his comments in the aftermath of the changes he made to the army’s leadership, alongside the public conduct of Zyeele since then, provide a clue: preparing the army to play a partisan role in politics and especially the conduct of the forthcoming election. In April 2025, Hichilema appropriated the country’s military as his fighters, ordered them to start dealing with civilians, and, when doing so, to be in a lethal mode. Speaking during the commissioning of 500 new soldiers and looking directly at Zyeele, the president said: “I want to see my soldiers who are polite in the communities, who know how to handle civilians but yet (sic) when duty calls for the lethal side, they mutate into that mode as well. I believe you have got my message”, he declared six months after the unexplained dismissal of Lieutenant General Alibuzwi.

Given that soldiers do not “handle civilians”, as the maintenance of law and order is the responsibility of the police, Hichilema’s remarks were generally seen as a veiled invitation for the army to deal decisively with any pre-election signs of political dissent and potential post-election unrest. It is a message that the new army commander has taken to heart since then. For instance, in November 2025, informal small-scale miners, whose hazardous trade Hichilema had promised to regularise when he was in opposition, pelted the president with stones at a public rally on the Copperbelt. Hichilema was forced to abandon his speech, flee to safety, and had his ego severely bruised. If this incident showed mounting public anger at the president’s failure to fulfil the campaign promises he made in the last election, it unsettled the corruption-accused Zyeele who described the disillusioned stone-throwing youths as insane, vowed to hunt them down, and promised to institute “corrective measures” to avoid a repeat.

“You cannot throw a stone at a commander-in-chief and hope to have peace”, the army commander said before adding that “All those individuals who threw stones at the commander-in-chief, we shall pick them one by one. Some of them are under custody already. Those who ran away, we will look for them and deal with them according to the law. There is no sane person who can throw a stone at a commander-in-chief.” Zyeele’s point was clear: the army had got Hichilema’s message and was now implementing it by assuming policing functions. Although the message was directed at informal miners, the targeted audience was much wider: general civilians in whom the army commander is instilling fear that any expression of dissent against the president would be met with lethal response from ‘Hichilema’s soldiers.’

Zyeele amplified this message earlier this month when he publicly threatened to use violence against another group of informal small-scale miners, this time from Mufumbwe in Northwestern Province, dubbed Zambia’s new Copperbelt. Like their counterparts on the Copperbelt, these miners have been disappointed by Hichilema’s failure to regularise their trade and there are growing fears that they too might embarrass the president, if left unchecked. There are also credible reports that some senior UPND figures and one or two individuals close to Hichilema have entered the trade and do not want competition from the informal miners. On 22 January, Zyeele told the media that the president had ordered the military to kill these “illegal miners”.

Dripping arrogance, the army commander further described the citizens as “targets” to be “flushed out” and on whom “lethal force will be applied without hesitation.” With beaming excitement, Zyeele disclosed that “The directive from the commander-in-chief was very straightforward: to exterminate illegal miners. We shall do this step by step. We do not intend to use force but obviously, when necessary, that is our business: to use force. And I do know there will be consequences in that direction, such as injuries, loss of life, but there is no [other] option available”.

The army commander added: “We are also reminded of the impunity to disobedience of law and order by the illegal miners. We will not allow that impunity to continue…. Illegal mining attracts illegal immigrants, and we are also interested in illegal immigrants. Starting this week, we shall be using force to exterminate and fumigate all illegal miners. Our next destination is Mpika [in Muchinga Province]. Obviously, the template of Mufumbwe maybe different from Mpika, but there will be similarities in the lines of operations. I know that this nuisance has been in Central Province for a long time… It is time we brought it to a dead end.”

Here, Zyeele’s objectives are twofold. First, by publicising this premeditated mass termination of the right to life of ordinary civilians as a mere fulfilment of presidential directives, the army commander is placing Hichilema above the Constitution and effectively acknowledging that he has no problem with carrying out any orders, however unlawful, a clear departure from his predecessors. This is another ingratiating response to the president’s earlier address. In effect, Zyeele is telling his commander-in-chief that “we have heard your message, and your soldiers are ready to mutate into the lethal mode.” Second, in framing the problem of illegal mining as a cross-province issue, the army chief is seeking to condition Zambians into accepting the possible deployment of soldiers onto the streets ahead of the election under the pretext of maintaining law and order even when the police have not admitted failure to discharge what is essentially their mandate. Placing soldiers on the streets will in turn intimidate citizens into submission in case of a rigged election and avert Tanzania-style mass protests.

The refusal to drag the country’s military in partisan politics increasingly appears to have been the reason behind the dismissal of the former army commander. After Hichilema appointed Zyeele as his successor, Alibuzwi publicly advised his successor to “ensure that the army does not engage in partisan politics, especially as the country heads towards the 2026 general elections”. Speaking at a farewell party hosted in his honour, the ex-military chief provided illuminating insights into behind-the-scenes dynamics that possibly contributed to his sacking: “Our army has always been known for its professionalism and now is not the time to drop the guard. The Zambia Army has its identity. I was sometimes misunderstood in trying to protect this identity. But let me mention that I have no regrets whatsoever because I had the responsibility to protect the army’s identity according to the military customs, practices, and internationally accepted continental system”.

Going by his conduct since assuming the role of army commander, Zyeele has shown that he is more than willing to drop the guard and change the army’s identity by ensuring that it engages in partisan politics ahead of the general elation. The only positive thing so far is that Zyeele’s demonstrated partisanship is not widely shared by the rank and file of the military, who remain professional and are most probably repulsed by the grovelling attitude of their commander towards one political player. Were Hichilema to lose the election and refuse to concede defeat, the ability of the leadership and rank and file of the military to stay out of political processes, as they have historically done since the re-introduction of multiparty democracy in 1991, will be essential to electoral turnover and peaceful transition of power. So far, Hichilema has refused to provide any public assurance that he would peacefully concede defeat and hand over power if he lost the election. Conversely, any attempts by the army to intervene in favour of the incumbent if it becomes clear that he has lost the election will leave Zambia on the brink of a bloodbath and civil war.

The systematic destruction of democratic institutions

This year’s election is also like no other before it in relation to the overt and covert manoeuvres employed by an incumbent president to eliminate political competition through the deliberate destruction of democratic institutions. The police, judiciary, civil society, opposition parties, and, as already shown, electoral commission have all been targeted for capture by the executive arm of government in a manner that has never been witnessed since the era of one-party rule. In addition to co-opting previously independent media outlets such as News Diggers and appointing most of the experienced leadership of Zambia’s civil society movement into the government, Hichilema has used the police to target the remaining civic leader for arrest.

For instance, Brebner Changala, a prominent civil rights activist who played a significant role in exposing Lungu-era wrongs and contributed to the delegitimisation of the PF in a manner that paved the way for Hichilema’s election, has been saddled with an active court case since May 2024 after he criticised the presidency in comments that were deemed by the government as seditious. Archbishop Alick Banda, one of the country’s most prominent and outspoken religious leaders, is on the verge of arrest over a politically motivated case that is aimed at silencing him or getting the Vatican to remove him from his position. By the time of elections, both civic leaders might be in prison.

In addition to dusting off colonial-era statutes to arrest political opponents and critics, Hichilema has also devised anti-free speech laws such as the Cyber Crimes Act of 2025 to help curb online criticism of his leadership failures. This has created a general climate of fear that is reminiscent of Lungu’s last days in power. Political parties have also been targeted for destruction. Hichilema has sponsored confusion or instigated divisions in all three of Zambia’s former ruling parties using state institutions such as the police, the Registrar of Societies, and the courts.

The government has taken formal control of the PF and chosen its leader, created two factions in former president Kaunda’s United National Independence Party (with one supported by the State), and helped the Hichilema-supporting Nevers Mumba to avert any leadership challenge to his long-expired mandate over the Movement for Multiparty Democracy. This has weakened the state and viability of the opposition. The factional battles in these parties are easier to resolve, but Hichilema’s decision to pack the courts has compromised the judiciary and resulted in gymnastics on the part of judges, expressed through delayed delivery of judgments and the passing of verdicts that are so legally defective that they offend both reason and common sense.

Perhaps more blatant has been the capture of the police, an institution that Hichilema has repeatedly abused to suppress the right to peaceful public assembly of opposition parties whilst he himself continues to campaign unhindered. Over the last four years, the police have blocked nearly all public rallies called by opposition parties outside of by-elections, always citing unspecified security concerns or inadequate manpower. Yet whenever the opposition have threatened to proceed with their rallies, the government has dispatched hundreds of police officers to the designated venues to quash the meetings. The Inspector-General of police, Graphel Musamba, recently explained that “we don’t allow opposition rallies because the other side [the ruling party] is always ready to attack them [the opposition]”. This is damning and undeniable evidence of political suppression.

In addition to violating the right to peaceful public assembly, freedom of association (those denied permission to meet are members who associate with a given political party), and free speech (since people meet to talk), stopping the opposition from mobilising voters has prevented the raising of political temperature expressed through big-sized rallies that have historically served as a barometer of the public’s desire for change. Large-scale rallies of opposition parties show an incumbent president’s declining political support and serve as a source of courage for elites in formal institutions like the judiciary to do the right thing.

For instance, ahead of Zambia’s 1991, 2011, and 2021 elections, all of which resulted in the defeat of the sitting president and were preceded by well-attended opposition rallies, courts that had all along shown timidity and subservience to the executive suddenly sprang to life and made several decisions against the executive. Thanks to Hichilema, and for the first time in over three decades, opposition parties are heading into a general election campaign without the benefit of mobilising voters and selling their policy appeals through public rallies.

An incumbent president with a character that knows no restraint

This is also the first time since independence that the county is heading into a major election led by a leader with a character that knows no restraint. All previous competitive contests were mediated by the presence of a sitting president or acting president with a character that regulated their worst impulses. Not Hichilema. Such is his lack of restraint and demonstrated aversion to democratic norms that it is almost impossible to escape the conclusion that he is just a bad human being. His predecessors had boundaries that they could not cross.

For instance, faced with growing opposition to his rule, Zambia’s founding president Kenneth Kaunda listened to the people, cut short his five-year term, called for fresh elections, and, when he lost them, peacefully handed power. In contrast, Hichilema recently vowed never to easily give up power, saying the UPND did not spend over two decades in opposition only to return to opposition politics after five years. This lack of respect for voters emanates from his character.

Apart from the desire to continue accumulating using public office, Hichilema’s determination to remain in power is driven by historical grievances. The president, like many members of his ethnic group, believes that Tongas have always been short-changed. One term is not enough, and he considers it their entitlement to run the show for much longer, through him. It is worth briefly mentioning that this sense of unresolved grievance falls under scrutiny. Since independence, Tongas have occupied senior political leadership positions in the government. For instance, under Kaunda, Mainza Chona served as Zambia’s Vice-President while Kebby Musokotwane and Elijah Mudenda were appointed Prime Minister at different intervals. In the 1990s Chiluba’s cabinet included several Tonga-speaking ministers such as Baldwin Nkumbula, Bennie Mwiinga, Symukayumbu Syamujaye, Ackson Sejani, Samuel Miyanda, Vernon Mwaanga, Alfeyo Hambayi, Vincent Malambo, and countless deputy ministers.)

Chiluba therefore showed restraint in his inclusive appointments to public office. In fact, soon after his election in 1991, he came under increased pressure to elevate then Deputy Chief Justice Bonaventure Bweupe to the position of Chief Justice that had been vacated by the retiring Anel Silungwe. Chiluba refused to do so on the ground that ‘You cannot have two of three state institutions headed by individual from the same region.” In contrast, Hichilema, following his election, appointed two individuals from his region to lead the other two state institutions –the Judiciary and National Assembly.

Chiluba also bowed to public pressure when his plans to change the Constitution and seek a third term of office were opposed by civil society, the opposition, ordinary Zambians, members of his own party and even elements of the military. In contrast, Hichilema, only last year, ignored widespread opposition from civil society, opposition parties and citizens to bulldoze his way in pushing through changes to Zambia’s Constitution that are aimed at entrenching his party’s dominance even after the judiciary halted them.

Levy Mwanawasa showed restraint by respecting the limits imposed on him by the Constitution. In contrast, Hichilema has repeatedly shown that not even the law can stand in his way. For instance, when the country’s Auditor-General that he found in office began to expose the corruption of the Hichilema administration, the president hounded him out of office and appointed a pliant successor who was above the constitutionally prescribed age limit of 60 years and illegally remains in office to date.

Rupiah Banda showed considerable restraint in how he handled the funeral of President Mwanawasa. After Mwanawasa died in France, his widow, Maureen, told then acting president Banda that it was the wish of the family that the deceased’s body be flown across the country to enable Zambians pay their final respects to the late president. Banda did not personally support the family’s view. He also came under increased pressure from senior MMD officials who urged him to reject the family’s request on the ground that Maureen was trying to use her husband’s death to promote her own political agenda. In the end, and understanding the solemnity of the occasion, the acting president respected the family’s wishes and facilitated their expression, even though he himself did not accompany the body to the provincial capitals.

In contrast after Lungu died in South Africa, President Hichilema refused to publicly pledge that he would stay away from Lungu’s funeral out of respect for the grieving family’s disclosure that the deceased had told them that in the event of his death, and largely because of how poorly he felt Hichilema’s administration had treated him in life, he did not want his successor anywhere near his body or funeral. Instead of delegating the responsibility of officiating at the funeral to another official such as Vice-president Mutale Nalumango, Hichilema effectively insisted that the task should only be carried out by him and nobody else. In response, the family was forced to consider burying Lungu outside Zambia, but Hichilema was not done with them. Determined to get his way on the matter and acting as if he has undisclosed personal interest in the funeral of his predecessor, the president instructed the Attorney General to move South African courts to block the burial from taking place without him. As a result of this ongoing court process, the late former president remains in a Johannesburg morgue more than seven months after his demise, prolonging the anguish of his family.

Sata’s tenure was short (he was also sick for much of it) and divisive, but he had no ambition greater than being president. Lungu undermined democratic institutions in a manner that nearly makes Hichilema his ultimate legacy, but he too had boundaries. After arresting Hichilema on a trumped-up and non-bailable charge of treason, Lungu bowed to public pressure to have his political opponent released after spending four months in detention.

In contrast, Hichilema arrested Mumbi Phiri, a PF leader who had instigated his arrest, on a trumped-up and non-bailable charge of murder. In a clear act of revenge, Hichilema ignored public pressure to have Phiri freed until after she had cloaked over 12 months in detention. Lungu also appointed electoral commissioners who came from across the country. In contrast, all the current commissioners serving on the ECZ come from Hichilema’s region, demonstrating the extent to which he has polarised the country.

If all his predecessors were unwilling to compromise the country’s sovereignty to foreign interests, Hichilema has shown that he – like the African chiefs who sold their people into slavery and signed away their territories’ mineral wealth with a degree of short-sightedness that paved the way for formal colonialism by European powers – has no qualms with selling Zambia, literally. The president is reportedly on the verge of signing a highly problematic deal that would give the United States unlimited access to the country’s mineral wealth and the sensitive medical records of Zambians in exchange for health aid. This deal, which is as one-sided and horrible as the one that Kenya’s president recently signed with the US before the East African country’s more independent judiciary suspended its implementation over data privacy concerns, risks making Hichilema even more unpopular, although he may try to conceal its details from public view.

The irony of it all is that Hichilema is only the second president of Zambia to have been popularly elected with more than 50 percent of the total votes cast since 1991. But he is the only one who has squandered, within the first term, both the domestic and external goodwill that accompanied his election. A key reason for this unwanted record is Hichilema’s failure to deliver most of his election promises. This is complemented by his lack of humility to accept his shortcomings and his repulsive tendency to overly praise himself for supposed achievements, as part of creating a non-existent success story or painting a rosy picture of Zambia under his leadership to the outside world.

This unfavourable domestic context explains why he has progressively destroyed alternative sources of authority. What makes Hichilema extremely dangerous, however, is his reckless lack of restraint. Drunk on his own power and lost to the vanity of self-focused ambition, the current president appears increasingly unconstrained, pursuing policies that have deepened divisions in the country, and totally disconnected from consequence.

Zambia: a tinderbox on the verge of conflict?

In what turned out to be his last public interview, founding President Kaunda was asked in 2021 to name the one thing that he feared the most. The 97-year-old identified the possible election of Hichilema to the presidency as the foremost threat to Zambia’s future: “There is no other leader I can fear to run this country.” Spoken in the run-up to the last general election, Kaunda’s words were initially dismissed as the rumblings of an old man. However, the conduct of Hichilema in public office has since caused many people to reconsider that view and deem the former president as prescient. In a sense, Hichilema has set up the next general election as a matter of life and death, for him. So far, much of the preliminary evidence suggests that the country is headed for a disputed election outcome and possibly civil war.

All the ingredients are almost there: captured state institutions including a severely compromised judiciary that makes a mockery of the justice system; vandalism of the national constitution; selective arrests and prosecutions that appear to target people from certain ethnic groups and regions; the stifling of opposition parties and dissent; mass unemployment of a youthful national population; state-led frustrations of many people’s attempts to survive or escape death by eking out a living in the informal sector; mass poverty; a crippling cost-of-living crisis; an extremely intolerable load shedding that has badly affected production; and deepening ethnic-regional divisions exacerbated by the increasing politicisation of security forces. In this context, a poorly handled election may turn out to be the spark that sets ablaze the heap of inflammable material that has long accumulated.

Only the people can steer Zambia away from the perilous path that Hichilema has thrust the country upon. In other words, unless the electorate strategically identifies a credible presidential candidate, rallies behind that candidate to the exclusion of all others, and ensures that their vote is protected from manipulation, it is impossible to completely rule out the outbreak of large-scale chaos in the run-up to or the immediate aftermath of the August election. Will we Zambians avert a violent national disaster or walk into it with our eyes wide open? Time will tell. For now, Hichilema is holding a matchstick in his hands, moving towards the heap. Who, or what, will stop him from burning Zambia?

For feedback or comments, email ssishuwa@fas.harvard.edu

WE LOST THE 2021 ELECTIONS DUE TO BETRAYAL AND WE MUST UNITE AGAINST IT TO SECURE VICTORY IN AUGUST 2026 – Celestine Mambula Mukandila, Esq.

WE LOST THE 2021 ELECTIONS DUE TO BETRAYAL AND WE MUST UNITE AGAINST IT TO SECURE VICTORY IN AUGUST 2026



A state-sponsored project is once again actively at work, seeking to finish off whatever remains of the Patriotic Front.

What is unfolding is not ordinary political competition; it is one of the most treacherous political manoeuvres in recent memory. Zambians must recognise it for what it truly is: a State Project.



The objective is clear and deliberate. UPND is now attempting to fragment and weaken opposition strength by engineering divisions, particularly by splitting votes in the northern part of the country. Such conduct strikes at the very heart of multiparty democracy and offends the constitutional requirement that the State must remain neutral in political competition.



History teaches us that state projects thrive on deception, infiltration, and division. They are never driven by principle, but by desperation to retain power at all costs. We must therefore remain vigilant, united, and resolute. State projects must be identified early and resisted firmly.



There is no justification for consigning ourselves to political oblivion now, more than ever. One must ask: why these desperate manoeuvres, if not fear of a united opposition?



We must also refuse to remain silent while those who betrayed the late Sixth Republican President now shamelessly claim proximity to him and purport to be custodians of his legacy. Political opportunism must not be allowed to rewrite history.



For the avoidance of doubt, my membership, together with that of many others appointed by the late President Edgar Chagwa Lungu from the Patriotic Front into the Tonse Alliance, was done strictly on secondment and recommendation by the Patriotic Front. That membership therefore remained the preserve of the Patriotic Front. Even President Edgar Chagwa Lungu himself was seconded to the Tonse Alliance by the Patriotic Front. It is for this reason that the PF Central Committee constituted a committee mandated to craft the rules of engagement governing the Party’s participation in the Tonse Alliance.



At no point did any of us enjoy independence of operation or tenure within the Alliance. Any claim to independent authority or office within the Tonse Alliance is therefore misleading and dishonest. The Patriotic Front remains the anchor party in the Tonse Alliance, and there is no other Patriotic Front represented therein except the one under the stewardship of Honourable Given Lubinda, Acting President.



The creation of the Tonse Alliance was, and remains, a strategic political model intended to rebrand the Patriotic Front into a more civil, inclusive, and united opposition platform, one that reflects and advances the aspirations of the Zambian people.



I remain resolute and unwavering in my commitment to the protection and defence of the Patriotic Front, not merely as a political party, but as a critical pillar of Zambia’s democracy and constitutional order.

Celestine Mambula Mukandila, Esq.

Zambia–US Health Talks Tie Aid to Mineral Access

● Zambia–US Health Talks Tie Aid to Mineral Access

Reports suggest Zambia is preparing to sign a confidential agreement with the United States that would link health sector funding to expanded American involvement in the country’s mining industry.



The draft memorandum of understanding reportedly connects U.S. health financing to preferential access to Zambia’s mineral resources. Although the agreement was introduced publicly as a five-year health package worth 1.5 billion dollars, internal documentation indicates the actual financial commitment may be lower than originally presented.



A key part of the proposal involves long-term sharing of health data and biological samples. Under the draft, both countries would exchange genetic and epidemiological information within days of identifying high-risk disease threats. This arrangement is expected to remain in place for up to 25 years, supported by an additional monitoring framework designed to track progress and funding use.



There is also a condition that would suspend funding if Zambia and the United States fail to finalize a separate Bilateral Compact by April 2026. That compact, proposed during high-level talks in 2025, is believed to include details on foreign assistance and mining sector cooperation.


The timeline for finalizing the agreement has drawn attention due to limited public disclosure and reported short consultation windows for officials. Calls for greater transparency have come from opposition figures, civil society groups, and policy stakeholders who argue that decisions affecting national resources and public health should be debated openly.



With no official confirmation from government authorities so far, the reported Zambia–US health deal continues to attract public interest as discussions over health funding, mineral access, and long-term national priorities unfold.

12 REASONS WHY ECL WAS MORE THANKFUL TO ME, SEAN TEMBO, PROF. DANNY PULE, HON. EDITH NAWAKWI AND SG NAKACHINDA FOR TONSE ALLIANCE THAN ANYONE IN PF – Chris Zumani

12 REASONS WHY ECL WAS MORE THANKFUL TO ME, SEAN TEMBO, PROF. DANNY PULE, HON. EDITH NAWAKWI AND SG NAKACHINDA FOR TONSE ALLIANCE THAN ANYONE IN PF



By Dr. Chris Zumani Zimba

…….The fool says in his heart,   “There is no God.” They are corrupt, their deeds are vile; there is no one who does good (Psalms 14:1)……



1. When PF was politically sold to UPND by Miles Sampa and Chabinga in 2023,  l was in imprisoned in Chimbokaila and Mwembeshi on malicious charges. The noise makers in PF we see today did nothing to remove the shame and embarrassment around ECL.  Some PF leaders were even hosting media talk show programs were they could host people like Laura Miti or Dora Siliya who embarrassed and politically undressed ECL more. They imposed more pain and shame on ECL.  These are chaps who had no loyalty or true respect for our boss.



2. Many of these noise makers in PF were just eating sausages and chips, dancing donchi kubeba and drinking strong wine in their homes mocking ECL as a “former President without a party”. This is because most of them saw ECL as a dangerous political rival and competitor since they also wanted to be PF presidents. They indirectly endorsed  Miles Sampa for trading PF to UPND and ECL was fully aware about it.



3. When God acquitted me & l came out, I found ECL betrayed,  stranded & politically undressed. Our boss was brutally embarrassed, broken and left depressed by the treacherous actions of Miles Sampa and team. Out of desperation,  ECL decided to start hunting for political solutions outside his PF leaders and called it #REBRANDING. He went everywhere including joining UKA in his capacity alone as Former President and not with PF.



4. ECL was forced to reduce himself and made company with politician who he thought were different from PF traitors in view of what happened in 2023 from Miles Sampa and team.  Before long, UKA disrespected and failed him terribly as young political players who have never been councilors, MPs,  PSs, Ministers or SAPs started addressing him as “comrade Lumgu” and their “equal member”. Some of us didn’t accept these political insults for our father.



5. Then Sean E. Tembo & myself decided to create Tonse Alliance specifically for ECL and his followers in PF and outside without consulting anyone and not even ECL himself.  Our objective was simple: “to stop the disrespect,  betrayal and embarrassment around ECL  and give  our boss an alternative political platform he can own and use his for 2026”. Sean Tembo solely designed all the Tonse logos and paid for everything himself.  I worked on the constitution alone and we edited it with Tembo.



6. When we finished working on the constitution and logos,  Sean Tembo sent me to present this Tonse Alliance project in July 2024 to my boss and convince ECL to kiss it. I had a four hours meeting with ECL alone to discuss Tonse Alliance and why it was the best alliance for him and Zambians. Tonse Alliance was purely a political baby for ECL and never a PF project as some noise makers want to mislead people. They have zero idea about the history of Tonse Alliance apart from making false noise around here. These are folks who never presented solutions to ECL’s predicaments to date.



7. As former President,  ECL liked the idea of Tonse Alliance but never wanted to show disruption by openly leaving UKA.  He didn’t want the fall of UKA to be blamed on him. So, he gave me one condition if he was to take up Tonse Alliance leadership: “we must convince Edith Nawakwi,  Prof. Danny Pule and Sean Tembo to join Tonse Alliance first before me”, he concluded.  ECL treasured these opposition leaders for political rebranding and he wanted it this way going into 2026: more of new faces around him and not the same old PF faces. .



8. Thank God, Sean Tembo was already onboard with me on the Tonse Alliance project and ECL was very happy.  Few days later, we had a second meeting with ECL,  myself and Sean Tembo. ECL strategically appointed Sean Tembo as the face of the Alliance.  Our boss was happy to inform us that he had talked to Madam Edith Nawakwi and Prof. Danny Pule and the two leaders equally agreed to join Tonse ahead of ECL so that UKA is left to fall own it’s own. ECL even appointed Prof. Danny Pule as the Care Taker Chairman until when Tonse Alliance is officially launched and ECL takes over leadership.  Prof. Pule acted in this role from August to November,  2024.



9. Had President Sean Tembo,  Hon. Edith Nawakwi and Prof. Pule refused to be part of Tonse Alliance,  ECL would not have accepted to take up leadership in this alliance. ECL accepted this Tonse Alliance project as a result of support from Nawakwi,  Pule and Tembo. Therefore,  as someone who has been on this project from day one, l know that ECL was eternally grateful to these three for making Tonse Alliance project a reality for him, not the PF leaders. This is the background that most of these noise makers dont know except to “urinate lies” everywhere.



10. For ECL,  the PF top leaders were not his priority for any alliance but his PF followers, loyalists and structures countrywide as well as other opposition leaders. Thats why in UKA,  ECL went alone and only started to pull his PF loyalists and supporters one by one to join UKA.  When ECL was in UKA,  he only worked with few of us who supported him but sidelined above 95% of PF leaders.  ECL had already abandoned PF to the political auctioneer,  Miles Sampa and his UPND friends.  This is where we trace and  engineered THE #ECLMOVEMENT concept. 



11. When all these conditions were secured of convincing the 3 above, that’s when ECL asked me to bring PF SG Raphael Nakachinda and present the idea of Tonse Alliance to him too. Nakachinda was a classic ECL trustee who never hesitated but kissed the Tonse Alliance project for our boss and PF.  ECL was equally happy that his SG was game to run with Tonse Alliance as opposed to UKA or People’s Pact. In PF,  Nakachinda was ECL’s most trusted leader for this Alliance than anyone. At that time, People’s Pact had endorsed ECL as their Chairman but ECL just went mute on them. He didn’t believe in them and never wanted to commit himself to them.



12.So, some of our noise makers in PF must learn to say the #TRUTH and say #THANKYOU to many of us who showed up with political solutions to ECL when he most needed it. If they can’t say thank you to me or SG Nakachinda as true political sons of ECL for this Tonse Alliance project,  at least say thank you to Sean Tembo,  Prof. Danny Pule and late Edith Nawakwi.  There is no one who thought of helping ECL from the pain, shame & cruelty Miles Sampa & Chabinga imposed on our late Father apart from myself and Sean Tembo as well as Danny Pule and Edith Nawakwi at that time.  At death, atleast ECL died as Chairman & 2026 Presidential Candidate of Tonse Alliance and not PF.


Dr. Chris Zumani Zimba is the Tonse Alliance Chief Architect,  National Coordinator,  Lead Consultant and ECL Movement Chairman.  He was the Political Advisor of President Edgar Chagwa Lungu from Dec. 2019 to June 2025. He holds a certificate,  bachelors,  masters and PhD in Political Science.

EDGAR LUNGU WAS A WEAK CANDIDATE TO DEFEAT.

EDGAR LUNGU WAS A WEAK CANDIDATE TO DEFEAT.
The pf acting President Robert Chabinga who is also member of parliament mentioned that Edgar Lungu was so weak politically.


The host asked Robert as how was  he weak when he managed to win twice as a president.


He defended his assumption that ,if ECL was not weak how could he win the elections with few votes against the opposition.


He mentioned that in
2015 he won with less than 200 thousands votes  ,the second election he won with 100 thousands,he mentioned that a strong Presidsnt is supposed to win with million votes.


He said it is sad that a sitting President with all state machinery wins an election with 100 thousands votes?


How do you digest or comment on Robert Chibanga’ remarks over the late President Edgar Chagwa Lungu.


Edgar Changwa Lungu was the Zambian 6th President in Zambia.He died in South Africa in 2025 5th June were he had gone for his usual mefdical check ups.
May his soul rest in eternal peace.

Jailing Malema Could Ignite Instability in South Africa

Jailing Malema Could Ignite Instability in South Africa

South African opposition leader Julius Malema is facing a critical legal moment after being convicted on weapon charges, and the prospect of a custodial sentence has sparked intense debate about its potential impact on national stability. Malema’s large and fervent support base, especially among youth and communities frustrated by persistent inequality, means any jail term could reverberate well beyond the courtroom.



Political analysts are drawing unsettling parallels with the violent unrest that followed the jailing of former President Jacob Zuma in 2021. The imprisonment of Zuma triggered widespread protests and riots in KwaZulu‑Natal and Gauteng, which escalated into mass looting, arson, and violent clashes that left dozens dead and inflicted significant economic losses. Defence forces were deployed in large numbers to help contain the unrest, which also disrupted essential services and supply chains.



Observers note that the scale and intensity of those events exposed deep socio‑economic fault lines in South African society and underscored how political polarization can quickly translate into instability when a charismatic leader is perceived to be under attack.



Analyst Sakaria Shikomba emphasised the broader continental resonance of Malema’s leadership, noting that:



“Julius Malema is seen not only as a revolutionary figure within South Africa but across the entire African continent. Imprisoning him under these circumstances could very well trigger mass protests. If this is not managed with exceptional political foresight and respect for constitutional processes, we could witness a significant escalation in unrest, including widespread looting and disruption.”



Shikomba’s statement highlights not just the risk of immediate protest, but the deeper political symbolism Malema holds for many, particularly in contexts where economic frustration and demands for structural transformation remain acute.



Critics warn that beyond the immediate security concerns, a custodial sentence for Malema risks undermining public confidence in democratic institutions, especially if it is viewed as politically motivated or as disproportionately punitive compared to similar cases involving other political figures.


The broader implication for South African politics is clear: ensuring rule of law and equal justice must be balanced with strategies to sustain political stability, address underlying socio‑economic grievances, and preserve national cohesion.

Marriage  found me  when I was just 19. It wasn’t my choice—my parents arranged it- Patience Ozokwor

“Marriage  found me  when I was just 19. It wasn’t my choice—my parents arranged it. At first, I was scared. I didn’t know how to love a man I didn’t choose. But as time passed, love grew.

We spent 23 years together. He was sick for 15 of those years, and in 2000, he passed away. We had three beautiful kids, and I adopted five more. One of them died, so now I have seven. I never remarried. I wanted to stay with my children and raise them well.



Today, people take too long fixing themselves, yet marriages don’t last. In our time, our parents chose for us, and we stayed committed. I’ve told my children never to think of divorce.

I raised my daughters to be respectful and my sons to be responsible. That’s how I built a strong home through hardship, love, respect and sacrifice”

~ Patience Ozokwor ❤️

#Afrocania #virals #nollywood

Helen Zille’s Comments on Patrice Motsepe Spark ANC Leadership Speculation and Renew Debate About Future DA–ANC Cooperation in South Africa’s Unity Government

Helen Zille’s Comments on Patrice Motsepe Spark ANC Leadership Speculation and Renew Debate About Future DA–ANC Cooperation in South Africa’s Unity Government



Comments made by DA Federal Chairperson Helen Zille about billionaire businessman Patrice Motsepe have reignited debate around the ANC’s future leadership and the growing political closeness between the Democratic Alliance and the ANC under the Government of National Unity (GNU).



Speaking on a Sunday World podcast, Zille described Motsepe as a highly capable and strategic business leader whose experience in building global companies could, in her view, translate into strong leadership within government. She suggested that South Africa is entering an era where competence, economic management and stability may matter more than party lines, especially as the country faces unemployment, energy crises, corruption and declining investor confidence.



Her remarks quickly set social media alight, with many questioning whether Motsepe – a mining magnate, CAF president, and brother-in-law to President Cyril Ramaphosa – could realistically be positioned as a future ANC leader. This comes amid the resurfacing of the #PM27 campaign, which has been quietly promoting him as a potential ANC presidential candidate for 2027, despite Motsepe repeatedly stating that he has no interest in seeking political office.



ANC Secretary-General Fikile Mbalula dismissed the campaign as “mischievous and misleading,” insisting that the ANC’s leadership processes cannot be driven by online movements or business interests. Motsepe himself has maintained that his focus remains on business, football development and philanthropy, not party politics.



However, the conversation has also opened a wider discussion about the evolving relationship between the ANC and the DA in the GNU. Zille’s willingness to openly speak positively about an ANC-linked figure is seen by many analysts as a sign that, in the future, cooperation between the two parties may deepen, especially on economic reform, infrastructure development and restoring state institutions.



Helen Zille brings strong political experience, sharp institutional knowledge, and a reputation for tough accountability, having previously served as Premier of the Western Cape and Mayor of Cape Town. Her influence in policy, governance reform and coalition negotiations positions her as a key architect in shaping how the DA engages with power at national level.



Patrice Motsepe, on the other hand, represents financial muscle, international business credibility, and access to global investment networks. His success in mining, sports administration and philanthropy has made him one of Africa’s most respected businessmen, and many believe his management skills could be valuable in rebuilding South Africa’s struggling economy, even if not from an elected office.



Together, the discussion around Zille and Motsepe reflects a broader political shift: a future where traditional party rivalries may give way to strategic partnerships, with the ANC and DA potentially working more closely to stabilize the country, attract investment, and restore public trust in leadership.

Cameroon : Marc Brys received his AFCON 2025 bonuses, while David Pagou got €0!!!

Cameroon : Marc Brys received his AFCON 2025 bonuses, while David Pagou got €0!!!



Reason? Brys was dismissed by the Cameroonian Football Federation, but the Ministry of Sports is responsible for the recruitment and dismissal of national team coaches. 



Since the Ministry never officially terminated his contract, Brys is reportedly still receiving his salary, estimated between €44,000 and €66,000. 



Meanwhile, David Pagou has not received any bonus or salary because he does not have a contract with the Ministry. (RMCsport).