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THE PRESIDENT’S LATEST REPORT ON PROGRESS MADE REGARDING NATIONAL VALUES- Kellys Kaunda

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BY Kellys Kaunda

THE PRESIDENT’S LATEST REPORT ON PROGRESS MADE REGARDING NATIONAL VALUES



The President was upbeat on the role his government is playing to facilitate the achievement of the objectives of national values as contained in the Zambian constitution.



It’s a report that essentially says to Zambians that government has achieved a lot; we are in safe hands; we are on the right track and, given another term, a far better future is coming.



It’s noteworthy that he spent considerable amounts of time on optimism while almost purposely minimizing what has not been achieved or may not be achieved.



It is expected that he should sound optimistic. After all, he is a politician and politicians by their very nature are public relations officers of their own political parties.

This means that the opposite view will come from the opposition, government critics and independent analysts.



Here is my view. I acknowledge the latest developments in the energy sector where significant improvements have been made.

I live in the part of Lusaka where electricity supply has remained consistent for over three months now.



This is important for economic productivity and growth.

But the President glossed over issues such as trading places for marketeers.

This is a very significant portion of our population but whatever investments have been made to improve infrastructure for trading is nothing to write home about.



Just look at some of the most prominent spaces in Lusaka like between Findeco House and Downtown around Kafue Roundabout.



There is no dignity in trading in such physical conditions as there are no bathroom/toilet facilities.

How long this situation has been in existence tells you what government priorities look like.



In terms of youth empowerment, again, the President didn’t come out with groundbreaking initiatives.

The youth constitute the majority of this country’s population. And yet, the many activities that most of them have demonstrated interest in such as sports and media arts have received token or no investment to make any meaningful impact.



And there are no initiatives to facilitate the youth’s transition between graduation and integration into the labor force or the economy, in general.

The President is happy with the continued flow of investors and investments.



But investors and investments are businesses that invest only enough to make a profit.

They will employ only enough to produce profitably.



Government will make a big deal out of such huge infrastructure developments as the construction of pipelines and transport corridors.

Important though all these may be, their trickle-down effects register minimal impact on a population in a state of poverty as Zambia’s.



Generally, the quality of policies and their penetrative capabilities leave much to be desired.

Whatever goods and services government is providing are extremely few and far between to arrest the run-away development challenges of this country



One major challenge is that government is not innovating enough to take to scale what it is doing.

It is also failing to stretch its imagination to tap into potential sources of economic diversification that have been lying idle,  government after government.



This is why the GDP has always been the same over the years.

At this rate, whatever gains we make will always be canceled by challenges we always ignore or fail to arrest.



But Zambians have voted in and out governments while the same cycle plays out because, innocently, they don’t know any better.

NO ROOM FOR LAWLESSNESS UNDER MY ADMINISTRATION – HH

NO ROOM FOR LAWLESSNESS UNDER MY ADMINISTRATION – HH

PRESIDENT Hakainde Hichilema says his Administration has made significant strides in reducing political violence and caderism in the last four years.



President Hichilema says there is no room for lawlessness under the watch of his Administration.



Speaking in Parliament today during the National Address on the progress made in the application of National Values and Principles, President Hichilema reiterated that no one is above the law.



He said over the past four years progress has also been made in promoting patriotism and National unity through the consistent reminders of the principle of ‘One Zambia, One Nation.’



He further said efforts have been made to promote unity in diversify through decentralisation and equitable resource distribution.

President Hichilema noted that positive developments in cultural relations have been recorded with traditional leaders attending each other’s ceremonies.



And President Hichilema called for an end to child marriage.

He said his Administration is making efforts to address social biases such as alcohol and drug abuse, teenage pregnancies and child marriages.



President Hichilema said teenage girls who dropped out of school to get married are now receiving counseling and re-enrolled into school so that they can benefit for the free education policy.



He said Government is working to ensure that all young people benefit from the opportunities that his Administration is providing.

He said Gender-based violence -GBV- remains a challenge in the country and that Government is addressing the vice through the establishment of a national call center and urged citizens to report all GBV cases without fail.



Meanwhile, President Hichilema expressed concern about high divorce rates in the country.

He called for the promotion of strong and loving families as they are the foundation of the nation.



And President Hichilema said Government is addressing the issue of human trafficking through a number of efforts such as operationalisation of the Department of Anti-Human Trafficking.



He noted the negative impact of social media which is being abused by some members of the public to spread harmful content, fake news and hate speech.



President Hichilema also called for responsible use of digital platforms by leveraging on the creativity and entrepreneurial spirit of the youth.



He said Government is reforming the legal framework to protect citizens from harmful online behaviour and cybercrime.

ZNBC

AKA RAISES CONCERNS OVER CONSTITUENCY DELIMITATION PROCESS

AKA RAISES CONCERNS OVER CONSTITUENCY DELIMITATION PROCESS

Veteran politician and senior citizen Prince Akashambatwa Mbikusita-Lewanika has raised concerns regarding the ongoing constituency delimitation process and the planned increase in parliamentary seats from 156 to 226 ahead of the August 13, 2026 general elections.



In a letter addressed to the Electoral Commission of Zambia -ECZ Chairperson, the Prince questions the transparency, timelines and criteria being applied in the exercise, which follows constitutional amendments expanding the number of constituencies.



In his letter, the prince has copied in Members of the Constitutional Court, the Minister of Justice, the Secretary to the Cabinet and the Chairperson of the Law Association of Zambia.



He notes that the delimitation process is taking place less than a year before the 2026 elections, raising what he describes as serious governance and democratic accountability issues.



Prince Akashambatwa states that his concerns are informed by his multidisciplinary academic background in history, political science, public administration, international affairs, Africana studies, development administration and economic development.



He further cites his extensive experience in senior roles across government, parastatal, private sector and traditional leadership structures, including service on a comprehensive electoral review commission.



Among the key issues raised are limited transparency in the delimitation process, compressed timelines for consultation and implementation, questions surrounding population equality and fair representation and concerns about potential partisan gerrymandering.



He has proposed several corrective measures for consideration by the Commission including publication of the 2019 Delimitation Report, disclosure of the demographic formula used to delimitate and extension of the consultation period.


He has also recommended the re-opening and extension of the voter registration exercise, publication of draft constituency maps and clear and objective criteria for allocating new constituencies to districts.

SALARY AT LARGE: Nora Hauptle Must Stop Holding Zambia To Ransom; She Must Earn Her Paycheck

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By Augustine Mukoka

SALARY AT LARGE: Nora Hauptle Must Stop Holding Zambia To Ransom; She Must Earn Her Paycheck
By end of next week, Copper Queens coach Nora Hauptle would have earned $20, 000 for only working 10 out of at least 50 days (that’s if her leave days accrue at 2 days per month).


As of May 2025, Nora had run to FIFA reporting the Football Association of Zambia (FAZ) for allegedly breaching terms of her contract after she went some three months without pay.
As these two scenarios are playing out, we have some people clapping for Nora. How?


Ati iyo she announced she would not be at the COSAFA women’s tournament because she preferred some tournament in the Middle East.
Well, her employers – FAZ – saw it fit to restrict their focus for Zambia’s preparations for the WAFCON to one team rather than two teams less than one month before the tournament.


And because her employers preferred to start with the COSAFA to splitting into two, she has not shown up for the regional tournament. Just like she didn’t show up for the

Malawi invitational tournament. Such conduct is concerning. Nora would rather be in Dubai than in Chibolya watching Luyando.
Whether Nora likes it or not, her bills are being paid by the girls from our townships and that’s her office for now.
It’s unacceptable for her to be running to Switzerland each time the team has a brief window of rest.
From what I have gathered, Copper Queens are earmarked for another set of friendlies after the COSAFA to continue preparations for WAFCON.


The only challenge that arose was to flirt with the idea of two teams – one for COSAFA and the other for the Pink Tournament.
Yes. She’s a decent coach.
Yes. She’s firm & wants the best (hopefully) for Zambia (to enrich her CV).
Yes. She’s strictly focusing on delivery.


But all these attributes amount to nothing if she drops her professionalism guard.
Her employer saw it fit to focus on COSAFA. Thereafter, she would then proceed but it appears she has opted out of duty.
If I were her employer, COSAFA would still be good preparation for WAFCON.


Instead of spending thousands of dollars on a friendly in Dubai, those funds can be channeled towards motivating the players. That way they will fight a little harder at WAFCON know too well their pockets are overflowing.
As things stand, it appears Nora is AWOL. Does she have a good reason to stay away? No, not at all.
Alas, she just doesn’t want to prepare the team with a COSAFA tournament.


This is the highest form of insubordination. In any organization, it leads to disciplinary action including up to termination of employment.
Nora should not be treated with kid gloves. Per annum, she’s is entitled to $120, 000 plus as part of her emoluments. But Charles Halubono, who only gets allowances, is the one doing her job. Aya ni manyengo colleagues.


I am wondering whether there was any due diligence in hiring Nora. Those who brought her to Zambia must tell us what they saw in her.
If a Zambian behaved like Nora, would he or she be treated the same? Let’s be fair.


In summary, when an expatriate coaches agrees to coach any Chipolopolo team, he or she must be required to spend more than 75% their time in Zambia.


We can’t always be dancing to the tune of these coaches all because they’re expatriate. I agree with them on zero tolerance on interference but not coaching the team using Microsoft Teams (remotely). It doesn’t make business sense.
NOTE: As you comment, please allow ba Bruce Mwape to rest. He is a closed chapter.

Chatunga Mugabe To Spend Weekend Behind Bars In Johannesburg, Expected In Court Monday

Chatunga Mugabe To Spend Weekend Behind Bars After Hyde Park Shooting
Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe is set to spend the weekend behind bars and is expected to appear in court on Monday following his arrest over an alleged attempted murder in Hyde Park, Johannesburg. The 28-year-old, the youngest son of the late former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, was arrested on Thursday, 19 February 2026, after a 23-year-old gardener was shot at the Mugabe family home.

The South African broadcaster eNCA reports that Mugabe and his co-accused “will appear in court on Monday” in connection with the shooting. The injured man remains in a critical condition in the hospital.

Alleged Shooting At Hyde Park Home
Police were called to the upmarket Hyde Park property on Thursday afternoon. The South African Police Service (SAPS) confirmed that two men were arrested and will face attempted murder charges.

SAPS spokesperson Colonel Dimakatso Nevhuhulwi said:

“The police can confirm that the two men that were brought in for questioning in relation to a shooting that occurred earlier today at Hyde Park have been officially arrested and are expected to appear before Alexandra Magistrates’ Court soon on charges of attempted murder. Police investigations continue.”

She added:

“According to information at hand, the victim is an employee at this residence and has been taken to hospital.”

The employee sustained a single gunshot wound and is in a critical condition. Police are still searching for the firearm allegedly used in the incident.

Colonel Nevhuhulwi told journalists:

“They have not told us where the gun is. We cannot definitely say who shot.”

Search For Firearm Intensifies
Investigators reportedly found spent cartridges at the scene but no weapon. A multidisciplinary team, including K-9 units, forensic experts and divers, returned to the property later on Thursday night to continue the search.

Photographs published by local media showed Mugabe in handcuffs being escorted by police. Officers also seized a black BMW fitted with white lights, similar to those on VIP or security vehicles, as part of the investigation.

Police have not officially named the suspects, in line with standard procedure before a court appearance. However, multiple media outlets have identified Mugabe as one of the men arrested.

Grace Mugabe Furious Following Son Chatunga’s Arrest For Attempted Murder In South Africa

‘I Told Them To Behave’: Grace Mugabe Furious At Son’s Arrest For Attempted Murder
Zimbabwe’s former First Lady is said to be absolutely furious after her youngest son, Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe, was arrested in Johannesburg on Thursday afternoon and charged with the attempted murder of a gardener at his luxury Hyde Park residence.

The 28-year-old socialite and another unidentified man were taken into custody following the shooting of a 23-year-old employee, who remains in a critical condition in the hospital. Sources close to the family have revealed that Grace Mugabe’s patience has finally run out following her son’s latest brush with the law.

“She Has Been Speaking To Her Children, Telling Them To Behave”
The arrest marks yet another legal scandal for the Mugabe family, and insiders say the former First Lady is at her breaking point. A well-placed source with strong connections to the family shared details of her fury with SABC News.

“I spoke to someone who has a strong relationship with the Mugabe family. He indicated to me that the former first lady, Grace Mugabe, is very angry because she has been speaking to her children, telling them to behave. Because if you remember, the other son was arrested in Zimbabwe last year with dagga. And also, the very same son who is now arrested in South Africa, at some point in time, he made court appearances in Zimbabwe.”

The source’s revelations point to a troubling pattern of behaviour from the late former President Robert Mugabe’s children.

Chatunga’s older brother, Robert Mugabe Jnr, was fined US$300 (approximately R5,500) last year after admitting to possession of cannabis in Zimbabwe. The family is no stranger to South African controversy either—Grace Mugabe herself was accused of assaulting a model with an electrical cord at a luxury Johannesburg hotel in 2017, though she was later granted diplomatic immunity.

Police Search For Gun As Suspects Remain Silent
The upscale Hyde Park neighbourhood was transformed into a crime scene on Thursday as a multidisciplinary team of SAPS officers, including divers, forensic experts, and a K-9 unit, descended on Chatunga’s residence. While cartridges have been recovered from the property, the firearm used in the shooting remains missing.

SAPS spokesperson Colonel Dimakatso Nevhuhulwi confirmed that the two suspects have been officially charged and are proving uncooperative with the investigation.

“They have not told us where the gun is, they are not saying anything about the gun,” Colonel Nevhuhulwi told reporters at the scene. “We cannot definitely say who shot.”

Police reports indicate that Mugabe initially locked himself inside the house for two hours while officers negotiated with him and his friend. A black BMW fitted with white lights, similar to those used on VIP vehicles, was seized from the property as evidence. The vehicle is believed to have transported two men and a woman prior to the police’s arrival.

The victim, whose identity has not been released, remains in the hospital in a critical condition after sustaining gunshot wounds. While initial reports suggested a single shot, other sources indicate the man was struck twice.

Chatunga and his co-accused are expected to appear before the Alexandra Magistrates’ Court soon to face charges of attempted murder. The Mugabe family’s lawyer in Zimbabwe, Ashley Mugiya, has confirmed that local legal representatives will handle the case in South Africa.

Gun Still Missing as Police Intensify Search at Bellarmine Mugabe’s Hyde Park Home

used in a shooting at the Hyde Park home of Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe remains missing, as South African police intensify their investigation into the incident that left a young employee critically injured.

Despite recovering a cartridge at the scene, authorities have not yet located the gun believed to have been used in the shooting.

The absence of the weapon has prompted an extensive search operation at the upmarket Johannesburg property.

Divers, K9 Unit Join Search Operation
Members of the South African Police Service (SAPS) returned to the residence on Thursday night after arresting Mugabe and another suspect. The property was cordoned off as investigators launched a multidisciplinary search involving divers, forensic experts and a K9 unit.

Police divers were brought in to search the swimming pool on the premises, which had to be drained due to murky and dirty water. However, no firearm was recovered. K9 units were also deployed to comb the property in an effort to trace the missing weapon.

Several police vehicles, including a marked patrol car, were stationed outside the residence overnight as investigations continued.

Victim in Critical Condition
The 28-year-old Mugabe was arrested on Thursday, 19 February, after a 23-year-old gardener was shot and wounded during an alleged dispute at the Hyde Park residence. The victim sustained two gunshot wounds and is currently in critical condition in hospital. His identity has not been released.

Mugabe and the second suspect spent the night in holding cells at Bramley Police Station following their arrest.

Attempted Murder Charges
Police have confirmed that both suspects are facing attempted murder charges and are expected to appear before the Alexandra Magistrates’ Court.

SAPS spokesperson Dimakatso Nevhuhulwi confirmed the arrests, stating that the two men brought in for questioning in connection with the Hyde Park shooting have been formally charged.

Investigations remain ongoing, with authorities continuing their search for the missing firearm, which is considered key evidence in the case.

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SA Police Seize Luxury Car Fitted With Illegal Sirens Fleeing Chatunga Mugabe’s Hyde Park House With Helper Inside

SA Police Seize Luxury Car Found Trying To Leave Chatunga Mugabe’s Hyde Park House With Helper
JOHANNESBURG – In a dramatic twist that has exposed gaping security failures at an active crime scene, South African police have seized a luxury vehicle fitted with illegal police sirens that was caught fleeing the Hyde Park residence of Chatunga Bellarmine Mugabe – with the suspect’s helper among three occupants inside – as officers returned to discover the property had been left completely unguarded for hours.

The stunning development unfolded on Thursday evening as police returned to the scene of the afternoon shooting that left a 23-year-old gardener fighting for his life in hospital. According to multiple sources at the scene, officers witnessed the vehicle attempting to make a hasty exit from the property just as they arrived, raising explosive questions about why the crime scene was left unsecured in the first place.

Sirens Blazing: Illegal Police Equipment Found On Getaway Car
The vehicle, now impounded by authorities, was discovered to be equipped with unauthorised police equipment that has left law enforcement officials stunned. eNCA reporter Heidi Giokos, who was at the scene, provided real-time updates on the dramatic turn of events.

“When police arrived for the second time, this car was leaving with 3 occupants inside. One being the helper. The car is also fitted with white lights and a siren. This is illegal,” Giokos reported.

The discovery has raised serious questions about what other equipment might be in the Mugabe household’s vehicle collection. SABC News journalist Chriselda Lewis confirmed the seizure, posting:

“Police have now seized this car, at the premises of the son of former Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe. It is apparently fitted with white lights. Cops came across this vehicle leaving the premises as they were returning here to continue looking for the missing gun. Apparently, two men and a woman were occupants.”

Further investigation revealed the violation was more severe than initially thought. Lewis later updated her report:

“This vehicle is also apparently fitted with a police siren.”

According to Giokos, police clarified that while white lights are permissible when installed by security companies, the siren constitutes a serious regulatory breach.

“But the sirens aren’t. It’s a police siren that’s only authorised for SAPS,” she reported.

A Troubled History Of Road-Related Violence
This is not the first time Chatunga Mugabe has found himself in hot water involving vehicles and confrontations on South African roads. UK-based Zimbabwean Investigative journalist Maynard Manyowa revealed a chilling pattern of behaviour linked to the former first family’s son.

“He actually has a couple of vehicles with blue lights and police sirens. Just last month they beat a driver who cut them off to a pulp and confiscated his gadgets on Rivonia Road,” Manyowa posted on X.

The revelation has sent shockwaves through social media, with users questioning how the Mugabe family has managed to operate vehicles with restricted police equipment for so long without intervention. The Rivonia Road incident, which allegedly occurred just weeks ago, paints a picture of escalating violence and impunity.

Social media users have been quick to point out the apparent inconsistencies in police procedure at the Hyde Park crime scene. One user, tweeting as @ZukoMandlakazi, questioned:

“Show us a South African doing the same thing in Zim. The things that people we welcome into this country can be super ungrateful and disrespectful.”

Another user, @NireTToc, sarcastically commented on the bizarre sequence of events:

“Ah, nix to see here, cops deciding securing a crime scene is optional, leaving abo Mme free to moonlight as a tow truck driver, the 3 probably took the missing gun and possibly brewed a cup of Limpopo tea. Just your average, unexplained, absolutely fine series of events.”

Gun Still Missing As Victim Fights For Life
While the vehicle seizure has captured public attention, the core of the criminal case remains unresolved. Police have confirmed that the firearm used to shoot the gardener has still not been located, despite an extensive search involving the K9 unit.

Colonel Dimakatso Nevhuhulwi, the police spokesperson, provided a candid update on the investigation’s status.

“We have our dog unit inside, and some of our officers inside searching for the firearm. The victim has been taken to hospital. It was indicated that he is in a critical condition, but we are hoping that he will be fine.”

The police spokesperson confirmed that two suspects, aged 28 and 33, have been formally arrested and will face charges of attempted murder. They are expected to appear before the Alexandra Magistrate’s Court soon.

What Happens Next

The Hyde Park residence remains an active crime scene as forensic investigators continue their search for the missing weapon. The cartridge recovered from the shooting has been sent for ballistics analysis.

Police have confirmed that the two men taken into custody are cooperating with investigators, though they have not revealed the location of the firearm. Colonel Nevhuhulwi stated:

“They have not told us where the gun is. We cannot definitely say who shot.”

The victim, whose name has not been released, remains in hospital in critical condition. Medical staff have not provided an update on his prognosis.

As the investigation continues, questions mount about how vehicles fitted with illegal police equipment went unnoticed by authorities, and whether Thursday’s seizure represents a new direction in holding the Mugabe family accountable under South African law.

The case has been transferred to the Provincial Investigation Unit for further handling, indicating the seriousness with which authorities are now treating the matter.

Zelensky Orders Ukrainian Team to Draft 3-Year War Plan Amid Stalled Negotiations with Russia

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🚨 Breaking News: Zelensky Orders Ukrainian Team to Draft 3-Year War Plan Amid Stalled Negotiations with Russia 🚨


In a stunning development following the Munich Security Conference, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reportedly held a private meeting with his closest advisers and expressed deep skepticism about ongoing peace talks.

Declaring that negotiations have failed, he instructed his team to prepare a comprehensive military plan for another three years of conflict aligning roughly with the end of U.S. President Donald Trump’s term in January 2029.Sources in Kyiv revealed that the directive left everyone in the room shocked, while European officials have echoed concerns that the war could drag on for at least that long.



This shift signals a potential pivot to a prolonged defensive strategy as Ukraine braces for uncertain U.S. support under the current administration.



Source: Wall Street Journal Chief European Political Correspondent Bojan Pancevski, speaking on a Spotify podcast, as reported by Kyiv Post.
#UkraineWar #Zelensky #RussiaUkraineConflict #BreakingNews

Pakistan businessman Imran Butt Has Filed Papers Requesting To Appear Before The Madlanga Commission

Breaking news

Pakistan businessman Imran Butt Has Filed Papers Requesting To Appear Before The Madlanga Commission.



It doesn’t rain but it pours for the suspended Deputy Police Commissioner Lieutenant General Shadrack Sibiya.

This comes after a Pakistan businessman Imran Butt filed papers to the Madlanga Commission requesting to appear before it to clear his name after was mentioned during the first day of Sibiya’s testimony on Wednesday.



During his testimony, Sibiya alleged that Butt was involved in human trafficking.

But Butt refuted the claims during his interview with Newzroom Africa on the same day.



Butt claimed that he had opened a case of fraud against Sibiya in 2015.

He accused Sibiya of lying when he testified that Butt was investigated for human trafficking and insisted that it was the other way around.



Butt said Sibiya was allegedly investigated for human trafficking.

He remarked that the Hawks’ head office investigated Sibiya’s alleged involvement in human trafficking. He added that he has evidence he is willing to present before the commission.



In the letter filed by his legal representatives, BFK Attorneys the letter reads:

“It has come to our client’s attention that evidence was given before the Commission by Lieutenant‑General Shadrack Sibiya in which our client is implicated and/or referred to in a manner that on our instructions falsely implicates him in serious criminal offences.

.



“In keeping with the principles of fairness and the well‑established rule of *audi alteram partem*, our client respectfully seeks an opportunity to appear before the Commission in order to place his version on record under oath and to respond fully to any allegations or inferences arising from the testimony concerned,” the letter reads.



His legal representatives accordingly requestes that they would be pleased to liaise with the Honourable Chairperson of the Commission (Retired Judge Mbuyiseni Madlanga) to make the necessary arrangements for Mr Butt’s appearance before the Commission;



“Advise us of the proposed date, time and procedural requirements for such appearance and confirm whether the Commission requires the prior filing of a sworn affidavit o

Mkhwanazi Strikes Back: Urgent Court Bid to Silence ‘Rogue Cop’ Claims

Mkhwanazi Strikes Back: Urgent Court Bid to Silence ‘Rogue Cop’ Claims

KwaZulu-Natal’s police boss, Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, has launched an urgent High Court bid in Durban to silence explosive claims made by businessman Calvin Mojalefa Mathibeli and he wants them erased within 24 hours.


In papers filed on 19 February 2026, Mkhwanazi asks the court to declare social media and broadcast statements about him false and defamatory. He is seeking an interdict to stop Mathibeli from repeating allegations that he is corrupt, criminally involved, captured by private interests, or linked to unlawful killings.



The legal blitz follows a dramatic SAPS raid on Mathibeli’s offices on Friday, after claims that Calvin Security staff were held hostage. Mathibeli responded with a fiery public letter accusing the provincial commissioner of waging a seven-year campaign against him even alleging that Mkhwanazi wants him dead and collects protection fees from taxi operators.



Mkhwanazi says his reputation is under attack and vows to sue for damages. The urgent matter will be heard on 24 February.

Yaytseslav mocks Ghana and Kenya after leaving Africa

Russian national Yaytseslav has once again taken over online conversations after multiple videos surfaced showing him approaching women in public spaces across Kenya and Ghana.

The clips which have been widely circulated on social media shows him striking up brief conversations with women in malls and on the streets before inviting them to his apartment.

The encounters were recorded using Meta smart glasses,

allowing him to discreetly film the interactions without the women’s clear awareness of how the footage would later be used.

Following the viral spread of the videos, public outrage has intensified in both Kenya and Ghana.

Reports indicate that efforts are underway by authorities and concerned individuals to track him down and bring him to account over the alleged non-consensual recordings and distribution of private encounters.

Despite the mounting backlash and reported manhunt, sources suggest that Yaytseslav appears unfazed by the controversy.

In a new development, the Russian, who is reportedly currently in Asia continuing what he describes as his “exploration,” has come under fire for derogatory comments about Africa.

In the caption attached to a recent hotel room video featuring an Asian woman, he described Africa as a “dusty continent,” a remark that has triggered widespread condemnation online.

Many social media users have criticised the statement as disrespectful and offensive, particularly given the ongoing controversy surrounding his activities in African countries.

Yaytseslav: 19-Year-Old Lady in Russian Man’s Clips Speaks, Says “IThought He’d Treat Me Well”

A woman identified as Kalekye, who appeared in viral videos
involving Yaytseslav, has come forward to clarify her side of
the story.

She stated that she never visited the Russian man’s apartment
and declined to meet him after he sent her a suspicious pin
drop.


Kalekye, who lives in Nairobi, is one of the first ladies to
have been approached by Yaytseslav during his time in Kenya.

According to her, their encounter happened in March 2025.

During their meeting, Yaytseslav, whose real name is
Vladislav Lyulkov, introduced himself, asked her age, and
told her to meet him in the evening.

Yaytseslav: Video emerges as lady in trending Russian man’s
clips goes for HIV test

Even though she told him she was 19, admitted to exchanging
contact information with Yaytseslav and agreed to meet him, she
never honoured the appointment.

However, Kalekye has stated that the meeting never happened
because she pulled out over security concerns.

Why Kalekye rejected Russian man Yaytseslav

In an interview with SPM Buzz, she explained that she expected
the meeting to be at a public location, such as a restaurant,
but he instead asked her to meet him at his apartment.

Describing her expectations at the time, Kalekye admitted she
initially viewed this interaction as a normal encounter and had
hoped Yaytseslav would treat her well and flash some cash.

 "Niliona nimetoka block. Just like a man would like a pretty
 girl, it's the same way. Nobody wants to be with a poor guy.
 I do not think that is being a gold digger; everyone wants a
 brighter future," she said.

She confessed that she was open to a relationship if Yaytseslav
had been consistent and genuine in his advances, because she
saw it as an opportunity to break out from the neighbourhood
for a brighter opportunity.

Insisting that she never made it to his apartment, Kalekye
explained that Yaytseslav only sent a pin location to a
short-stay apartment around Ngara, and she declined, citing
safety concerns and preferring a public meeting spot.

 "He skipped the talking stage and immediately sent me the
 location to a BnB in Ngara, and I was like, it was not
 normal. People do not just go there to dance. I did not go,"
 she explained, noting that was the last time they
 communicated.

She added that at the time, she did not notice any recording
devices, though he was wearing dark glasses, which were later
suspected to be Meta smart glasses capable of discreetly
recording video.

Kalekye said she now views the attention positively and is even
planning to release a book she had written, potentially
capitalising on her unexpected viral fame.

Yaytseslav: Lady Who Washed Russian Man’s Boxers Speaks Amid HIV Status Claims Read

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Choice Kinoti, one of the women featured in controversial
videos by Russian man Yaytseslav, has spoken out about their
relationship.

Yaytseslav, whose real name is [52]Vladislav Lyulkov, has been
trending after it emerged that he had filmed and published
escapades with different [53]women from Ghana and Kenya.
Yaytseslav videos, Kenyan women, Russian man in Kenya, Russian
man escapades in Africa, Social media, Kenya, Choice Kinoti

Choice Kinoti washes Russian man Yaytseslav’s boxers

In one of [54]Yaytseslav’s videos from his time in Kenya,
Choice Kinoti was seen performing domestic tasks for him.

The controversial footage showed her washing Yaytseslav’s white
boxer shorts and cleaning dishes at the Airbnb rental where he
was staying.

The clip sparked massive reactions online, with many expressing
their concern. However, Kinoti has noted that she does not
regret her actions.

Choice Kinoti explains her relationship with Yaytseslav

In an interview, the up-and-coming content creator stated that
she was in a romantic relationship with Yaytseslav and that she
was aware he filmed their time together and did not see any red
flags, as she knew him to be a streamer.

Kinoti said the Russian had promised to take her to a visa-free
country for her [59]birthday, describing their affair as a
genuine relationship rather than a casual encounter.

She defended herself against widespread online criticism,
particularly over footage showing her [60]washing Yaytseslav’s
clothes. She explained the act was reciprocal, saying he had
cooked for her and she wanted to return the gesture.

She explained that she later grew suspicious of Truhov’s
intentions and confronted him about filming their private
moments, adding that more private encounters had been recorded,
and she was concerned the footage could be leaked.
Yaytseslav videos, Kenyan women, Russian man in Kenya, Russian
man escapades in Africa, Social media, Kenya, Choice Kinoti
(BUTTON) Choice Kinoti goes viral after a Russian man,
Yaytseslav, released her videos. Photo: Choice Kinoti.

According to her, her father, a lecturer, had counselled her
before she enrolled at university.

 "Guys, as my family and friends know, I’m not a girl who is
 stupid enough to meet strangers and make love with them
 without protection. That’s not in my character. My family
 knows I’m a smart girl. The spotlight found me in the wrong
 ways. I’m also human. I did not make love unprotected, and
 I’ve never. My dad is a lecturer, and he counselled me
 before I went to campus. I dropped out of Karatina, and I
 went to JKUAT," she said.

Karatina refers to Karatina University in the town of Karatina
in Central Kenya, while JKUAT is the abbreviation of Jomo
Kenyatta University of Agriculture and [64]Technology located
at Juja, 36 kilometres North East of Nairobi.

WATCH LIVE: Presidential Address On The Progress Made In The Application Of National Values And Principles By President Hichilema

Presidential Address On The Progress Made In The Application Of National Values And Principles By The President Of The Republic Of Zambia Mr Hakainde Hichilema

-President Hakainde Hichilema has welcomed Bright Nundwe, the newly elected Member of Parliament for Chawama, to Parliament.

-President Hakainde Hichilema says the stable & peaceful environment since the UPND assumed office has so far attracted unprecedented levels of investment, with the mining sector, attracting over US$12 billion.

COOPERATING PARTNERS MUST HALT IMMEDIATE  FUNDING TO THE CORRUPT ACC- Amb Emmanuel Mwamba

By Amb Emmanuel Mwamba

COOPERATING PARTNERS MUST HALT IMMEDIATE  FUNDING TO THE CORRUPT ACC



Friday, 20th February 2026

The shock announcement that the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) has halted or “cleared” senior cabinet ministers and government officials that were under serious investigations requires immediate action.



Our immediate call is to the cooperating partners to halt funding and technical to the ACC as doing so is empowering an institutions that has been weaponised and has degenerated to harm the fight against corruption, the rule of law, the demand for transparency and accountability and democracy.



It is on record that the United States Government provides substantial support through existing Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) focused on strengthening governance and transparency, the United Kingdom, which contributes via initiatives such as asset recovery programs managed through the British High Commission and Multilateral institutions like the Organizations like the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the European Union (EU) that collaborate on specific anti-corruption and public financial management projects and the European Development Agencies which has been giving historical and ongoing support, have been provided by agencies such as Sida (Sweden), Danida (Denmark), Norad (Norway), and GIZ (Germany) to immediately suspend funding to the Anti-Corruption Commission.



ACTIONS THAT HAVE HARMED THE FIGHT AGAINST CORRUPTION

As soon as President Hakainde Hichilema dissolved the Musa Mwenye Board that was demanding for equal treatment of corruption cases both old and new cases, as provided by the law, President Hichilema’s surprise reaction was to dissolve a credible board that was demanding accountability.



The Musa Mwenye Board had demanded action against corrupt ministers and senior officials such as Solicitor General Marshal Muchende.

President Hichilema refused to suspend these officials and allowed them to continue to occupy  their offices despite the serious allegations against them.



The crisis was compounded by the appointment of retired Supreme Court Justice Evans Hamaundu and Mrs. Daphne Pauline Soko Chabu.

Daphne Pauline Soko Chabu is currently serving as the Director General of the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC).



She aspired to stand a member of parliament under the UPND. She is highly partisan and her actions in the office of Directore General has demonstrated so.



Further retired Judge Evance Hamaundu, whilst serving the Supreme Court, was accused of receiving a bribe and taken to the Judicial Complaints Commission (JCC).

Therefore, the news that the Anti-Corruption Commission has cleared senior government officials who were accused of corruption and fraud confirms long-held fears that the two can not fight corruption.



The other cases that the ACC has dropped include the public investigations against mining giants Glencore and First Quantum Minerals regarding suspected and irregular donation of $3million to the former ruling Party, the Patriotic Front,  and alleged similar donations made to the UPND during the same period.



It is clear that Justice Hamaundu and Mrs. Chabu are not fit for purpose and are incapable of fighting corruption and have betrayed the Constitution.

They have instead used their positions at the ACC to abuse the law and to abandon credible investigations, an act of favouritism,.promotion of lawlessness and corruption.



The decision to drop the corruption against the senior government officials raises outrage as it has not been done on merit but as a political favor to President Hichilema and to save their corrupt friends.



Zambia has a shrunken democracy with law enforcement agencies weaponised against political opponents and with the executive controlling wings of government and toiling the line set up by President Hakainde Hichilema.



President Hichilema has turned the fight against corruption as a vicious fight against political opponents, critics, and rivals.

Similarly, even the so-called recoveries are a joke as they are a product of targeted and selective justice.



Similarly, the setting up of the Economic and Financial Crimes Courts has degenerated into a special court against former government officials instead of a court against prosecuting or pursuing economic and financial crimes.

It has become an enabler of selective Justice, a process starting from the ACC.



The perversion of the ACC, such a critical constitutional body, will leave lasting damage to both the fight against corruption, the rule of law, and democracy and cooperating partners must not facilitate an institution pervading the fight against corruption.



Funding and technical support must only resume when a credible board and a professional Director General are appointed and when President Hakainde Hichilema stops his interference.



It is imperative that cooperating partners are not seen to empower a vicious tool, that is damaging the fight against corruption and the rule of law.

Amb. Emmanuel Mwamba
20th February 2026

GOVT DISTANCES ITSELF FROM SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE PROBE INTO LUNGU’S REMAINS

GOVT DISTANCES ITSELF FROM SA POLICE PROBE INTO LUNGU’S REMAINS

MINISTER of Home Affairs and Internal Security, Jack Mwiimbu, has distanced the Zambian Government from the decision by South African authorities, to conduct an investigation on the remains of former President, Edgar Lungu, in connection with alleged poisoning claims.



Last week, South African Police quizzed five members of Edgar Lungu’s family in an investigation that suggests that the former president may have been poisoned.


Mr. Mwiimbu says the move by South African investigators may have been prompted by public assertions from withing the Patriotic Front (PF) that suggesting the former Head of State was poisoned.



Speaking in the National Assembly, Mr. Mwiimbu stated that government is awaiting the outcome of the investigations and will respect the process.



“This is a matter that has arisen from certain claims and let the investigative wings conclude their work,” said Mr. Mwiimbu.

Meanwhile, Mr. Mwiimbu reaffirmed that government remains committed to repatriating the remains of the former President.



He explained that the delay in repatriation and burial is due to the family not agreeing to proceed with the established procedures governing a state funeral of a former Head of State.



Mr. Mwiimbu added that once the family agrees to follow the laid-down structures for a state funeral, the process of bringing back the remains and burial will proceed smoothly.

RCV

MAYBE  IT WAS TECHNICAL – MUCHIMA
‎…  when asked that he was fired for voting against Bill 7, as party acts against Garry, 6 others

‎MAYBE  IT WAS TECHNICAL – MUCHIMA
‎…  when asked that he was fired for voting against Bill 7, as party acts against Garry, 6 others





‎President Hakainde Hichilema on Wednesday fired Elijah Muchima and Elias Mubanga from their ministerial portfolios for allegedly abstaining from voting on Bill 7, which has since been assented into law, well-placed sources have revealed.



‎And sources further told Daily Revelation that six other UPND members of parliament, including Garry Nkombo, were allegedly ordered by the party to exculpate themselves after it was discovered that they allegedly abstained from voting on Bill 7.



‎Muchima when contacted for comment said it could have been a technical issue rather than a deliberate move when explaining his actions on Bill 7.



‎Sources told Daily Revelation that on Wednesday at State House, President Hakainde Hichilema, in the presence of secretary general Batuke Imenda, national youth chairperson Gilbert Liswaniso met the

Subcribe here for details on this article: ‎https://dailyrevelationzambia.com/it-may-have-been-technical-muchima-when-asked-if-he-was-fired-for-voting-against-bill-7-as-upnd-acts-against-nkombo-6-other-mps/


MOST MINISTERS, HH AIDES WILL GO TO JAIL, WARNS SILUMBE

MOST MINISTERS, HH AIDES WILL GO TO JAIL, WARNS SILUMBE

MOST serving ministers and State House staff will be jailed for corruption and abuse of office related offences if President Hakainde Hichilema loses power after August 13 general elections, Leadership Movement (LM) president Dr Richard Silumbe has warned.

In an interview with The Mast yesterday, Dr Silumbe said Zambia needed to reset its national agenda by decisively dealing with the corruption taking place in government and not selective justice as the case was now.

He said corruption under the United Party for National Development (UPND) was rife and destructive to government service delivery.

“Just look at what is happening in the Ministry of Health, we still have no answers about the 68 medical containers found at some parking lot in Makeni. Zambians are waiting to hear what happened. This matter has gone quiet because the person behind it is someone powerful and close to State House,” he said.

Dr Silumbe said if the crime was committed by someone from the opposition, the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) would have made a huge case of it.

He said apart from the Ministry of Health, deeper corruption was at the Ministry of Agriculture in the procurement of fertiliser, seed and other farm inputs.

Dr Silumbe said what was shocking and troubling was the shielding of government officials involved in illegal activities.

“This is troubling, especially for our farmers. This government has no interest in the poor people; no wonder all they can do is to punish farmers in the manner they did last farming season. Don’t you wonder how this country, during the farming season, the market of farming implements is flooded with fake fertilisers, fake seed, fake chemicals and fake everything? I wonder whether this leadership is not aware of the corruption at the Ministry of Agriculture that allows for that,” he said.

Dr Silumbe said Zambians were being shortchanged as high levels of corruption allowed mines to be handed to foreigners

“Go to that office at Cadastral at the ministry and you will be shocked by what happens. Corruption is real. Sadly, our people have lost land and mines through corrupt activities at the Ministry of Mines,” he said.

Dr Silumbe warned that when LM assumes power, it would tackle both past and present corruption regardless of the people involved.

“Unlike our friends in the UPND who look at who has committed what crime, with us in government, it will not be about retribution but the rule of law.

No wonder we are saying that most of these ministers will be jailbirds when they lose power in August. Let them steal now and eat because time to account for theft of public resources will come soon,” he said.

The Mast

STEADY HANDS WITH EXPERIENCE, I’M READY TO SERVE – KALABA

STEADY HANDS WITH EXPERIENCE, I’M READY TO SERVE – KALABA
Opposition Citizens First leader, Harry Kalaba, says he is a credible contender to challenge President Hakainde Hichilema in the August 13 general elections, owing to his extensive government experience dating back to his early years as a backbencher at 35.


Appearing on KBN’s State of the Nation hosted by Kennedy Mambwe, Mr. Kalaba said the upcoming elections presents an opportunity for Zambians to vote out the UPND administration that has failed to reduce the high cost of living in the last four years.


“This time, we should not just vote because we need to move in a mob. I am offering myself for office because I was a backbencher in Parliament at 35, at the age of 36, I was a deputy minister under the office of the Vice President and at 37, I was a Minister of Foreign Affairs. So, I know and have experience regarding how government operates,” he said.


Responding on how the Citizens First will address the high cost of living which Zambians have endured during the reign of the UPND administration, Mr. Kalaba underscored that the problem needs a multifaceted approach in order to yield positive results.


“The CF will deal with the high cost of living by tackling the energy sector. We need to have Indeni Refinery back in operation, so that the plant can be processing crude oil into finished products; by doing so, will lead to cheaper fuel. The cost of electricity is too high as a result of the cost reflective tariffs that need to be addressed, “ he assured.


The Former Foreign Affairs minister emphasized that once elected as President of Zambia on August 13, the Citizens First will prioritize its industrialization agenda by creating industries such as experienced during the reign of UNIP administration led by late first Republican President Dr. Kenneth Kaunda.


“We are proposing a robust industrialization agenda. We want to bring back industries such as the car assembly plant in Livingstone, the bicycle plant in Chipata like what our late President Kaunda managed to achieve during the UNIP administration. We want to add value to raw materials that we produce. Voting for the CF is voting for value addition.


Mr. Kalaba acknowledged that in the absence of reliable supply of electricity, his administration needs to ensure the country has multiple sources of energy.
“Besides, our dominant hydro power plants, we need more electricity in order to have a strong base for our industrialization agenda, this is why the CF will actualise the establishment of the nuclear power plant in Chongwe when we form government this year.”


On the current economic performance of the UPND administration, the former Bahati member of parliament described the appreciation of the Kwacha against the US dollar as cosmetic because ordinary citizens have not benefited from reduced cost of basic commodities.


“We in the Citizens First, we are convinced that the appreciation of the Kwacha is cosmetic because the country has in the last four years experienced uncontrolled electricity loadshedding which reduced production, so, we don’t believe the last month of constant electricity supply is the reason for a strong Kwacha.”


“ A strong Kwacha against the dollar has not given an advantage to our people who are paying more to buy basic commodities and paying more on transport. This is why, the CF will deal with the high cost of living by dealing with the energy sector to have cheaper fuel and electricity for our people,” he said.


He believes that the CF’s agenda of industrialization offers hope for citizens who are struggling to support their businesses and families.


“Once industries flourish under our administration, a lot of people will have jobs thereby they will have disposable income to support their businesses and families, in the end poverty levels will reduce”


He added that the agriculture sector needs reforms if the country is to have meaningful development. He accused the UPND administration of failing to support small scale farmers with the high costs of production.


“Fertilizer costs and the cost of seeds must be subsided in order to support the growth of the agriculture sector, which is key to national development. Today, ask any small scale farmer, they are complaining about the cost associated with fertilizer and other farming inputs, the current trend needs to be reversed”.

MUNDUBILE IS NOT FOOLISH ENOUGH TO OFFER RUNNING MATE ROLE THROUGH MEDIA – MAKEBI

MUNDUBILE IS NOT FOOLISH ENOUGH TO OFFER RUNNING MATE ROLE THROUGH MEDIA – MAKEBI



PF presidential candidate Makebi Zulu says Brian Mundubile is not foolish enough to communicate a running mate offer through the media.



Zulu adds that if the statement was issued by Chris Zumani Zimba, it was simply an act of mischief, stating that Zimba “can do better than that”.



On Tuesday, Mundubile offered Zulu and Given Lubinda the opportunity to consider taking up the role of running mate under the Tonse Alliance.



In a statement, Tonse Secretary General Chris Zumani Zimba said the Alliance had given Zulu and Lubinda a 12-day ultimatum to engage in dialogue and redeem themselves politically.



Reacting to this, Wednesday, Zulu said if Mundubile had truly intended to deliver such a message, he would have done so with decorum, dignity and respect.



“If Mundubile had to send such a message, I don’t think he is foolish enough to do such a thing as to put it in the media, and he is incapable of giving me or Lubinda [instruction] on how to make up. There is no bad thing. He would maybe put some decorum or some dignity and, again, some form of respect. So, I don’t think it’s him. I would like to give it to him that it’s obviously not him. If it’s released by Zimba, then he is just being mischievous, he can do better than that,” said Zulu.

News Diggers

REV. SUMAILI SAYS DELAYED BURIAL OF EDGAR LUNGU EXPOSES DECLINE IN  NATIONAL VALUES AND PRINCIPLES.

SUMAILI SAYS DELAYED BURIAL OF EDGAR LUNGU EXPOSES DECLINE IN  NATIONAL VALUES AND PRINCIPLES.



By: Thomas Afroman Mwale

Former Minister of Guidance and Religious Affairs, Rev. Godfridah Sumaili, has charged that Zambia has failed to make progress in upholding national values and principles during the four years of the United Party for National Development (UPND).



Rev. Sumaili cited declining standards in governance, patriotism, national unity, democracy, and constitutionalism, attributing the situation to what she described as the prolonged delay in the burial of former President Edgar Lungu.



Speaking to Sun FM TV News, she argued that Zambia has become a “laughing stock” due to unresolved legal issues that have left Mr. Lungu unburied for eight months.



She maintained that adherence to morality would have required President Hakainde Hichilema to respect the wishes of the late President and his family, who remain in mourning.



Mr. Lungu died on 5 June 2025, but his burial has been delayed amid controversy. South African police have requested permission to conduct a postmortem examination to investigate allegations of poisoning—claims his family has denied.

ZAMBIA’S PUBLIC DEBT HITS US$28.9 BILLION

ZAMBIA’S PUBLIC DEBT HITS US$28.9 BILLION

By Cecilia Chiluba

Minister of Finance and National Planning has disclosed that Zambia’s total public sector debt stood at US$28.9 billion as at end-December 2025.



Dr. Situmbeko Musokotwane told Parliament in a ministerial statement that Central Government’s external debt amounted to US$16.1 billion, with an additional US$1.4 billion in government-guaranteed external debt.



He further revealed that the stock of domestic debt contracted through the issuance of Government securities increased marginally by 0.4 percent, rising from K252.8 billion in September ,2025 to K253.7 billion as at end of 2025.



“This upward trend was consistent with the programmed financing requirements for the budget deficit, as approved in the 2025 Annual Borrowing Plan,” Dr. Musokotwane explained.



On external debt, the Finance Minister noted a slight surge of 0.7 percent from September 2025, primarily due to disbursements from multilateral partners.

Dr. Musokotwane also highlighted improvements in Zambia’s Balance of Payments, indicating a narrowing current account deficit.



“Preliminary data indicates that the current account deficit narrowed to US$ 25.1 million, from a deficit of US$ 541.6 million as at end-June 2025.”

“This was driven by a stronger balance on goods, which rose to US$ 600 million from US$257.5 million in June 2025, supported by robust exports of copper and non-traditional exports,” he said.



The minister reiterated that gross foreign reserves rose to US$5.5 billion at the end of December, up from US$5.2 billion in September 2025, providing 5.2 months of import cover.



He attributed the build-up in reserves to disbursements under the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Extended Credit Facility (ECF) arrangement, project receipts, net statutory reserve deposits, Bank of Zambia purchases, and interest deposits.



Dr. Musokotwane noted that these developments reflect the government’s efforts to maintain fiscal and external sustainability.



He also observed that debt restructuring which currently stands at 94% has created the much-needed fiscal space for the implementation of developmental programmes.

#MoneyNews

DENYING EDGAR LUNGU  MEDICAL CARE WON’T GO UNPUNISHED – SEAN TEMBO

DENYING ECL MEDICAL CARE WON’T GO UNPUNISHED – TEMBO



PATRIOTS for Economic Progress President Sean Tembo has warned that  those responsible for blocking former president Edgar Lungu from leaving the country for medical treatment abroad will face investigation and prosecution.



Tembo said he possessed videos showing Lungu being prevented from boarding flights at Kenneth Kaunda International Airport on several occasions.



“ECL had not been arrested and was therefore neither on bail nor on police bond. He was also not under house arrest of any kind. So, on what basis did the United Party for National Development leadership prevent him from boarding his flight for medical attention? That is called impunity and it needs to be nipped in the bud. Someone someday will have to account for that,” he warned.



Tembo said the UPND was responsible for Lungu’s death whom they prevented from traveling abroad to seek medical attention.


Tembo said Lungu would still be alive if they had allowed him to travel outside the country for specialised medical care.

“Did the people who prevented ECL from leaving the country contribute to his death? Are they culpable for manslaughter? Those are the questions that a court of law will need to answer at that time and we know that is why they are doing bizarre things now. The same law shall visit them and remind them that Zambia is a constitutional democracy, and that impunity shall never be tolerated,” he said.



Meanwhile, Tembo said tax holidays awarded to the mines will be revoked once the UPND is kicked out of power in August.



He said there was no morality in over-taxing poor and vulnerable citizens while giving tax holidays to big corporations such as the mines.



Tembo said for the past 4 years, Zambia had lost more than K14.4 billion in tax holidays given to the mines by the UPND government.



“Ever since the UPND formed government we have lost about K23.8 billion. This is money that could have been used in other needy social sectors,” he said.

The Mast

KALABA PLEDGES TO REINTRODUCE MINERAL ROYALTY TAX

KALABA PLEDGES TO REINTRODUCE MINERAL ROYALTY TAX

CITIZENS First leader Harry Kalaba has vowed that he shall reintroduce the Mineral Royalty tax if elected into office, accusing the ruling United Party for National Development of weakening the country’s mining revenue base by scrapping the tax regime.



Mr Kalaba said mineral royalty tax remains a critical tool for safeguarding the country’s mineral wealth and ensuring that Zambians derive maximum benefit from copper production.



“We will reintroduce the mineral royalty tax which the UPND scrapped off because it is not in the best interest of the Zambian people to give away our minerals without proper taxation,” Mr Kalaba said.



He argued that mineral royalty tax is treated as an expense by mining firms and is used to reduce taxable income, thereby diminishing the country’s overall revenue collection from the sector.



“Mineral royalty tax remains an expense which is used to reduce the taxable income. That is not fair to the people of Zambia who own these resources,” he said. “We believe the mining sector must contribute meaningfully to national development.”



The former foreign affairs minister said a CF government would revert to the tax framework introduced under late President Michael Sata, where 25% was charged as mineral royalty tax on copper production sales.



“Under President Sata, 25% was charged as MRT on copper production sales, and that is the regime we intend to restore,” Mr Kalaba said. “We want a predictable and firm tax system that ensures the country benefits from its mineral resources.”



Mr Kalaba maintained that Zambia’s heavy dependence on copper demands a robust taxation model that shields the country from revenue losses during periods of high production and favourable global prices.



“As Citizens First, we are saying our minerals must work for the people. We cannot continue with a system that allows multinational mining companies to externalise profits while Zambia struggles with debt and underdevelopment,” he said.



He said his administration would engage stakeholders in the mining sector to ensure that any changes to the tax regime are implemented transparently and consistently.

.



“We are not against investors, but investment must be mutually beneficial. There must be fairness and equity in how mineral wealth is shared,” Mr Kalaba said.


The UPND government has previously defended its mining tax reforms as necessary to attract investment and stabilise the sector, arguing that policy consistency is key to increasing production and economic growth.

Daily Nation Zambia

Musokotwane’s IMF Update: What Numbers Say About Zambia’s Economic Turnaround

🇿🇲 EXPLAINER | Musokotwane’s IMF Update: What Numbers Say About Zambia’s Economic Turnaround


Finance Minister, Dr. Situmbeko Musokotwane, has issued one of the clearest economic snapshots yet of where the country stands after years of debt distress and instability. Speaking in Parliament, the Minister said that as at December 31, 2025, the central story is that Zambia has moved from emergency stabilisation to the early stages of growth, with macroeconomic indicators now beginning to improve in a visible way.



Musokotwane framed the statement as an effort to “address you directly” and ensure that “with this accurate information, it will become harder for some people to misinform and mislead the nation.”



This line matters, because economic reform is not only about policy, it is also about public trust in facts.

The minister stated that when the New Dawn administration took office in 2021, Zambia faced “heavy debt distress, high inflation, exchange-rate instability, low reserves, and reduced investor confidence.” That was the baseline. The question now is whether the recovery is real or just political messaging.



His data suggests a measurable shift: preliminary GDP growth for 2025 is projected at 5.2%, up from 3.8% in 2024, driven mainly by agriculture, mining, and ICT. This is the core engine of the current turnaround, a return of production rather than mere consumption.



Mining remains the anchor. Copper production rose by 7.8% to 890,345 metric tonnes in 2025, supported by increased output at KCM, Mopani, Kansanshi, and Lubambe. At the same time, the agricultural rebound has been significant, with a 3.66 million metric tonne maize harvest, easing food price pressures. These are not abstract numbers.



Food and copper are Zambia’s two most powerful economic levers: one stabilises households, the other stabilises foreign exchange.

Households, however, feel the economy through prices and the currency, not through GDP charts. Musokotwane pointed to inflation falling to 11.2% by end-2025, before returning to single digits in January 2026 at 9.4%, “the first time since early 2024.” The Kwacha’s movement has been even more politically visible.



The Minister said it appreciated by 21.07% between December 2024 and December 2025, averaging about K22.13/US$, and strengthened further in January 2026, trading around K18.8/US$. The drivers, he argued, are stronger forex inflows from mining and renewed confidence, including inflows into government bonds.



That is why the bond market surge matters: confidence is now showing up in capital flows.

Economic stabilisation has also been linked to energy reforms, an area where Zambia’s constraints have historically limited growth. The minister highlighted frameworks such as Electricity Open Access and Net Metering, saying these are opening space for private investment.



Electricity generation increased by 7.8% to 14.36 million MWh in 2025. Power supply is not a side issue. Without reliable energy, mining expansion, industrial growth, and job creation remain promises rather than realities.



The fiscal picture is equally important because growth collapses quickly when government spending runs ahead of revenue. Musokotwane reported total revenues and grants of K187.85 billion, above target, while expenditure came in below projection at K223.73 billion. The deficit closed at 3.4% of GDP, better than the expected 4.6%, due to tighter spending control.



He detailed major spending priorities including K5.63 billion for CDF, K2.48 billion for Free Education, and K9.34 billion for Social Cash Transfers. This is the government’s argument that fiscal discipline is not austerity alone, but also protection of core social programmes.



Debt remains the long shadow. As at end-December 2025, total public sector debt stood at US$28.9 billion, including US$16.1 billion in central government external debt and domestic debt of K253.7 billion. The minister emphasised that domestic borrowing has stayed consistent with the Parliament-approved Annual Borrowing Plan, an attempt to reassure markets and citizens that borrowing is now structured rather than chaotic.



“Borrowing must never be casual,” he said, insisting it must be “anchored in transparency and accountability.”

One of the most significant announcements is that Zambia has successfully concluded the 38-month IMF Extended Credit Facility programme, which began in August 2022. The programme closed with an immediate disbursement of US$190 million, bringing total IMF support to US$1.7 billion.



Musokotwane said Zambia will not seek a one-year extension, but instead will engage on a successor programme focused on “growth, investment, job creation, and expanding productive capacity.”

Government claims that 94% of external debt has been restructured, a figure that, if sustained, marks one of the most important turning points in Zambia’s debt narrative.



The question however remains simple: when does this translate into jobs, cheaper living, and opportunity? Musokotwane’s message is that falling inflation and a stronger Kwacha reduce pressure on imported essentials over time, higher mining and agricultural output support jobs and exports, and stronger reserves, now at US$5.5 billion or 5.2 months of import cover, give Zambia more protection against shocks.

The macro story is improving, but the lived economy will depend on whether investment becomes factories, jobs, and value addition, not just export volumes.



Musokotwane’s final framing is political but also economic: Zambia is moving “from economic repair to growth,” but must do so with discipline.



The real test of this new phase will not be whether the numbers look better in Parliament, but whether stability becomes prosperity that reaches households, markets, and communities beyond the headlines.

© The People’s Brief | Ollus R. Ndomu

LILAYI TENT POLLING STATIONS WAS NOT FAKE, EXISTED IN 2015, WITNESS TELLS COURT

LILAYI TENT POLLING STATIONS WAS NOT FAKE, EXISTED IN 2015, WITNESS TELLS COURT



A STATE witness yesterday told the Lusaka Magistrates’ Court that the tent polling station set up along Lilayi Road during the Chawama Constituency by-election was not fake, insisting it had existed in previous elections including the 2015 by-election that delivered PF’s Lawrence Sichalwe to Parliament.



This came as Matero Member of Parliament Miles Sampa appeared for trial on a charge of misuse of a computer system after he allegedly posted on Facebook accusing the Electoral Commission of Zambia (ECZ) of creating a “fake” polling station during the January 15, 2026 Chawama by-election.



Sampa already pleaded not guilty.

Testifying before the court, Mollen Sinyunda, a 45-year-old teacher at New Mandevu Primary School, said he was appointed presiding officer for Mutason 01 polling station, which operated under polling district Lima D1.



He said the tented station was not new.

“I was posted to work as a polling assistant at this same station in 2015 that ushered in Lawrence Sichalwe as Chawama MP,” Sinyunda said.



Sinyunda told the court that he had been recruited by ECZ after responding to an advert in December 2025.

After training at Chawama Basic School, he and five officers were deployed to the tent structure positioned under a tree.



Voting opened at 06:00 hours but remained slow. Then around mid-morning, fellow officers alerted him to a Facebook post allegedly made on Sampa’s page.



“I switched on my data and saw the post depicting the tent where I was working, saying it was an illegal and fake polling station,” he said.



He testified that the environment changed almost immediately, with crowds gathering about 400 metres away and refusing to vote.

“People came, started watching and did not vote,” he said, adding that he became worried and informed his supervisors



Only 66 out of 456 registered voters eventually cast their ballots.

During lunch, Sinyunda said he had gone to eat near a bar when Sampa unexpectedly walked in.



“He said, ‘ba PO mulelya akabwali,’ and asked me if it was a fake polling station. I told him, ‘No, Sir,'”  he narrated.

But under cross-examination by defence lawyers Bonaventure Mutale, Celestine Mukandila and Charles Changano, Sinyunda conceded that he did not have a government Gazette confirming the tent structure as a gazetted polling station.



He admitted the station was merely a tent under a tree and that a person visiting the site today would not find any structure.

“Why is it not there? Is it because it is not gazetted?” the defence pressed.



“I don’t know,” he replied.

The matter has been adjourned to April 21 and 23 for continued trial.

Kalemba

Cabinet Reshuffles Spark Early Political Readings as Opposition Calls Timing into Question

🇿🇲 BRIEFING | Cabinet Reshuffles Spark Early Political Readings as Opposition Calls Timing into Question

President Hakainde Hichilema has dismissed Health Minister Elijah Muchima in an unexpected late-night Cabinet reshuffle, a move that also saw Small and Medium Enterprise Development Minister Elias Mubanga removed from office.



State House said the changes were made in line with Article 116(3)(a) of the Constitution, adding that the President had conveyed appreciation to both ministers for their service, with successors to be announced “in due course.”



The decision immediately triggered competing political interpretations in Lusaka, even as government offered no detailed explanation beyond constitutional procedure.



Muchima, appointed to the health portfolio in July 2024, became one of the more visible Cabinet figures, and his sudden removal has fuelled speculation in political circles about internal discipline, performance reviews, and election-year positioning.



Speaking this morning, Mr Muchima struck a notably restrained tone, describing being fired as “normal” and part of governance. “Such decisions are part of governance and not unusual even in other countries,” he told Diamond News, insisting his support for President Hichilema remains “steadfast” and not dependent on holding office.



He also dismissed claims that the move was linked to voting dynamics around Bill 7, calling such suggestions “mere speculation” and reiterating that appointments and dismissals remain the prerogative of the appointing authority.



State House Chief Communications Specialist Clayson Hamasaka framed the reshuffle as routine executive authority, saying the President thanked both ministers and wished them well.



The Presidency’s statement offered no indication of wrongdoing, policy dispute, or broader restructuring, leaving analysts to read the move through a political lens rather than an administrative one.



Opposition figures, however, have moved quickly to challenge the timing and intent. Citizens First leader Harry Kalaba described the dismissals as “ill-timed” and politically motivated, arguing they were done for “political expedience” rather than reform.



“The reshuffles are surprising… it is merely an academic exercise,” Kalaba said on Hot FM, suggesting the two ministers had become “sacrificial lambs” and calling for the nation to be given reasons behind their removal.



Kalaba’s comments reflect a broader opposition argument that major accountability decisions should have come earlier in the term, not in the shadow of an approaching general election. He also questioned what the reshuffle signals to cooperating partners and the wider public, as Zambia continues to market stability and reform credibility internationally.



For now, the immediate facts remain clear: two ministers have been removed, the President has not publicly detailed the rationale, and replacements have not yet been named. Muchima has responded with acceptance rather than confrontation, while opposition leaders are attempting to frame the move as political theatre.



The next signal will come from who replaces the dismissed ministers, and whether this reshuffle marks an isolated adjustment or the beginning of a wider election-year recalibration within government.

© The People’s Brief | Goran Handya

Hichilema’s Final National Values Address: A Presidency Framed by Reform, Recovery & Reputation

🇿🇲 EXCLUSIVE | Hichilema’s Final National Values Address: A Presidency Framed by Reform, Recovery & Reputation



President Hakainde Hichilema will this morning address the National Assembly on the progress made in the application of national values and principles, in what is set to be his final such address before Parliament dissolves ahead of the August general elections.



The address, scheduled for Friday, 20 February 2026, is not ceremonial. It is constitutional. Under Articles 8, 9 and 86 of the Zambian Constitution, the Head of State is required to report to Parliament and the nation on how the country is upholding national values such as democracy, human dignity, good governance, integrity, and sustainable development.



Acting Clerk of the National Assembly Loveless Mayaka has confirmed that members of the diplomatic corps and invited guests are expected to be seated by 08:30 hours, while citizens can follow proceedings live on Parliament Radio and Parliament TV



But beyond the constitutional obligation lies a deeper political moment.

This is President Hichilema’s last national values address before dissolution. It comes at a time when his government argues that Zambia has transitioned from economic emergency to economic recovery. Since assuming office in August 2021, his government has defined itself around three pillars: debt restructuring, macroeconomic stabilization, and institutional reform.



When he entered State House, Zambia was in default, inflation was elevated, foreign reserves were thin, and investor confidence had eroded. Four years later, the narrative from Treasury is markedly different. Inflation has returned to single digits.



The Kwacha has strengthened significantly over the past year. The IMF Extended Credit Facility programme has concluded after 38 months. Public finances show a narrower deficit. Mining production is rising. Agricultural output has rebounded after improved rainfall and reforms in the FISP e-voucher system.



On the international stage, Zambia’s image has shifted from a case study in sovereign distress to what multilateral institutions now describe as a reforming frontier economy. The country has been visible at global platforms such as the African Mining Indaba, with President Hichilema telling investors that “all minerals are critical minerals” and that Zambia seeks value addition rather than raw extraction.



Diplomatically, his administration has re-engaged traditional partners while courting Gulf investors, European institutions, and the United States.

But the address will not unfold in a vacuum of praise.



Economic stabilization does not automatically translate into universal prosperity. Poverty levels remain high. Youth unemployment remains a structural challenge. Energy constraints still surface periodically. The mining expansion narrative is ambitious, with a target of 3 million metric tonnes of copper by 2031, but scaling production requires sustained capital, reliable power, and social licence from communities affected by environmental incidents.



Politically, the President faces an opposition that is fragmented but vocal. Questions persist over governance, executive appointments, cabinet reshuffles, and allegations from critics about political selectivity in prosecutions. His administration insists that institutions operate independently and that there are no political prisoners. The President himself has repeatedly framed his leadership as one anchored in forgiveness and institutional autonomy, conscious of his own past experiences in opposition.



The economic outlook heading into dissolution is cautiously optimistic. Mining output is expanding. International reserves have strengthened. Bond market demand has surged in recent months, signalling renewed investor appetite. The Kwacha’s appreciation has shifted political conversation, with critics struggling to counter a currency story that now favours the incumbency narrative. But appreciation also raises expectations.



Citizens want to know when macro gains will convert into lower living costs, stable jobs, and visible industrial growth.

Today’s address is therefore more than a report card. It is an attempt to define the legacy phase of this administration before voters return to the polls.



Will President Hichilema frame the past four years as a disciplined repair of a broken system? Will he lean into economic data and international validation? Or will he focus on governance ethics and national cohesion?



For diplomats seated in the gallery, the speech will be a signal of policy continuity. For investors watching on broadcast channels, it will be an assessment of stability heading into an election year. For ordinary citizens, it will be a moment to measure promises against lived experience.



Constitutionally, the address is an annual address. Politically, it is a closing argument before dissolution.

© The People’s Brief | Ollus R. Ndomu

EXPERTS AFFIRM PRESIDENTIAL POWERS TO HIRE AND DISMISS MINISTERS

EXPERTS AFFIRM PRESIDENTIAL POWERS TO HIRE AND DISMISS MINISTERS

GOVERNANCE expert Bob Mubanga says the President has constitutional powers to hire or dismiss Cabinet Ministers.

Mr. Mubanga explained that as supervisor of the executive wing of Government, the Head of State is empowered under the Constitution to act on officials who are allegedly not meeting expectations. He added that while governance is a collective responsibility, ministries under the executive arm are directly responsible for delivering services to citizens.

He was speaking in an interview with ZNBC News.

Meanwhile, former Secretary to the Cabinet Leslie Mbula said the Constitution empowers President Hakainde Hichilema to appoint and dismiss Ministers and other senior Government officials without giving reasons.

Governance Elections Advocacy Research Services (GEARS) Initiative Board Chairperson Lackson Lungu also noted that the Constitution does not require the President to provide reasons when dismissing Ministers.

ZNBC

IKELENGI: THE DISTRICT THAT COULD CHANGE ZAMBIA, IF ZAMBIA NOTICES IT

IKELENGI: THE DISTRICT THAT COULD CHANGE ZAMBIA, IF ZAMBIA NOTICES IT

There is a quiet district in the far corner of Ikelengi, tucked inside North-Western Province, where three countries almost shake hands. It is rich in rivers. Rich in forests. Rich in soil. And yet, painfully poor in opportunity.

For years, it has remained more of a footnote than a headline.

Now, after the recent dismissal of long-serving Member of Parliament Elijah Muchima, who has represented the area since 2006 and most recently served as Minister of Health, questions grow louder. How can a district sit on abundance for decades and still feel forgotten?

This is not a story about one man. It is about unrealised potential.

WHAT IKELENGI HAS THAT ZAMBIA NEEDS

  1. Agriculture That Can Feed More Than Itself

Ikelengi has high rainfall, fertile soils, and flowing rivers such as the Jimbe. This is not dry scrubland. It is green. Consistently green.

The district can support:

Maize and cassava at commercial scale

Beans and groundnuts

Horticulture, including vegetables and fruits like ifinanazi (pineapples)

Aquaculture using its river systems

With proper irrigation schemes, storage facilities, and feeder roads, Ikelengi could shift from subsistence farming to structured agribusiness. That means exports. That means jobs. That means tax revenue.

Yet most farming remains small scale and largely informal.

  1. Tourism Zambia Barely Talks About

Near Ikelengi lie waterfalls and river landscapes that rival more publicised destinations. The district also borders Angola and sits near the Democratic Republic of Congo, offering cross-border tourism potential.

North-Western Province is already home to major mining operations. Tourists and business travelers pass through the province. But Ikelengi remains off the brochure.

With basic investment in lodges, road networks, and marketing, the district could plug into Zambia’s growing tourism value chain.

  1. Forestry and Timber Value Addition

The region has dense woodland and forest resources. Currently, much of Zambia exports raw timber or processes it at minimal levels.

Imagine:

Furniture manufacturing clusters

Wood processing plants

Eco-certified forestry exports

Instead of exporting logs, Zambia could export finished products. Ikelengi could anchor such an industry.

  1. Cross-Border Trade Hub Potential

Geography matters. Ikelengi sits near Angola and within reach of DRC markets. That location is not a weakness. It is a strategic asset.

With proper customs infrastructure, warehousing, and road upgrades, Ikelengi could serve as:

A trade gateway

An agricultural aggregation center

A regional logistics node

Cross-border trade, when formalised, expands revenue and strengthens local economies.

SO WHY IS IT STILL UNDERDEVELOPED?

This is where the discomfort begins.

For nearly two decades, the area had consistent parliamentary representation. Stability in leadership often provides leverage for development planning. Yet the visible transformation many residents hoped for has not materialised at scale.

Underdevelopment in rural Zambia usually follows a pattern:

Poor road networks

Limited electricity access

Weak investment attraction

Minimal value addition industries

Youth migration to urban centres

Ikelengi fits that pattern too closely.

WHAT IKELENGI COULD CONTRIBUTE TO THE NATIONAL ECONOMY

If structured properly, Ikelengi could contribute in four major ways:

  1. Agricultural exports to Angola and DRC
  2. Food security reinforcement for North-Western Province
  3. Timber and wood product manufacturing revenue
  4. Tourism diversification income

This is not fantasy. Zambia’s mining boom in North-Western Province has already shown how quickly economic geography can shift when infrastructure meets investment.

The question is whether non-mining districts like Ikelengi will receive similar strategic focus.

THE HARD TRUTH

Zambia often speaks about diversification. Yet diversification begins in places like Ikelengi.

Not in boardrooms. Not in speeches. On the ground.

A DISTRICT AT A CROSSROADS

Ikelengi is not poor because it lacks resources. It is underdeveloped because its resources remain unstructured.

Rivers that could power irrigation still flow past idle fields. Forests that could anchor factories remain largely unprocessed. Border advantages remain under-formalised.

The potential is not sleeping. It is waiting.

And Zambia cannot afford to leave waiting districts behind.

Because sometimes the quietest district holds the loudest economic answer.


Zambian Angle

Mnangagwa Thrusts His Own Son Into Close Protection Unit as Tension Boils Over 2030 Agenda

Picture: Mnangagwa Thrusts His Own Son Into Close Protection Unit as Tension Boils Over 2030 Agenda



Tinashe Sambiri– President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s decision to have his son, Major Sean Mnangagwa, visibly positioned within his close protection detail has stirred debate amid rising political tension over the 2030 agenda.



At the burial of the late Rtd Brigadier General Samuel Mpabanga held at the National Heroes Acre in Harare on Wednesday, Major Sean Mnangagwa was seen closely guarding his father as proceedings unfolded.



The highly visible presence of the President’s son within the security arrangement has triggered discussion, particularly as speculation intensifies around constitutional amendments and the possibility of extending Mnangagwa’s stay in power beyond 2028.



While no official statement was issued explaining the security deployment, critics questioned the optics of a family member playing such a prominent role in the President’s protection detail at a high-profile national event.



However, ZANU PF online activist Cleopas Mukungunugwa publicly celebrated the arrangement, portraying it as a symbol of loyalty and strength.



“A reassuring sight as Sean Mnangagwa stands firmly in duty, keeping watch over his father, President Emmerson Mnangagwa — a moment that reflects discipline, loyalty, and the confidence that the Head of State is truly in safe hands,” Mukungunugwa said.



He added: “Major Sean Mnangagwa standing guard beside President Emmerson Mnangagwa — a powerful image of duty, vigilance, and family loyalty, assuring the nation that its leader remains secure and well-protected.”



Supporters argue that Major Mnangagwa, a trained military officer, is fully qualified to serve wherever he is deployed. Yet critics contend that the move reinforces perceptions of increasing family influence within State structures at a time when public anxiety is growing over governance and succession politics.



The incident comes as tensions simmer within political circles over the 2030 agenda, with opponents warning that efforts to extend presidential terms could deepen divisions. Against that backdrop, the sight of the President’s son positioned at the heart of his security detail has only amplified scrutiny over the consolidation of power and the blurring of lines between State and family.-ZimEye

Robert Mugabe’s Blue Roof mansion in Borrowdale, Harare, stands as one of the most iconic symbols of his long rule in Zimbabwe

Robert Mugabe’s Blue Roof mansion in Borrowdale, Harare, stands as one of the most iconic symbols of his long rule in Zimbabwe.

Named after its striking blue Chinese-style roof tiles, the residence was constructed between 2000 and 2006 by a Serbian firm, reportedly funded through a mix of party resources and foreign donations. Zee

Situated in one of Harare’s wealthiest suburbs, the estate was designed to showcase both luxury and authority, making it far larger and more lavish than the official State House where Mugabe conducted much of his presidential work.



The mansion itself is vast, reportedly featuring around 25 bedrooms, many of which have ensuite bathrooms and spa facilities, and possibly up to 24 bathrooms in total. The residence spreads across multiple floors, with grand reception areas, formal guest rooms, and office suites.

Additional features include two large water features, extensive gardens, and entertainment areas designed for hosting high-profile visitors. The combination of bedrooms, bathrooms, and recreational spaces made Blue Roof less a home and more a private palace fit for a head of state and his family.



Security and privacy were paramount, with the estate sitting on tens of acres of wooded land, heavily guarded during and after Mugabe’s presidency.



The mansion’s scale, lavish design, and high-profile location turned it into a symbol of power and prestige, as well as controversy, given Zimbabwe’s broader economic struggles.

Today, the Blue Roof remains a defining landmark of Mugabe’s legacy, representing both the opulence of his presidency and the enduring fascination with his personal life.

Robert Mugabe’s Son Charged with Attempted Murder After Hyde Park Shooting

Robert Mugabe’s Son Charged with Attempted Murder After Hyde Park Shooting



Chatunga Bellarmine Mugabe, the youngest son of Zimbabwe’s late former President Robert Mugabe, has been formally arrested and charged with attempted murder following the shooting of a gardener at his luxury home in the upscale Johannesburg suburb of Hyde Park.



The 29-year-old Mugabe is expected to appear before the Alexandra Magistrates’ Court, on Monday alongside a second, unidentified suspect, who is also facing the same charge.



The incident occurred on Thursday morning at the residence Mugabe shares with his brother, Robert Mugabe Jnr.

According to police, the 23-year-old victim, a gardener employed at the property, was shot and rushed to the hospital in critical condition. While initial reports suggested a single gunshot wound, sources indicate the victim may have been shot twice in the back. The altercation is believed to have stemmed from a labour dispute .



Police spokesperson Colonel Dimakatso Nevhuhulwi confirmed that officers were flagged down by private security and arrived to find the wounded man. While a cartridge was found at the scene, the firearm used in the shooting has not yet been recovered. “The two men that were brought in for questioning…have been officially arrested, and are expected to appear before Alexandra Court soon on charges of attempted murder,” Nevhuhulwi confirmed.



This arrest is the latest in a string of controversies involving the Mugabe brothers, who have lived in South Africa for several years and earned a reputation for lavish parties and unruly behaviour . Neighbours in Hyde Park have claimed that gunshots at the property are “frequent,” with one resident expressing fear, stating, “It is not for the first time we are hearing gunshots”.



Chatunga’s legal troubles are not new. In 2023, he was accused of assault following an altercation at a Sandton nightclub . Just last year, he was arrested in Zimbabwe along with two bodyguards for allegedly assaulting security guards at a mining site. His brother, Robert Mugabe Jnr, also appeared in a Harare court in October on charges of drug possession .

The Mugabe family has a contentious legal history i

Nigerian governor has sparked debate after a viral video showed him stopping his convoy to urinate publicly on a street,

A Nigerian governor has sparked debate after a viral video showed him stopping his convoy to urinate publicly on a street, leaving many questioning leadership decorum.

In the clip, the governor, dressed in the signature white regalia, steps away from his convoy and positions himself facing a wall as residents and passersby watch in disbelief.

After finishing, he adjusts his attire, washes his hands with water from a plastic bottle, places the bottle in his mouth briefly, and walks away.

Security personnel and entourage members are visible nearby.

The footage quickly circulated on social media, drawing mixed reactions.

Some called it a lapse in judgment unbecoming of a leader, while others suggested it may have been an urgent situation.

One Twitter user wrote, “That’s certainly shocking behaviour for a public official. Such actions by the governor could raise serious concerns about decorum and public accountability.”

Another tweeted, “See how our leaders are embarrassing us. Anyways, I feel for the man. His bladder might not be able to hold it any longer. Better safe than sorry.”

One defended the encounter saying, “I don’t blame him, that is just reality embarrassing him, he had security siren clearing road, convoy worth millions, but nature said, ‘Hey boss step outside now,’ you got to agree it happens.”

This is not the first bizarre encounter involving a Nigerian governor.

In February 2026, former Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai was involved in a cinematic standoff at the airport upon his return to Nigeria.

His return erupted into chaos when a crowd of supporters and commuters formed a human shield at the airport, physically obstructing DSS operatives from arresting him.

This dramatic standoff quickly escalated into a national security scandal after El-Rufai’s legal team accused agents of “state-sponsored stealing” of his passport.

Adding to the intrigue, the former governor later claimed he had evaded the initial ambush because the National Security Adviser’s phone lines had been tapped, allowing him to be tipped off before his plane even landed.

The gun has still not been found at the home of former President Robert Mugabe’s son

UPDATE | The gun has still not been found at the home of former President Robert Mugabe’s son.



Divers have been searching the swimming pool but have not found the gun believed to have been used to shoot a gardener.



One diver said the team is now draining the pool. However, a lot of dirt and debris at the bottom is making the search difficult.


The diver also said the property is very large, with an overgrown and poorly maintained backyard, which is making the investigation harder.



A vehicle fitted with white lights and a police siren has also been seized at the property.

SAPS still working on the scene.

CIA Targets China’s Military After Shock General Purge

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CIA Targets China’s Military After Shock General Purge

Just weeks after Beijing’s stunning removal of a top commander, the Central Intelligence Agency has launched a bold new recruitment drive aimed squarely at China’s armed forces.



The spy agency released a slick public video portraying a frustrated mid-level officer in the People’s Liberation Army, clearly designed to tap into unrest following the dramatic investigation of Zhang Youxia, vice-chairman of the powerful Central Military Commission.



The move comes amid Beijing’s sweeping anti-corruption crackdown that has shaken the upper ranks of the military. Washington appears eager to exploit any cracks in the system.



CIA Director John Ratcliffe said the campaign had already reached audiences inside China, offering officials a “brighter future” if they choose to cooperate.



The video follows a similar Chinese-language outreach last year targeting members of the ruling party complete with instructions on how to secretly contact U.S. intelligence.



As tensions simmer between the U.S. and China, the espionage battle is no longer hidden in the shadows it’s playing out online for the world to see.

Angola and Botswana Unite To Buy Diamond Mining Company De Beers

Angola and Botswana Unite To Buy Diamond Mining Company De Beers

Angola’s state-owned diamond company, Endiama, has announced plans to increase production to 17 million carats by 2027, following a record output in 2024.



This achievement has cemented Angola’s position as the world’s third-largest producer of rough diamonds by volume, behind only Russia and Botswana.



In addition to boosting production, the Angolan government is reportedly considering acquiring a 20% to 30% strategic share in De Beers, one of the world’s leading diamond companies.



Botswana is also positioning itself around De Beers. The government of Botswana is buying out 15% of De Beers.

De Beers was founded by a British man named Cecil Rhodes over 135 years ago, and started its diamond mining operations in South Africa.



They have mined hundreds of millions of carats of diamonds across Africa, primarily in South Africa, Botswana, and Namibia, generating tens of billions in revenue.



With Botswana and Angola both coming together to buy over 30% stake of De Beers, the days of imperial exploitation are numbered.
-TheAfricanDream

Zimbabwe’s Presidential Term Extension Could Spell Disaster

Warning: Zimbabwe’s Presidential Term Extension Could Spell Disaster

BY DR MASIMBA MAVAZA

Zimbabwe’s proposed constitutional amendment to extend President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s term has sparked widespread concern and criticism. The move is seen by the Commonwealth as a power grab, undermining democratic principles and Zimbabwe’s 2013 Constitution, which limits presidential tenure to two five-year terms.



A Recipe for Disaster

Examples of failed term extensions are there for all to see. Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni removed age and term limits, leading to repression, electoral manipulation, and economic decline. Uganda’s now viewed as a banana republic, and even its allies are cooling off. Burkina Faso’s attempts to extend presidential terms fueled widespread unrest, ultimately leading to a popular uprising. And let’s not forget Robert Mugabe’s 37-year rule, which ended in a military-backed dispensation, highlighting the dangers of prolonged leadership.



The Consequences

Extending presidential terms could lead to:

– Erosion of civic freedoms and democratic institutions
– Economic instability and decline
– Increased corruption and authoritarianism
– Succession crises and power struggles



The International Community Sounds the Alarm

The international community has expressed concerns about Zimbabwe’s proposed amendment, citing potential impacts on democracy, stability, and human rights. Zimbabwe’s Constitution explicitly limits presidential terms, and altering this without a referendum would undermine the rule of law.



*The People Speak*

Nearly 80% of Zimbabweans oppose the term extension, according to Afrobarometer surveys. This must be taken seriously. We must think of the future of our children, not just the present.



A Better Way Forward

Countries like the United States, South Africa, Mexico, and Brazil have successfully implemented term limits, promoting democratic governance and stability. Zimbabwe should follow suit.



The Economic Implications

Extending presidential terms could lead to economic instability, reduced foreign investment, constitutional crisis, and international isolation. Is this the future Zimbabwe wants?



The Regional Impact

Zimbabwe’s proposed term extension could undermine regional stability, erode democratic norms, and increase migration and instability. The SADC and AU have expressed concerns, and it’s time Zimbabwe listened.



Let’s work towards a better future for Zimbabwe, one that prioritizes democracy, stability, and the well-being of its citizens.-ZimEye

Storm Brews as ZANU-PF Backs Controversial Term Extension Bill

Storm Brews as ZANU-PF Backs Controversial Term Extension Bill

Tinashe Sambiri– Political tensions escalated on Thursday after ZANU-PF publicly endorsed Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3, a controversial proposal seeking to extend Presidential and Parliamentary terms from five to seven years.

Addressing the media in Harare on Thursday, party spokesperson Ambassador Christopher Mutsvangwa defended the Bill following its recent gazetting, insisting the move was part of a legitimate parliamentary process.

“The gazetting of Constitutional Amendment Bill Number 3 is part of a lawful parliamentary process. As a party, we stand firmly behind our resolutions, and we respect the institutions mandated to process the Bill to its logical conclusion,” Ambassador Mutsvangwa said.

He further emphasised that the ruling party supports the adopted resolutions and wants the constitutional processes completed without delay.

However, the proposed extension has triggered backlash from critics who argue that increasing terms of office could weaken democratic accountability and concentrate power. Political analysts warn that constitutional changes of this magnitude require broad public consensus rather than a rushed parliamentary process.

https://youtu.be/Ns8NRgDd_jQ?si=FsiHOwaZHA-efbxx

During Thursday’s briefing, Ambassador Mutsvangwa also reviewed President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s recent international engagements in Dubai and at the African Union, describing them as reinforcing Zimbabwe’s diplomatic posture.


“The President was in Dubai, he spoke on our own interests rather than centric diplomacy promotion, as you saw at the World Leaders Summit and the African Peer Review Mechanism. His Excellency’s engagements in Dubai and at the African Union reflect Zimbabwe’s growing stature on the international stage. Our diplomacy is Afrocentric, anchored on mutual respect and shared prosperity,” he said.

He also credited what he called inclusive investment policies for the country’s economic direction.

“The Second Republic has created a conducive environment for investment without discrimination. Be it from the West or East, we don’t discriminate by capital. Our economic trajectory is built on inclusivity, production and value addition,” he noted.


Despite the party’s firm stance, Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3 is already fuelling intense national debate, with critics warning it could deepen political divisions.