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TWO YEARS OF UPND GOVERNMENT: AN OVERVIEW

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TWO YEARS OF UPND GOVERNMENT: AN OVERVIEW

By Nkonkomalimba Kafunda

Today August 24 marks two years since the ascension to power of the United Party for National Development and it’s mercurial leader Hakainde Hichilema and presents an opportunity to give a general overview of how the party has fared thus far.

Riding on a wave of popular resentment, HH as he is known to both friend and foe, convincingly annihilated Edgar Lungu and his Patriotic Front at polls held on August 12, 2021.

Over the past two years the ‘New dawn’ as the administration christened itself has made strides to correct inherited ills as well as introduce innovations to improve Zambian lives.

After protracted negotiations the government managed to clinch a debt restructuring deal with official creditor committee co chaired by France and China. The government paid long suffering retirees their over due benefits, introduced free primary and secondary education and widened the social safety net.

Additionally, the government recruited close to 50,000 workers in health, education and the military. Further, the government completed the 750 MW Kafue Gorge Lower power project using locally generated resources sparing the country from load shedding, a regional headache. Constituency Development Fund was increased from K1.6 million to K28.3 million.

Here, unfortunately, is where the positives end. Though the government secured a US$1.3 billion IMF package and several concessional loans from the World Bank, these, in right thinking society, should not be considered achievements.

While the President is being lavished with superlatives and the UPND leadership id giving itself a pat on its collective back, the average Zambian is grappling with the high cost of living amidst grueling poverty.

Pre election, HH campaigned on the popular anti PF resentment and made wildly unrealistic and unachievable promises. Mealie meal would go down to K50 from K120 it is now heading the K300 route, Fuel would hover around K12 it now oscillates around K24-K28. Fertilizer was to be around K250 but its over K1000 a bag.

The exchange rate has remained volatile, appreciating by 4.8% in the second quarter before depreciating by 11% between June and August, according to Bank of Zambia Governor Denny Kalyalya. By its own volition, the UPND unwittingly created a crisis of expectation which is now replicating the popular resentment that was the PF’s waterloo.

In the all-important mining sector issues at Mopani and Konkola Copper Mines remain largely unresolved, despite several placating statements from minister 0f Mines Paul Kabuswe. He is rapidly losing both time and credibility. He is simply not believable. (Not to be confused with unbelievable, which would denote high competence levels).

Additionally, tax and other incentives gifted to the sector in the 2022 and 2023 budgets have not resulted in growth, if that were the intention. It is generally believed, but not said, that Canadian multinational mining giant FQM was being thanked for it’s clandestine role in the PF ouster. It is the proverbial elephant in the room. This week Both Finance Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane and Zambia Revenue Authority boss Dingani Banda confirmed drastically reduced production and tax collection levels in the sector.

Socialist Party leader Dr. Fred M’mrmbe called the administration puppets controlled by transnational corporations who have no interest in the welfare of Zambians whose poverty levels are at an alarming 82%. Zambia is projected to produce 680,000 tonnes of copper in 2023, the lowest in 14 years.
In the agriculture sector, it is expected that the maize harvest will drop by about 25% from the 2021 harvest, the last one under PF’s watch, according to a crop marketing survey.

This is due, in part, to a shambolic input support program. This threatens national food security as despite increasing the floor price to K280 per 50 kg bag from K180, the Food Reserve Agency has not reached it’s targeted 1 million tonnes of grain and has put out adverts frantically urging farmers to deliver to depots.

In it’s quest to remove PF connected businesses from the input business, the UPND dismantled a working supply chain without replacing it with a viable alternative causing shortfalls in all manner of inputs. Agriculture minister Motolo Phiri is at his wits end. He has been promoted to his level of incompetence. In management it is known as the Peter principle.

Supply chain disruptions do not end at agriculture. Medicines and medical supplies are in short supply in the health sector. Again a working supply chain was dismantled on political grounds without a viable alternative.

But perhaps the biggest spectacle is in the much touted fight against corruption. Numerous arrests of former government officials and PF members have been very publicly made but little else. Granted the rule of law has been upheld and all suspects have been granted bail or bond, a semblance of justice not revenge at play. Shamefully, the only high level conviction is that of a former Development Bank of Zambia CEO for DBZ paying children’s school fees he was not entitled.

It is clear, but not acknowledged, that the national Prosecution Authority has no capacity to prosecute the complex transactions they allege the suspects handled. This is the whale in the tub. In the meantime corruption remains endemic and obscenely rampant. The culture of ‘nchekelako’ is omni-present and the highly publicized arrests, apart from harassing the opposition, are for the benefit of donors.

However, corruption is not the most pressing problem. Families are eating one or no meal a day. This has nothing to do with availability or accessibility but everything to do with affordability as the food is in the shops but beyond the pocket.

The fact that grain and mealie meal is being exported to deep pocketed neighbors at a premium causing market place distortions has made this government deeply unpopular.

In fact, the UPND is looked at as arrogant and ungrateful, a party that does not care for the well being of the people that put them where they are. Unemployment remains strata strophic and those with jobs can not make ends meet, According to the Jesuit Centre for Theological reflection, a family of five in Lusaka needs around K9,500 a month. Salaries are as low as K1,200.

Unless and until there is a significant drop in the cost of living with a corresponding rise in the standard of living, this is a lame duck presidency.

VEDANTA RESOURCES TO PAY KCM SUPPLIERS IN EXCESS OF US$250M

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VENDATA RESOURCES TO PAY KCM SUPPLIERS IN EXCESS OF US$250M

Billionaire Agarwal’s Vedanta Resources Ltd pledges to pay Zambia creditors before retaking mine.

Vedanta Resources Ltd. is ready to pay $250 million owed to suppliers in Zambia as soon as it resumes control of copper mines that were seized by the southern African nation’s government more than four years ago.

Former President Edgar Lungu’s administration placed Konkola Copper Mines under provisional liquidation in 2019, after accusing Anil Agarwal’s Vedanta of lying about expansion plans and paying too little tax. That sparked a series of court cases, culminating in current President Hakainde Hichilema seeking to resolve the dispute amicably.

Agarwal, who is looking to reduce the parent company’s massive debt load, has also pledged to invest $1 billion in Konkola and more than double copper production from the operation. Zambia’s output of the metal for 2023 is forecast to plunge to the lowest in 14 years. The industry is in dire need of fresh investment to take advantage of surging demand for copper to fuel the transition to clean energy.

The plan to pay all creditors is “to make sure I win the hearts of the people,” billionaire Agarwal said in an interview at Bloomberg’s Johannesburg office on Wednesday. “Money will never be a constraint.”

Vedanta has about $2 billion of bonds due in 2024 — a record annual bill for the company, with a $1.1 billion repayment due in January.

The company’s shares rose 1.3% in Mumbai on Wednesday, the biggest gain in two weeks.

For Zambia, raising output at the mine will help it boost tax revenues in a nation that relies on the metal for about 70% of export earnings.

Konkola’s complexes comprise of shafts, a smelter and a refinery. It currently produces about 50,000 metric tons of finished copper from its own mines. First Quantum Minerals Ltd. copper mines in the country produced 390,000 tons last year.

Vedanta, India’s biggest mining company, produces metals from aluminum to zinc. It has also expanded its operations in Africa, and has mines in Namibia as well as South Africa.

“Africa is my heart,” Agarwal said. “If I have to marry two wives, one will be India, one will be Africa.”

Credit: Matthew Hill, Swansy Afonso, with assistance from Taonga Mitimingi, Amogelang Mbatha, Jessica Zhou and Jennifer Zabasajja

Man Convicted For Murdering His Wife After She Caught Him Attempting To Rape Daughter Pleads Insanity

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MAN CONVICTED FOR MURDERING HIS WIFE AFTER SHE CAUGHT HIM ATTEMPTING TO RAPE DAUGHTER PLEADS INSANITY

A MAN’S defence of insanity, after he was convicted and sentenced to death for murdering his wife, who caught him attempting to rape his daughter, has failed to hold in the Court of Appeal.

Elias Mwansa, of Chililabombwe, was convicted and sentenced to death by the High Court for murdering his wife, Musole Mbilishi.

Details in the case are that on July 17, 2021, Mwansa found his daughter speaking with a man near a bush.

This did not please him and he asked the daughter to choose whether to be killed or have sex with him.

However, the daughter ran away while Mwansa gave chase in an attempt to rape her.
But while struggling with his daughter, the wife arrived and when asked what he was doing, he responded that he needed a younger woman.

The following day, the wife and her children moved out of the house to go and stay with a relative.
However, Mwansa followed them on the pretext that he needed them back home and he had engaged elders to sit them down.

When the family returned, Mwansa sharpened his axe and while his wife was in the bedroom, he followed her and hacked her in her neck.

His daughter found him struggling to remove the axe from her mother’s neck and she rushed out to call for help.

The court further heard that as Mwansa’s daughter called for help, he pursued her and threw an axe in her direction, threatening to end her life to prevent her from revealing what she had witnessed.
However, the axe missed the daughter, who managed to call for help, and Mwansa was apprehended and eventually charged with murder.

In his defence, Mwansa said he did not know what he was doing, stating that he had a mental illness and was haunted for attempting to rape his daughter.

He further said he had episodes of mental illness and at some point he was admitted to Chainama Hills Mental Hospital in Lusaka.

However, Court of Appeal judge Kelvin Muzenga rejected the appeal, stating that the level of coordination in his actions indicated command over his mental faculties.

“The appeal is hereby dismissed, and the conviction and sentence are upheld,” he stated.

Daily Mail

Zimbabwe Elections: Opposition claims ‘primitive’ vote rigging as ballot papers mysteriously run short

A week before Zimbabwe’s crucial election, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) said everything was in place.

Addressing journalists and election observers on 17 August, ZEC chairperson Priscilla Chigumba said: “The commission has procured all essential electoral materials and has delivered 80% of them to provinces under police escort.”

She added: “I would like to assure you that we have everything in place be it legal, social or any other requirement and we are eager to conduct a free, fair and credible election.”

But on Wednesday, ballot papers were missing or misprinted, and some polling stations went as late as 17:00 – for a vote due to end at 19:00 – without ballot papers.

Polling had been due to start at 07:00 but by 10:00 there were reports many voting stations had not yet opened. Those were mostly in areas traditionally considered opposition strongholds.

In a statement, the ZEC said the hiccups were due to numerous court appeals that ate into ballot paper printing time.

The week before, it had no such concerns.

The ZEC added it had printed 7 126 600 presidential ballots, 7 098 750 for parliamentary elections, and 6 861 650 for local authority elections.

That is more ballot papers than the total number of eligible voters.

By 17:00, said the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) presidential elections officer Charles Kwaramba, the party had not yet received a satisfactory answer on what had gone wrong.

‘Don’t go back home’

The CCC’s Chalton Hwende, a candidate for the Kuwadzana East constituency in Harare, said ballot papers there ran out and his team was told by ZEC officials more ballot papers would be printed.

But when voting resumed, the ZEC only supplied “2 900 ballots for the council election instead of the 12 000 shortfall”, he added.

There were many similar incidents across the country.

In some cases, ballot papers did not list CCC candidates.

In an address to the media, CCC presidential candidate Nelson Chamisa said the ZEC was engaged in “primitive” rigging.

It did not make sense that areas remote from Harare, some of which were strongholds of Zanu-PF, had adequate ballot papers while in Harare, where they were printed, some polling stations went without, he added.

Chamisa said Zimbabwe was headed toward a constitutional crisis.

“They have no mandate to run this country, so they have plunged this country into a crisis. Starting from tomorrow, there’s no government in Zimbabwe.”

He added:

Mr Mnangagwa can claim but he’s not the president of this country. Legally and constitutionally.

Voting in some polling stations is due to run into Thursday morning since polling stations should be open for a continuous 12 hours.

Earlier on Wednesday, CCC spokesperson Fadzayi Mahere appealed to the party’s supporters not to despair because of delays.

“Don’t go back home. Apathy is not an option,” she wrote on X the platform formerly known as Twitter.

“Not voting is not an option. Giving up is not an option. Be patient despite any frustration.”

Irregularities and ‘exit polls’

Trouble at voting stations was not limited to CCC supporters: Zanu-PF incumbent Emmerson Mnangagwa’s son, Collins, was turned away because he did not appear on the voters’ roll.

At several polling stations an organisation closely aligned with Zanu-PF, the Forever Associate Zimbabwe (FAZ) set up desks 300m from voting booths.

Staff described them as “exit poll survey desks”, and asked people leaving to give their names, and at least one of the desks asked people for their identity numbers.

In parts of the Mkoba constituency in Gweru and in Harare, fake CCC posters declaring Chamisa had called for a boycott of the election were put up overnight.

Accidental drowning confirmed as what killed former White House Chef, Tafari Campbell

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The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of Massachusetts has concluded that the manner of death for former White House sous chef Tafari Campbell was an accidental drowning resulting from being submerged in a body of water.

According to Timothy McGuirk, a representative from the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security, Massachusetts does not make autopsy findings public. Nevertheless, the chief medical examiner determined that Campbell’s demise was accidental.

The Massachusetts State Police’s preliminary inquiry yielded no indications of foul play in the death of 45-year-old Campbell, as reported by The Boston Herald. The investigators did not uncover any signs of external harm or injuries on the body, according to the same source.

Campbell, a father of two who was a personal chef to former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama, died in a paddle boarding accident near the Obamas’ Katama estate in Martha’s Vineyard on July 23.

The chef, who was from Dumfries, Virginia, lost his balance while standing on a paddle board and fell into the water, another paddle boarder on the pond told police, reports the Herald. The other paddle boarder attempted to swim to Campbell, but could not reach him in time, per the Herald.

Campbell’s body was recovered by divers from a pond on Edgartown Great Road shortly before 10 a.m. ET on July 24, Massachusetts State Police had said in a news release.

“MSP Underwater Recovery Unit divers made the recovery after the victim’s body was located by Massachusetts Environmental Police Officers deploying side-scan sonar from a boat,” the department said in the release, noting the recovery was made “approximately 100 feet from shore at a depth of about eight feet.”

MSP later told PEOPLE in a statement, “Mr. Campbell was visiting Martha’s Vineyard at the time of his passing. President and Mrs. Obama were not present at the residence at the time of the accident.”

The Obamas shared a tribute to Campbell, who they called “a beloved part of our family”.

“When we first met him, he was a talented sous chef at the White House — creative and passionate about food, and its ability to bring people together,” the Obamas said in a joint statement sent to PEOPLE. “In the years that followed, we got to know him as a warm, fun, extraordinarily kind person who made all of our lives a little brighter.”

The statement continued, “That’s why, when we were getting ready to leave the White House, we asked Tafari to stay with us, and he generously agreed. He’s been part of our lives ever since, and our hearts are broken that he’s gone.”

“Today we join everyone who knew and loved Tafari — especially his wife Sherise and their twin boys, Xavier and Savin — in grieving the loss of a truly wonderful man,” they added.

In an Instagram post shared on July 24, his wife Sherise wrote: “My heart is broken. My life and our family’s life is forever changed. Please pray for me and our families as I deal with the loss of my husband.”

Chamisa faces a mountain to climb in his bid to remove Mnangagwa from power

Mufaro Boroma became eligible to vote under Zimbabwean law two years ago, but she will not be voting in her country’s general elections on Wednesday.

“I didn’t register to vote because I didn’t think my vote would change the outcome of the election,” the 20-year-old beauty therapist from Harare told Al Jazeera. “Why should I waste my time? It’s clear ED [president Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa] and ZANU-PF [the ruling party] are going to win.”

She is one of a number of Zimbabweans boycotting this month’s presidential election, believing it to be a foregone conclusion in favour of the ruling party.

“It’s like watching a delayed soccer match whose outcome you know already,” Chipo Zisengwe, a 42-year-old, told Al Jazeera in Harare.

Since Zimbabwe’s independence from Britain in 1980, only two men have led the country, both from the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU-PF), the liberation movement that morphed into a centre-left political party. It has long been accused of rigging elections using state institutions to maintain its stay in power, but ZANU-PF denies this and insists it is popular with the electorate.

‘Goliath will be slain’

Still, many remain sceptical of the electoral process.

According to a July 2023 study by Afrobarometer, only half of the country has confidence in the ability of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission to conduct credible elections. In the build-up to Wednesday’s elections, users on the social media platform X offered barbecue to incentivise people who are of age to vote, but hadn’t registered to do so.

Analysts say a low voter turnout could hurt the chances of Nelson Chamisa, the 45-year-old leader of the country’s main opposition, who has a largely youthful base.

His supporters say their frustration with the status quo stems from a floundering economy in which hyperinflation continues to decimate purchasing power. High unemployment means the majority of the population is engaged in some sort of informal work, including menial jobs like laundry services and digging fields, to survive.

This has stimulated a lot of interest in the campaign of Chamisa, leader of the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC). The candidate has promised to help create 2.5 million jobs within five years if elected. Indeed, the election is seen as a referendum on Mnangagwa’s performance in office.

But the odds are stacked against Chamisa prevailing, analysts say.

He knows this, but remains confident that he can emerge victorious.

“I’m coming armed with a stone. Goliath will be slain with a stone,” he said, fashioning himself as the Biblical David, who defeated the giant Philistine warrior, Goliath, with a slingshot.

It’s a narrative the opposition leader has been painting for some time. “This giant Goliath looks so ‘big and invincible’, but is so weak and vulnerable. It’s just a matter of time,” he said in May 2021.

Going against the machinery of the state

In 2018, Mnangagwa secured 50.8 percent of the presidential vote, barely surpassing the required 50 percent plus one vote but edging his closest rival, Chamisa, then of the Movement for Democratic Change Alliance (MDC), who received 44.3 percent of the votes.

Chamisa and his supporters claimed the election was rigged, but the courts disagreed, upholding the president’s victory.

That result helped further ingrain a “lack of trust” in the democratic process, said Stanford Nyatsanza, a public policy researcher at Zimbabwe Democracy Institute (ZDI).

“The continued conduct of disputed elections without desired outcomes scares away voters from casting their votes in the next election,” he told Al Jazeera.

To make matters worse, Chamisa and smaller opposition parties have had to work with scarce resources.

Presidential tickets were set at $20,000 by the electoral commission, denting the budget of the opposition.

Only ZANU-PF and the MDC, now the second-largest opposition party, got funding from the government for the election season. By law, funding is distributed to political parties based on the percentage of votes they garnered in elections. The CCC, which wasn’t formed until four years after the 2018 elections, has been forced to find funding elsewhere.

At a rally on Monday, Chamisa told supporters that he would not let the ruling party “steal the election” again.

But a significant lack of resources could mean that the opposition does not have “enough monitors to expose likely rigging at every polling station”, which could be “the game changer,” said ZDI researcher Bekezela Gumbo.

These challenges make the task of unseating Mnangagwa a difficult one, said Eldred Masunungure, director of the Mass Public Opinion Institute and professor at the University of Zimbabwe.

“I really doubt if Chamisa will win based on empirical evidence. If ED wins, he will do so with a comfortable margin,” he told Al Jazeera.

Chamisa’s critics also point out that his party has no organisational structure or constitution and question his ability to lead a country in dire need of stability. Despite having a “magnetic appeal”, the perception is that he is a one-man squad, Masunungure said.

“He is charismatic and that counts enormously … the downside is that his personal qualities tend to displace the organisational qualities required to run a successful organisation,” he said.

By contrast, the ruling party has the machinery of the state behind it.

When the election campaigning season commenced, Zimbabwean police barred Chamisa’s rallies while Mnangagwa was unfettered in campaigning. On Tuesday, 40 CCC faithful were arrested for holding a “car procession rally”. It is unclear whether they have been released.

Opposition supporters have also been targeted for intimidation by a shadowy group, Forever Associates of Zimbabwe, linked to Zimbabwe’s state security agency, the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO). Earlier this month, one person was killed and several others injured during an ambush of CCC supporters going to a rally in southwest Harare by those loyal to ZANU-PF.

The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission has also withheld an auditable copy of the voters’ roll from the CCC and refused to give a detailed breakdown of the register.

‘Shrinking the margin of loss’

In the last few weeks of the campaign, some of the restrictions have been removed, causing some analysts to posit that in a free and fair election, Chamisa will win against Mnangagwa.

According to a June survey by Elite Africa Research, out of 2,000 registered voters polled, 47.6 percent indicated their support for Chamisa in the presidential election, while 38.7 percent favoured President Mnangagwa. The same poll revealed that 47.7 percent of respondents were inclined to vote for Chamisa’s CCC party, whereas 39.6 percent leaned towards Mnangagwa’s ruling ZANU-PF party in the parliamentary elections.

“Independent opinion polls such as one done by Elite Africa … show that Chamisa indeed has a sling [support of the majority of registered voters]. His policy blueprint also shows that he indeed has a sling to destroy the myriad of challenges bedeviling Zimbabwe,” Gumbo told Al Jazeera.

Gumbo noted that Chamisa, like Mnangagwa, has been appealing to the Christian community, “one of the largest constituencies in Zimbabwe”. An overwhelming majority of the country – 95 percent – are Christians, and according to an Afrobarometer survey, Zimbabweans trust religious and traditional leaders.

Chamisa’s forays in rural Zimbabwe, traditional ZANU-PF strongholds, could help “in shrinking the margin of loss” and boosting his strong support in the city centres, analysts say.

Mnangagwa was seen as a hero after deposing his friend former President Robert Mugabe ahead of the 2018 election. But he has lost that goodwill, they say.

He “demonstrated that he is not able to resolve the problems faced by the electorate and has no plan to make things better as shown by his failure to even pen a manifesto,” Gumbo told Al Jazeera.

Source – Al Jazeera.

China bars importation of seafood from Japan as Tokyo starts discharging radioactive water

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China announced on Thursday that it will prohibit the importation of seafood from Japan. Japan has made the decision to discharge radioactive water from the Fukushima nuclear plant, so they are taking action.This new move has intensified the existing tension between China and Japan.

The release of this plan has caused a lot of disagreement among people. – A large number of consumers and several countries are highly opposed to it, with Beijing at the forefront of the disapproval. China expressed strong displeasure and condemned the operation initiated on Thursday afternoon as self-centered and reckless.

China’s customs department said it will no longer import any sea products from Japan. This could also affect other ocean products like sea salt and seaweed.

The action was taken to make sure that food in China does not become contaminated by radioactive materials from the water released by the Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan. This is important for the safety of Chinese people who consume the food.

Japan has been saying that it is safe to release the treated water and it needs to be done quickly to make room at the broken nuclear power plant.

The discharge started at 1 p. mThe local time was declared as midnight ET by the state-owned electricity company called Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO).

The company said it thinks it will release only about 200 or 210 cubic meters of cleaned wastewater. Starting on Friday, they will release 456 cubic meters of cleaned wastewater every day for 24 hours. In total, they will release 7,800 cubic meters over the course of 17 days.

TEPCO announced that they would stop the operation right away and look into any problems with the equipment or the level of diluted wastewater.

On Thursday, a boat will be sent to the harbor to collect samples of wastewater. These samples will be tested to make sure they meet international safety standards.

Japan experienced a very powerful earthquake and tsunami in 2011. This caused the water in the Fukushima nuclear plant to get contaminated with extremely dangerous radioactive substances. After that, they added more water to cool down the leftover fuel in the reactors. However, water from the ground and rain also got in, making the wastewater even more radioactive.

The idea to let the water go has been in progress for a long time. In 2019, officials said they were running out of room to keep the stuff and had no choice but to release it in a safe and very diluted form.

Some governments are in favor of Japan’s actions, but others strongly disagree. Many people in Asia are stockpiling salt and seafood because they are worried about the potential for pollution in the future.

The US supports Japan, and Taiwan also agrees that the amount of tritium being released should have only a small impact.

But China and the Pacific Islands have strongly expressed their disagreement, saying that the release could affect many countries in the region and around the world, and could possibly be harmful to people’s health and the ocean ecosystem.

Before China said they would stop selling seafood, they said that releasing the dirty water would cause problems for everyone and hurt future generations of people.

On Thursday, many Chinese people were very angry and sad about the release. They showed their feelings on social media, with over 800 million views on Weibo in just a few hours for a hashtag about it.

Some people agreed with the ban on seafood, but others wanted the authorities to do more. “One person suggested that we should stop allowing the sale of products from Japan. ”

Lots of people in China have mixed feelings about Japan. Despite many Chinese people liking Japanese products and culture, there are often calls to boycott everything Japanese when past conflicts resurface due to current disputes between the two countries.

In 2012, there were many protests against Japan in China’s cities because Japan made the decision to own some islands in the East China Sea that both Tokyo and Beijing said belonged to them. These protests became violent.

The complete ban on seafood and aquatic products from Japan now includes all areas affected by regulations in the past, including Fukushima and nine other regions. Earlier this week, Hong Kong said that it would not allow any food from certain parts of Japan to be brought into the city.

Mainland China and Hong Kong are Japan’s two largest markets for seafood exports. This could be a problem for Japan’s fishing industry.

Even though many people disagree, the Japanese authorities and their international supporters, like the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog, believe that the release is not harmful.

Over time, the dirty water has been regularly cleaned to remove all the bad stuff, and then kept in containers. TEPCO says that a lot of the water is treated again.

When the dirty water is let go, it will mix with clean water, which will make it have only a tiny bit of radioactive stuff in it. It will go through a tunnel underwater that is about 1 kilometer away from the coast and into the Pacific Ocean.

Other organizations like the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency will watch the release of waste both during and after it happens.

The IAEA said that they have staff members in a newly-opened office in Fukushima. They will keep an eye on the situation there for many years.

Republican debate: Candidates battle off against one another in debate without Trump

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The first debate for the 2024 presidential election witnessed Republican candidates engaging in heated arguments. In the absence of Donald Trump, they aimed to assume the leadership role.

Eight competitors gathered on a stage in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to argue about various topics including Ukraine and abortion.

While most people were hesitant to criticize Mr. Trump, a few of the candidates did criticize the absent former president.

The person who wins will compete against the Democratic candidate, most likely President Joe Biden, in November 2024.

On Wednesday night, some important people appeared on stage for a TV show on Fox News. These people were Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, South Carolina Senator Tim Scott, former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, former Vice-President Mike Pence, former Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson and North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum.

Mr DeSantis, who is currently in second place for the election, is having some difficulties with his campaign. He has made a promise multiple times to “send Biden back to his basement. ”

But even though he was in the main spotlight, the governor of Florida had a hard time getting attention during the two-hour forum compared to Vivek Ramaswamy, who is a successful new politician and billionaire.

“Do you prefer a person controlled by a super PAC, as if they were their puppet,” the 38-year-old son of immigrants from India asked, “or do you want a patriot who honestly speaks the truth. ”

Mr Pence, who has a lot of experience in debating, criticized Mr. Ramaswamy for not having much experience. He said that it is not the right time for Mr. Ramaswamy to be learning on the job. We don’t need to have someone new and inexperienced.

Christie also criticized Mr. Ramaswamy, calling him an inexperienced person, and compared his speaking style to that of a computer-generated chat program.

As the candidates argued, Ms. Haley interrupted and said, “This is exactly why Margaret Thatcher said, ‘If you want someone to speak, ask a man, if you want someone to take action, ask a woman. ‘”

The discussion showed that there were disagreements within the party regarding their stance on helping Ukraine and allowing women to have abortions.

Many of the candidates promised to support Ukraine in its conflict with Russia.

ButRamaswamy made fun of “professional politicians who will go to Kyiv like they are going on a religious journey to see President Zelensky. ”

MsHaley criticized Mr. Ramaswamy’s stance of isolating himself from other countries, stating that he lacks experience in foreign policy.

There was a disagreement about whether it should be allowed to restrict abortion all across the country.

MsHaley, the only woman on stage, expressed her belief that it is unfair to pressure women into making a decision on this matter when Republicans do not have enough votes in the Senate to successfully pass it.

MrPence responded that this was not a display of leadership.

The debate moderators asked the candidates if they would support Mr. Trump if he became the Republican nominee.

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Out of the eight people on stage, Mr. Christie and Mr. Hutchinson were the only ones who didn’t raise their hands.

Mr Christie received both negative and positive reactions when he claimed that Mr. Trump’s behavior is below what is expected of a US president.

Mr Hutchinson received louder and louder negative reactions as he claimed that Mr. Trump should not be allowed to be president.

Mr Trump did not take part in the debate because he believed he was already doing better than others in the race. Instead, he decided to have an interview with Tucker Carlson, a former host on Fox, and put it online at the same time. He did this to try and outshine the televised event.

The ex-president said he didn’t want to deal with smaller competitors bothering him. This interview got 100 million views on Twitter.

After the debate, Trump’s spokesperson Jason Miller said that even though the former president wasn’t there, he still won. He also said that Governor DeSantis’ performance signaled the start of his decline.

The argument happened shortly before Mr. Trump’s trip to Georgia, where he might be arrested for trying to overturn the 2020 election results in that state.

According to a recent poll by CBS News, Mr Trump is leading the Republican race with 62% of the votes, which is much higher than the combined total of all his opponents. This is despite his ongoing legal problems.

Mr DeSantis is in second place with 16% of the votes. Ramaswamy ranked third with a score of 7%.

Last week, a poll from Quinnipiac University showed that Mr. Trump, who is 77 years old, was nearly tied with Mr. Biden in a potential election matchup. 47% of the people surveyed supported Mr. Biden, while 46% supported Mr.

During a debate-watching event in Atlanta, Georgia, around 100 young Republican voters evaluated the candidates.

Richard Polk, who is 33 years old, believed that Mr. Trump was a good president. However, he felt that Mr. Trump often sabotaged his own efforts.

Ashlee Jackson, a voter who does not belong to any political party from the area, believed that the candidates should provide less empty phrases and more specific information about their policy stances.

The upcoming Republican debate will happen in Simi Valley, California, on September 27th.

In January, voters will start picking the person they want to support for president in a bunch of state elections called primaries. The very first primary will be held in Iowa.

The final candidate for the Republican Party will be chosen at their convention in Milwaukee in July, before the general election takes place four months later.

Zimbabwe cracks down on ‘parallel’ poll results

Zimbabwean police have arrested 39 independent election monitors working for two civil society organisations, accusing them of carrying out an illegal parallel voter tabulation exercise.

The arrests followed the extension of voting to a second day in some wards after Wednesday’s chaotic presidential, parliamentary and local government elections.

Polling stations in most urban centres failed to open on time due to non-availability of election material in a situation that sparked protests from the main opposition presidential candidate Nelson Chamisa of the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC).

Mr. Chamisa, who is fighting to unseat President Emmerson Mnangagwa from power, said there were attempts to rig the elections in the opposition strongholds.

Police said they raided centres where monitors from Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN) and Election Resource Centre (ERC) were operating from on Wednesday night.

“A raid was conducted last night (Wednesday) at Holiday Inn in Harare, at a location in Belgravia, Milton Park and also in the Grange area where several communication gadgets were recovered, which include laptops and phones,” police spokesman Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi said.

“Thirty-nine suspects were arrested. These were coordinating the alleged release of election results by some civic organisations, which are linked to the Zimbabwe Election Support Network, the Election Resource Centre and others.”

Rights group condemned the arrests, which they said were meant to stop voter tabulation.

“The arrest of the ZESN and ERC officials is part of a deliberate ploy by the state to target civil society organisations and ultimately silence their voice on the 2023 elections which has apparently failed to meet the credibility test,” the Crisis Coalition in Zimbabwe (CCiZ), a group of over 40 civil society groups, said.

“This mass arrest of the ZESN and ERC observers coupled with many other electoral malpractices puts a huge dent on the credibility of this election.”

On the eve of the elections, Zimbabwe deported at least six foreign researchers from South Africa and the United Kingdom after accusing them of trying to interfere in the polls.

The government has also refused to accredit journalists from the Voice of America’s Zimbabwe’s service while local media practitioners said they were experiencing inordinate delays in getting accreditation from the electoral commission.

The United States’ Carter Centre said its observers were also being denied accreditation and that they were being demonised by the local state-controlled media.

The European Union observer mission last week said it had taken note of “unacceptable attempts to discredit” it after state-controlled media ran stories claiming that it bribed local journalists with whiskey and groceries.

President Mnangagwa, who came to power in 2017 following a military coup that toppled strongman Robert Mugabe, has been accused of trying to rig the elections where he is seeking his last term.

He previously said he had invited foreign observers because Zimbabwe had nothing to hide as it was organising a clean election.

Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates are now BRICS Members from 1st June 2024

Leaders of the BRICS group of developing nations have invited Saudi Arabia, Iran, Ethiopia, Egypt, Argentina and the United Arab Emirates to join, in a move aimed at growing the clout of a bloc that has pledged to champion the “Global South”.

Expansion could also pave the way for dozens of interested countries to seek admission to BRICS – currently Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – at a time when geopolitical polarisation is spurring efforts by Beijing and Moscow to forge it into a viable counterweight to the West.

The new candidate members were announced by South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who is hosting a summit of BRICS leaders.

“BRICS has embarked on a new chapter in its effort to build a world that is fair, a world that is just, a world that is also inclusive and prosperous,” he said.

The new candidates will be formally admitted as members on January 1, 2024. Ramaphosa and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva left the door open to the possibility of admitting other new members in future.

“We have consensus on the first phase of this expansion process and other phases will follow,” Ramaphosa said at a media briefing.

Lula said globalisation’s promises had failed, adding that it was time to revitalise cooperation with developing countries as “there is a risk of nuclear war”, an apparent allusion to growing tensions between Russia and the West over the Ukraine conflict.

United Arab Emirates’ President Mohammed bin Zayed, whose country is already a member of the bloc’s New Development Bank (NDB), said he appreciated the inclusion of his country as a new member.

“We look forward to a continued commitment of cooperation for the prosperity, dignity and benefit of all nations and people around the world,” he posted on messaging platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

The debate over enlargement has topped the agenda at the three-day summit taking place in Johannesburg. And while all BRICS members publicly expressed support for growing the bloc, there were divisions among the leaders over how much and how quickly.

Though home to about 40 percent of the world’s population and a quarter of global gross domestic product, BRICS members’ failure to settle on a coherent vision for the bloc has long left it punching below its weight as a global political and economic player.

“This membership expansion is historic,” China’s President Xi Jinping said in remarks following the announcement on enlargement. “It shows the determination of BRICS countries for unity and cooperation with the broader developing countries.”

More than 40 countries have expressed interest in joining BRICS, say South African officials, and 22 have formally asked to be admitted.

They represent a disparate pool of potential candidates motivated largely by a desire to level a global playing field many consider rigged against them.

They are attracted by BRICS’ promise to rebalance world bodies dominated by the United States and other wealthy Western states.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the bloc’s expansion should be an example to other global institutions founded in the 20th century that have become outdated.

“The expansion and modernisation of BRICS is a message that all institutions in the world need to mould themselves according to changing times,” he said.

Ruto to hold talks with TikTok CEO amid concerns over explicit content

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Kenya’s President William Ruto has waded into the country’s TikTok controversy, in which a petitioner wants the popular social media application banned on the grounds that it is contributing to the erosion of cultural and religious morals in society.

Speaking at State House Nakuru on Wednesday, Ruto revealed that he plans to hold talks with the chief executive officer of TikTok on Thursday morning to agree on ways to “moderate content on the platform”.

“Tomorrow, I will have a discussion with the CEO of TikTok so that we can agree on modalities of moderating content on the platform, I know we have had issues with TikTok in the recent past, but I promise to resolve the matter,” he revealed.

The revelations come at a time when a petitioner has called on members of parliament to ban the use of TikTok.

Majority Leader Kimani Ichung’wa said that parliament cannot preside over the banning of the app because it has created jobs for the majority of young people.

Ichung’wa said that while the petitioner had valid concerns, his approach to a total ban was akin to fighting technology.

“The petitioner should come to seek how to regulate the use of the app, the age group and the content uploaded for a particular age to view, a total ban would kill the careers of many young people who are earning a living from it,” Ichung’wa said last week.

Nominated MP Irene Mayaka said banning the use of the app in Kenya would not solve the problems raised by the petitioner, saying that with applications such as the Virtual Private Network (VPN), one could still watch content in apps available in other countries.

She rather urged parents to monitor what their children consume on social media.

Minority Leader Opiyo Wandayi echoed Ichung’wah’s sentiments, saying the app should be regulated because it is a source of income and revenue for the government. “I believe that in this digital age, we as a country cannot afford to live in isolation or operate from an island, so it is foolhardy to consider banning another app,” he said.

“These platforms provide opportunities for our youth to find employment, especially for those who are able to create content. “

Lang’ata MP Phelix Odiwuor aka Jalang’o, a renowned content creator, has urged the government not to ban TikTok.

According to the MP, the social media platform is where the current generation wants to belong and interact.

In an interview with a local television station last Friday, Jalang’o also noted that various social media platforms are where young people are making money from content creation.

“Don’t ban Tik Tok. The young people in their thousands believe that Tik Tok is where they make their money,” he said on K24.

The petition will be reviewed by the Public Petitions Committee, which will make a decision after 60 days.

Wagner fighters threaten Putin over ‘death’ of commander Prigozhin in a plane accident

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Wagner soldiers have made a scary warning to Vladimir Putin soon after their boss Yevgeny Prigozhin was said to have died in a plane accident in Russia.

The Wagner leader who was 62 years old was in his own plane when it suddenly fell to the ground about 60 miles north of Moscow, according to officials from Russia.

According to Russia’s aviation authority, all 10 people who were on the plane are confirmed to have died. The names of the victims have been released.

Dmitry Ukin, the person who helped start the Wagner Group and worked closely with Prigozhin, was one of the people who died when the Embraer jet suddenly fell from the sky.

People have been wondering and guessing about whether or not the warlord was really on the plane that was going from Moscow to St Petersburg.

The accident near the village of Kuzhenkino in the Tver region caused suspicion because it occurred precisely two months after Prigozhin attempted to rebel against Vladimir Putin, but it didn’t last very long.

According to The Sun, Wagner fighters have threatened to launch a second protest in Moscow if their leader is not alive.
A message from a paramilitary group last night said: ‘There are rumors that the leader of Wagner PMC, Yevgeny Prigozhin, has died. ‘

We think that Putin and other Kremlin officials tried to kill him.

If we find out for sure that Prigozhin has died, we will plan another protest in Moscow called the “March of Justice”. It would be better for him to be alive because it will benefit you.

More men with guns, who say they are part of the same team, mentioned in a video on the internet that there is a lot of conversation happening about what the Wagner Group will do. We want to share something with you.

‘We are about to begin, prepare yourselves for us. ‘
Neither the UK nor US governments have made an official statement, and the Kremlin has not officially identified Prigozhin as one of the casualties.

But, government-controlled media and social media accounts connected to Wagner have said that both Prigozhin and Utkin are no longer alive.

Other people on the plane who were identified by Russian officials include Sergey Propustin, Evgeniy Makaryan, Aleksandr Totomin, Valeriy Chekalov, and Nikolay Matuseev.

The three people working on the plane were pilot Aleksei Levshin, assistant pilot Rustam Karimov, and flight attendant Kristina Raspopova.
One well-known Wagner channel, Grey Zone, said that Prigozhin died and praised him as a hero and patriot who was killed by people who betrayed Russia.

His supporters are showing their respect and sadness by lighting up his office windows in St Petersburg with a big cross at night. They also left flowers and lit candles near the offices on Thursday.

Many ideas are being talked about regarding this situation. Some people who like him think Russia is to blame, while others think Ukraine is responsible.

The Kremlin’s propaganda machine has a history of spreading false information, so there could be a possibility that disinformation is being spread.

Putin was at a concert celebrating the Soviet troops’ win in the Battle of Kursk during World War II when the accident occurred.
Abbas Gallyamov, a person who used to write speeches for Putin and now criticizes him, suggested that Putin was responsible for the crash and used it to increase his power.

“He wrote on Telegram that the government now believes it cannot go against Putin. ” Putin is very powerful and able to get back at people who have wronged him.

Bill Browder is a businessman who knows a lot about Russia and he criticizes the Kremlin. He agrees with the statement that Putin does not forgive or forget.

He appeared embarrassed and powerless while Prigozhin acted without any worry in the world (after the rebellion). He wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, that this will make his authority stronger.

The crash site of a business jet in Russia where the wreckage is found.

During his trip to California, President Joe Biden informed the reporters that he was unaware of what had occurred.

“But I am not shocked,” Mr. Biden stated ‘Putin is responsible for most of what happens in Russia. ’

Shortly after the accident, another plane owned by Prigozhin that seemed to be going to St Petersburg also, based on flight tracking information, landed at Ostafyevo airport near Moscow.

The second plane has made people think that Prigozhin might still be alive and pretending to be dead, just like he did in 2019.

But Vladimir Rogov, a person chosen by Russia to work in the partially controlled Zaporizhzhia region in Ukraine, said he spoke to Wagner leaders who confirmed that Prigozhin was on board.

We have read the reports. “If it is proven to be true, nobody should be caught off guard,” expressed the US National Security Council spokeswoman Adrienne Watson.

Keir Giles, an expert on Russia from a think-tank called Chatham House, has advised to be careful.

He said that many people have changed their name to Yevgeniy Prigozhin to make it difficult to know where he has been going.

Mr Giles said, “Don’t be surprised if he appears soon in a new video from Africa. ”

GOLD SCANDAL: Shadreck Kasanda resorts to ‘blackmail’, threatens to spill the beans

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Kasanda resorts to ‘blackmail’, threatens to spill the beans

DETAINED gold dealer Shadreck Kasanda has threatened to implicate State House if he is not immediately released from police cells.

Kasanda was arrested last Thursday in connection with a fake gold deal that unfolded at the Kenneth Kaunda International Airport over a week ago.

But in a latest twist of drama, Kasanda is now blackmailing the State to let him go or he will ‘spill the beans’.

He said he will not accept to be a stooge in the scandal and preserve the honor of influential plot one employees, when he was only trying to be a responsible whistle-blower.

Kasanda’s lawyers Makebi Zulu advocates have written a letter to the Attorney General over President Hakainde Hichilema’s commentary on the unearthed gold scam at the Airport on August 14.

Kasanda and his co-accused Mahogany Air proprietor Dr Jim Belemu, his employee Patrick Kawanu and ZamQlik solutions limited director Oswald Diangamo are facing a charge of disposing minerals suspected to be proceeds of crime.

According to the Letter Makebi Zulu advocates stated that the President commented on the criminal activities at the the airport and drew conclusions prejudicial to Kasanda having a fair trial, when he was cognisant of the judicial process.

Kasanda’s advocates said the President’s comment is honored and his sentiments cannot be taken lightly.

They claimed the decision by the State to criminally pursue Kasanda is illegal in line with Section 43(1)(2)of the public interest disclosure (protection of whistleblowers).

Kasanda’s lawyers said DEC disregarded the disclosure made by the businessman to a security personnel after it joined the investigations midway and has gone on a tagnet issuing media statements suggesting that the disclosure was inconsequential and deemed Kasanda not to have been a whistleblower.

They stated that arresting Kasanda to the exclusion of named persons behind the whole deal who include known personnel at State house who after the ordeal accompanied the President to Angola is unjust.

“Upon returning from Angola the said officials have not been interrogated or arrested,”Kasanda’s lawyers stated.

“It is our demand that the State drops the charges forthwith and release our client from unlawful detention, failing which we shall be left with no option but to commence proceedings for appropriate remedies which action shall contain full disclosure of the information.”

They proposed that since Kasanda is ‘clean’ as the late KK’s handkerchief and snitched on State house officials in good faith the State ought to have made him their witness.

“Instead the public humiliation and victimization of our client have characterized the conduct of the State in an attempt to render him a scapegoat for matters well within the State’s knowledge,” said Kasanda’s lawyers.

“Our client shall where appropriate report the known breach of the law and maladministration by the DEC to the public protector for investigations.”

By Mwaka Ndawa

Kalemba

Harry Kalaba accused of being “Gold mafia crook”

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AS the country is still trying to comprehend intricacies surrounding the recently thwarted gold scam, Democratic Party leader Harry Kalaba has been caught up in the gold scandal allegations that have engulfed many African countries, including Zambia recently.

Details of the allegations are in a clip circulated by ZimEye, an online political tabloid publication run by Zimbabwean but UK-based investigative journalist Simba Chikanza.

In the clip titled Gold mafia crook caught, Mr Kalaba thought he was getting himself a free Iphone 15, (not yet released on the market) after meeting up Mr Chikanza, an Aljazera investigative unit researcher who the politician has been communicating with for over a month.

However, the Journalist , who was filming the meet up accused Mr Kalaba of aiding to orchestrate a money laundering and gold smuggle.

The visibly emotional scribe told off Mr Kalaba of having used the Zambian flag logo on a fake video document to help mislead the public about a money laundering investigation in Zimbabwe.

He also accused the former Minister of Foreign Affairs of having worked with Zimbabwean prophet and businessman Ubert Angel who also went viral after being captured in the famous Gold mafia documentary in which he was allegedly part of orchestrating gold and money laundering deals.

The Journalist revealed in a video he captured of himself meeting Mr Kalaba in a phone shop in Lusaka, that the politician and Ubert Angel funded around USD$240 million for the chaos going on in Zimbabwe.

In an emotional dialogue, spoke passionately about the harsh conditions being faced by Zimbabweans as they take to the polls, suggesting that Mr Kalaba is part of the unrest going on in the country.

Below is part of their conversation.

Journalist: My name is Simba Chikanza, an Aljazeera journalist. I am behind the gold mafia documentary that you discredited.

I have investigated Ubert Angels origins.

What is happening honourable Kalaba is that you are a senior politician and these are Zimbabwean people who are voting today. Many of them are being beaten up and assaulted.

And so how do you reverse the damage that you caused on the Zimbabwean people?

Remember these people are voting under conditions of money laundering and gold smuggling that you yourself, honourable Kalaba helped to cover up and you created a fake video document together with Ubert Angel.

Mr Kalaba: Tries to interject in surprise.

Journalist:Do you deny that Ubert Angel prepared that script and you put a Zambian logo on it?

My people! Your people! Remember Zambia and Zimbabwe, we are one and the same?

They are voting today, mother’s are being raped! Are you checking the news?

All this is being funded by the USD$240 million that Ubert Angel and you participated in.

Mr Kalaba: How do you know that Ubert Angel is involved in this? Because you work for Aljazeera?

Journalist: Honourable Kalaba, do you deny?

Do you know who delivered that phone (purported Iphone 15) to you? Those are police officers.

Mr Kalaba: That is why I have never used it.

The Journalist further accused Mr Kalaba of abusing his position of when he was a Minister of Foreign Affairs to create falsehoods which have caused chaos in the voting system in Zimbabwe.

Later on, a man is seen trying to rough up the undeterred journalist who continued to capture the moment.

(Mwebantu)

Diplomats Can’t See Wrongs In Upnd Because They Supported HH’s Election – Mundubile

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DIPLOMATS CAN’T SEE WRONGS IN UPND BECAUSE THEY SUPPORTED HH’S ELECTION – MUNDUBILE

Thursday, 24th August 2023.

Leader of Opposition in Parliament Hon. Brian Mundubile says diplomats accredited to Zambia must stop getting involved in the country’s politics.

And Mundubile claims some diplomats are failing to see wrongs in the UPND government because they supported President Hakainde Hichilema’s election.

He was speaking following remarks by outgoing European Union Ambassador to Zambia and COMESA Jacek Jankowski who said, Monday, that the opposition in Zambia is now more free than it was under the previous regime.

“In the past during the PF government, the diplomats would point out violations of human rights. But what we have seen now is that they are getting more involved in our political space. I want to remind them like we reminded Ambassador Woolley that Zambia is a sovereign state, and when they are accredited to this country they must understand what their limits are.

They must understand their dos and don’ts. So it’s a warning, we want to warn our diplomats that let them stick to their lane, that way they will retain the rights to point out the wrongs that the government is doing, violation of human rights going forward,” Mundubile said.

Mundubile argued that a number of opposition leaders had been arrested for criticising the government and media freedoms had also shrunk under UPND.

“I don’t know what spectacles he was using to judge the political space. Under the new dawn there had been the highest number of arbitrary arrests. Political opponents of the UPND are arrested for merely speaking. You have a whole list of politicians who are in and out of police cells just because they did not agree with the UPND. So for him to say there’s been more freedom, I really don’t know what spectacle he’s using to say that. From where we stand, we think that there’s been a big reduction in democratic space.

People with opposing views can no longer speak because if you speak against the government they’ll find a reason to arrest you. So I don’t agree with the ambassador when he says he’s observed freedom. That statement does not resonate with the facts on the ground,” Mundubile said.

“Did he remember that Innocent Phiri and another cameraman were arrested at Chilufya Tayali’s house for merely doing their job. Some journalist was beaten up in Serenje, another one in Eastern province was picked up by police, there was another journalist who basically exposed the audio between a State House official and a permanent secretary, they were actually summoned. The Editor for News Diggers was summoned for merely reporting on what was happening. I think the examples are many to draw from, so I do not agree that the UPND or the opposition did not have space. HH was on radio every day, so how can he now say that it’s only now that the opposition are speaking? Harry Kalaba was speaking every day, KBF was speaking every day and many other people. So I don’t see the reason why he should draw examples that it’s only now that there’s this freedom. The UPND won power because they were able to communicate with the people, they were able to campaign freely. That’s why they are in power today”.

Mundubile claimed that most diplomats supported President Hakainde Hichilema’s election.

“We know that most of those who are having challenges now are the ones sponsored by countries that fought very hard to put President Hakainde Hichilema in power. Now they have realised that Hakainde Hichilema is failing to perform, so they would like to offer further assistance. They are actually abrogating their own rules, the international rules because they fought very hard, they worked outside their space to fight very hard and campaign for President Hakainde Hichilema. Now that they have seen that he’s failing, they are failing to admit that he has failed. They would like to portray a picture that Hakainde Hichilema and his government are actually doing something,” Mundubile said.

“This is a warning to NGOs, civic leaders and cooperating partners, the moment you take a side in politics and support a party, and that party actually wins elections, it becomes difficult for you to function effectively because you fail to point out the wrongs that that government is doing. Right now there’s no Civil Society in Zambia, the NGOs have all gone underground because they supported Hakainde Hichilema. The Cooperating partners, we saw Ambassador Woolley, we are now seeing the Ambassador from EU, they can’t see the wrongs because their sponsored candidate Hakainde Hichilema is the one governing. But if they take sides and their preferred candidates actually win, they become non-functional”.

Meanwhile, Mundubile said there was need to amend the Constitution so that political party funding flaws can be addressed.

“We want, as a country, to look at some legal reforms, particularly to do with political party funding. This is where the bigger problem comes in because we have countries that are funding political parties with an interest to come and get some benefits later. So the diplomats coming from those countries can not come with a different message, they only come with one message , to promote that particular leader whether he’s doing wrong things or right things. So we must begin to look at the issue in the Constitution,” said Mundubile.

(Credit: News Diggers)

Batuke Imenda UPND SG Needs To Be Encouraged In His Quest To See Functional Cdf Fund Application- Prof. Edgar Ng’oma

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BATUKE IMENDA UPND SG NEEDS TO BE ENCOURAGED IN HIS QUEST TO SEE FUNCTIONAL CDF FUND APPLICATION.

By: Prof. Edgar Ng’oma Political Analyst/Philosopher.

Whatever constitutional arguments and provisions that elitists may advance to question the tour of UPND Secretary General Batuke Imenda tour of constituencies to inspect CDF related projects it does not hold. In the history of Zambia, no single Secretary General of a ruling political party has ever taken such a progressive undertaking that has the potential to bring accountability to those entrusted with cash to finance projects across constituencies that has the potential to turn around the fortunes of citizens across the country. The initiative Imenda has embarked on is awesome and exceedingly progressive. As a political commentator I would be failing to isolate this case and support it as a véry necessary tool to ensure service delivery by a ruling party in government.

I have listened to laughable arguments both on social media and mainstream media as well as national broadcaster recently on ZNBC, where many who have advanced to question Imenda on his tours citing none provisions in our Republican constitution. What these interviwers have forgotten is that Imenda as a citizen of Zambia and a taxpayer has the right to ask for accountability on any civil servants who is on a taxpayer salary that he as a citizen pays. Those questioning UPND SG Imenda must also know that as a citizen Imenda can effect a citizen arrest on any one who breaks the law. Now what more that Imenda is a Chief Executive officer of a ruling party whose part of his responsibility is to insure that the manifesto of his party in government delivers according to the mandate given to the party by the citizens of Zambia.

In all fairness, Imenda must be commended for the good work he is doing. I know the job of the opposition is not to point at the progressive things a ruling party in government is doing but instead offer constructive criticism. However, the job of ordinary citizens is to see to it, that the government of the day fulfills what it promised citizens during the campaigns. And what Imenda is doing is to ensure that what that CDF fund is intended for, is fulfilled and any well meaning citizens can not have a problem with that but commend and encourage him to continue with such a progressive exercise.

In conclusion let me take time to applaud and at the same time encourage UPND Secretary General Batuke Imenda to continue with his tour of all constituencies, take the report to your central government so that they fix whatever shortcomings you discover in your report as you transverse the country. Otherwise well done Mr.SG, no former SG of a ruling party has ever done what you are doing, but instead all former SGs have been mobilising cadres to beat up citizens, grab land from citizens and illegally share it among themselves, harrass people at bus stations and markets,. But you Imenda is unique, you have brought a new progressive culture and taken a progressive role every SG of even opposition political party must emmulate.

I submit.

Prof. Edgar Ng’oma Philosopher/Political Analyst.

Statement By Hon. Chushi Kasanda, MP, Minister Of Information And Media And Chief Government Spokesperson On Suspects Seeking Public Sympathy

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STATEMENT BY HON. CHUSHI KASANDA, MP, MINISTER OF INFORMATION AND MEDIA AND CHIEF GOVERNMENT SPOKESPERSON ON SUSPECTS SEEKING PUBLIC SYMPATHY

Government wishes to express its utmost disappointment with the emerging trend where individuals commit crimes and, when confronted by the law, swiftly cry persecution by implicating His Excellency the Republican President, Mr Hakainde Hichilema, as the cause of their legal predicaments.

Government wishes to make it clear to the Zambian citizens that implicating the Republican President, in self-induced conflict with the law, is an attempt to gain public sympathy.

All well-meaning Zambians by now know that the Republican President is not responsible for the criminality of any individual, whether a politician or an ordinary citizen. The position of His Excellency the President is that every individual who engages in criminality of any sort is on their own.

The collective position of the new dawn administration is that, while we uphold citizens’ freedom of expression, those who break the law will not escape the dragnet of the law enforcement agencies by using factors such as race, gender, political affiliation, tribe or any other considerations. Under this government the law shall be applied uniformly, firmly and fairly.

This government will not tolerate a situation where individuals with criminal intent will establish political parties to facilitate illegal activities and think they will use public sympathy to escape liability.

Government wishes to urge politicians, and their supporters, to desist from holding a misguided proposition, common in the political sphere, that one must continuously violate the law and face law enforcement encounters to aspire to the position of Republican President. The law is blind to such misplaced prepositions.

Government further wishes to appeal to Zambians to condemn criminality. The trend of praising suspected criminals, without considering the impact of the alleged crimes on society, is very worrying. We should all endeavour to put ourselves in the position of those affected by the actions of the suspects, before we demonise law enforcement agencies.

Hon. Chushi Kasanda, MP
MINISTER OF INFORMATION AND MEDIA AND
CHIEF GOVERNMENT SPOKESPERSON

23rd August, 2023

CONSORTIUM OF CSOS PETITIONS HH TO UNLOCK KCM, MOPANI

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CONSORTIUM OF CSOS PETITIONS HH TO UNLOCK KCM, MOPANI

…. also requests the President to address the operation challenges at Kansenseli gold mine

Wednesday August 23, 2023 (SMART EAGLES)

A consortium of Civil Society Organizations championing the revamping of the mining industry has petitioned President Hakainde Hichilema over the slaggish progress made in revamping Konkola Copper Mine (KCM) and Mopani Copper Mine.

The consortium is also requesting the Head of State to address the operational challenges at Kansenseli gold mine.

Consortium Member Samuel Banda says this is in the interest of creating job and business opportunities for the local people.

“Fellow citizens, as a consortium that has been advocating for the resumption of the mining sector, today 23rd August 2023 we have petitioned our Republican President Hakainde Hichilema to unlock the mining sector, but particularly Konkola Copper Mines and Mopani Copper Mine,” said Mr Banda who is also Advocates for National Development and Democracy Executive Director.

“We have also requested our Republican President in our petition to address the operational challenges at Kansenseli Gold Mine. We must make it clear that in our petition, we have requested the President to unlock KCM in the interest of creating employment and business opportunities for our people. The government must also ensure that KCM pays off the debts it owes suppliers and contractors. As you may be aware, that both KCM and Mopani owes some contracted suppliers around US$200 million and these two giant mines they can only clear off these debts when they begin to operate at optimum level.”

He said he was aware that government has been into talks with Vedanta Resources over the operations of KCM and according to the Minister of Mines, only one issue is remaining to be resolved.

And Zambians for Unity Peace and Development President Ronnie Jere said the consortium has resorted to petitioning the Head of State after seeing that all engagements with the Minister of Mines have proved futile.

Mr. Jere was confident that President Hichilema would resolve this matter saying he is experienced in this area.

“We have decided to do that because we have tried other avenues of engaging the Minister of Mines but our engagements have not received any positive results. We have resorted to engage His Excellency because we know that he will help us to resolve these issues based on his previous experience in sorting out issues such as this. We know that if the mines start operating optimally, issues of unemployment for the youths who are roaming the streets will be a thing of the past,” he added.

He also said there are contractors and suppliers who have not been given their dues saying resolving this matter with the investor which is Vedanta will resolve this matter.

Niger’s Ousted President’s Daughter Advocates Democracy Restoration

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Niger‘s President Mohamed Bazoum, who was ousted by a coup d’état on 26th July and has been held captive since, remains steadfast in his determination to preserve democracy, as affirmed by his daughter in a letter published in the French daily, Le Figaro.

Zazia Bazoum Mohamed, residing in Paris, pleads for her father’s release from captivity in the presidential palace and the reinstatement of constitutional order in Niger.

She emphasises her father’s democratic election and his standing as the choice of the people. She believes he has left a positive impact both nationally and internationally, highlighting his focus on combatting corruption and promoting good governance, which has yielded progress on the economic front.

Despite his hostage situation with his family, he stands firm, valuing democratic principles and opposing military regimes. His commitment is not only for Niger’s future but also for the Sahel region and West Africa at large.

Zazia underscores that President Bazoum could have chosen an easier path, sparing his family from suffering and pursuing significant international roles. However, his resolve to protect Niger’s democracy has led him to reject such options.

The soldiers responsible for the coup, which occurred just before the 2021 election in which Bazoum was due to participate, justified their actions by citing the deteriorating security situation.

Zazia dismisses these justifications as entirely baseless. She points out that all the terrorist attacks mentioned by the coup leaders occurred prior to her father’s presidency. Furthermore, those responsible for the coup and the associated problems were already part of the system they criticise.

Moreover, she highlights the alarming surge in terrorist attacks since the country’s takeover, with over seven attacks resulting in numerous casualties in a mere three weeks.

Efforts to resolve the crisis are challenging, as the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) demands the immediate release of Mohamed Bazoum and his reinstatement. However, the military junta remains resistant.

While ECOWAS has contemplated military intervention, diplomacy has been the preferred approach, yet with little success thus far.

Zazia Bazoum Mohamed contemplates a potential connection between her family’s plight and Niger’s imminent transition into an oil-exporting nation in three months’ time.

She suggests that the coup leaders fear that her father, in power, would ensure that the benefits of oil wealth would be directed towards the people of Niger rather than a self-proclaimed elite.

Ballot paper delays mar voting in Harare and Bulawayo

Finance minister Mthuli Ncube was among thousands of voters who had to temporarily turn back and head home or endure long hours in queue as widespread delays have marred the opening of polling stations across the country.
Polls will close at 7pm but there were reports of delays at some polling stations nationwide as the necessary documentation had not been delivered on time.

ZEC said that due to the delays, polling stations which opened late will have their voting times extended by the length of the delay.

“Delays in the opening have largely been caused by delays in printing of the ballot papers arising from court challenges. This has been the case with Harare and Bulawayo provinces,” ZEC said in a statement.

“The public is advised that all polling stations that opened late for reasons beyond the control of the presiding officer will remain open to cater for the period of the delay, keeping in mind the polling station must remain open for a continuous period of at least 12 hours on polling day,” the statement added.

At 12PM, Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube, standing for Zanu PF MP in Cowdray Park, arrived at his polling station, checked his name on voters roll and left. No ballot papers, no voting yet.

In Mutasa North Ward 28, voters were still waiting to vote as local government ballots were yet to be distributed across the ward, presenting problems relating to lighting and power later in the day.

At Ruwa Primary, the Election Resource Centre reported that Police had to be dispatched outside the polling station as some unidentified polling agents were recording names of people leaving the polling station. Culprits disappeared when police came out.

Commencement of voting was delayed at Bulawayo’s largest polling station, the Large City Hall, which had no ballot papers as of 9.30AM.

At Waterfalls Uplands shops tent, six people voted before they were advised that ballot papers had run out. At Mutare Junior polling station people were queuing outside as of 9.50AM as ballot papers had not yet arrived. Voters were still lining up at Waterfalls Primary School despite ballot papers being yet to be delivered as at 10.05AM.

The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) said it will take five days to announce the official results, although preliminary results are expected sooner.

Zimbabwe sets extra day of voting in selected wards after delays

Zimbabwe has extended voting in selected wards by a day after the late distribution of ballot papers delayed polling, according to a presidential decree issued late Wednesday.

Voters in the southern African country waited for hours to vote on Wednesday, saying they were hungry for change from economic chaos, but analysts were sceptical that the ruling ZANU-PF party would allow a credible election or any loosening of its stranglehold on power.

According to Zimbabwean law, voting is supposed to take place within one day.

The presidential notice listed 40 wards it said were affected by the delays. Although the named areas make up less than 1% of the country’s 12,374 wards, they include 11 wards in the capital Harare, which has the highest number of registered voters.

According a notice from President Emmerson Mnangagwa announcing the extra day, the affected wards are in three of Zimbabwe’s 10 provinces – opposition stronghold Harare, Mashonaland Central, where the ruling party is traditionally dominant, and Manicaland, which is a key battleground.

Mnangagwa is seeking re-election after a first term during which runaway inflation, currency shortages and sky-high unemployment left many Zimbabweans reliant on dollar remittances from relatives abroad to make ends meet.

Mnangagwa, 80, took over when longtime strongman Robert Mugabe was toppled in a 2017 military coup. He faces 10 other candidates, including his main challenger, lawyer and pastor Nelson Chamisa, 45, of the Citizens Coalition for Change.

“I am expecting change. We are struggling and hungry,” said Mabel Fambi, 67, who cares for five of her grandchildren because their parents cannot find jobs.

She was waiting to cast her ballot in the Kuwadzana constituency in the capital Harare.

In Harare and the country’s second biggest city Bulawayo, both opposition strongholds, a significant number of polling stations opened hours late, forcing voters to wait for most of the day.

“I see this delay as a deliberate attempt to disenfranchise me,” said Fortune Sikireta, who had been waiting to vote since dawn at Maranatha Christian High School in the middle-income Harare suburb of Tynwald. By late afternoon he had yet to vote but was determined to see it through.

The electoral commission blamed the delays on late printing of ballot papers caused by court challenges, saying in a morning statement that only 23% of Harare’s polling stations had opened on time.

Few or no delays were reported in other parts of the country.

Analysts said that, as in previous Zimbabwean elections, ZANU-PF, which has been in power for 43 years, had been using state institutions to ensure it would stay in power.

“The electoral playing field is heavily skewed in favour of the ruling party,” said private firm Africa Risk Consulting.

Zimbabwe’s chances of resolving a debt crisis and obtaining World Bank and International Monetary Fund loans are at stake, as foreign lenders have said a free and fair election is a pre-condition for any meaningful talks.

“We want change. We want a younger president,” said shoe mender Jonathan Darare, 47, who came out early to vote in Kuwadzana.

Polls had been scheduled to open at 7 a.m. (0500 GMT) and close at 7 p.m., with some 6.6 million people registered to vote in the nation of about 15 million. Parliamentary results are expected to trickle in on Thursday morning. The presidential result is expected later, though well ahead of a five-day deadline.

Chamisa was mobbed by supporters chanting his name as he arrived to vote in Kuwadzana. He predicted he would win but said the ruling party and the electoral commission would seek to deny him his victory.

“Funny games or no funny games, our victory is certain. We are going to continue to insist on a credible election and making sure we have a legitimate result out of this election,” he said.

The government and the electoral commission have said the election would be free and fair.

Mnangagwa voted at Sherwood Primary School in the city of Kwekwe.

The Zimbabwe dollar has fallen by about 85% since the start of 2023 and inflation has reached triple digits, pushing people deeper into poverty in a nation where only 30% hold formal jobs.

“Five years into Mnangagwa’s rule, conditions have not changed much from the Mugabe era,” said Africa Risk Consulting.

The Economist Intelligence Unit predicted Mnangagwa and Zanu PF would win by a narrower margin and not by fair means, raising the risk of disputes over the results and public protests.

To win the presidency, a candidate must get more than 50% of the vote. If there is no outright winner, a run-off between the top two candidates will be held on October 2.

Parliamentary and local council candidates only need a simple majority of votes cast.

Ethiopia announces joint Saudi probe into alleged migrant killings

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What happened to Ethiopian migrants at the Yemeni-Saudi border between March 2022 and June 2023?

That is what Ethiopia intends to uncover. The Foreign ministry tweeted Tuesday (Aug. 22) that the government will jointly investigate with Saudi authorities a report by a human rights group of killings of hundreds of its nationals.

The ministry called for restraint and advised against making “unnecessary speculation until an investigation is completed,” saying the two countries “enjoy excellent longstanding relations.”

A Saudi government official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly, called the Human Rights Watch report “unfounded and not based on reliable sources,” but did not offer evidence to support the assertion.

US-based group Human Rights Watch released a report on Monday citing eyewitness accounts of attacks by border guards in Saudi Arabia using machine guns and mortars on unarmed Ethiopians trying to cross into the kingdom from Yemen.

United Nations spokesman Stephane Dujarric called the report “very concerning” but noted the “serious” allegations were difficult to verify.

The United Nations has already questioned Saudi Arabia about its troops opening fire on migrants in an escalating pattern of attacks along its southern border with war-torn Yemen.

Last year, UN experts reported “concerning allegations” that “cross-border artillery shelling and small-arms fire by Saudi Arabia security forces killed approximately 430 migrants” in southern Saudi Arabia and northern Yemen during the first four months of 2022.

The HRW report points to a surge in abuses along the perilous migrant route from the Horn of Africa to oil-rich Saudi Arabia, where hundreds of thousands of Ethiopians live and work.

Calls for probe
Washington, a long-time ally of Riyadh, urged “a thorough and transparent investigation” into the accusations.

The European Union noted with “concern” the HRW claims and plans to raise them with Riyadh and with the Huthi rebels who control strategic parts of Yemen, a spokesman, Peter Stano, said Tuesday.

“We welcome the announcement by the government of Ethiopia, specifically, to investigate the whole issue together with the authorities in Saudi Arabia,” he said.

ZIM ELECTIONS: Police Threatens Arrest Voters For Obeying The Law On Placating Results At Polling Stations

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STATEMENT BY THE COMMISSIONER-GENERAL OF POLICE ON THE ZIMBABWE REPUBLIC POLICE’S STATE OF PREPAREDNESS FOR THE ELECTIONS DAY AND THE PRECEDING PERIOD
As the country heads for the anticipated Harmonized Elections tomorrow, 23rd August 2023, the Zimbabwe Republic Police reiterates that the security environment is indeed peaceful for the nation to hold free, fair, peaceful and credible elections.


My office has deployed appropriate levels of police officers at all polling stations, collation, constituency, provincial and National Command Centres to ensure that effective law and order is maintained during the voting process and thereafter. However, the Zimbabwe Republic Police is concerned with political utterances by some political leaders that they will not accept election results which are not in their favour and at the same time calling upon voters to gather at polling stations after casting their votes in what they call defend your vote through REP (Register, Elect and Protect).


As if that is not enough, we have noted that some purported civic organisations such as Team Pachedu and others are sending messages on social media platforms mobilizing the public to gather within the 301 metre-radius at polling stations while waiting for the election results.
May I therefore remind Zimbabweans and visitors that the country’s law enforcement agents are mandated to protect the internal security of the country without any form of hesitation or compromise. Above all, the public should take note that the Electoral Act, Chapter 2:13 is not the only piece of legislation that regulate public gatherings. We have also the Maintenance of Order and Peace Act Chapter 11:23 which clearly stipulates that among other public gatherings, all politically inclined gatherings must be duly notified and subsequently sanctioned by the relevant regulating authority.


In this regard, any gatherings at polling stations, collation, constituency, provincial and National Command Centres are unlawful. Any gatherings outside polling stations shall be dealt with in terms of the Maintenance of Order and Peace Act, Chapter 11:23. My office will indeed invoke the necessary security measures to maintain law and order without fear or favour in the country.
Unruly elements bent on causing chaos, alarm and despondency in the country are accordingly warned.


The Zimbabwe Republic Police is also aware that some civic organizations claim that they have put measures in place to announce the results on 24th August 2023 through statistics availed by some party polling agents. In terms of the Electoral Act, Chapter 2:13, it is the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission only who has the legal mandate to announce the election results in the country. Therefore, any deviation from the legal provisions shall be dealt with according to the country’s laws.


I also urge the voters to peacefully cast their votes and go back home, to church or any socio-economic activity one is set to conduct. No gatherings shall be allowed by the Police at polling stations.

The public should feel free to conduct various family. business and other social activities with no disruption as police officers are firm on the ground for their safety.

HH STOP THE ROT – CREATE DECENCY IN POLITICS AND SOCIETY- Lucky Mulusa

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HH STOP THE ROT – CREATE DECENCY IN POLITICS AND SOCIETY

By: Lucky Mulusa

What happened to former President Edgar Lungu (ECL) and his entourage in Mambwe district over the weekend deserves to be condemned by all right-thinking citizens and the behavior of who ever was behind it, corrected through guidance by President Hakainde Hichilema (HH).

It will be gross leadership failure on the part of President HH if he doesn’t condemn, correct the despicable behavior, and provide guidance to help create a better society during and beyond his tenure of office.

It is very unfortunate for a leader whether deliberately or by ineptitude to leave behind a less than decent society one was entrusted to lead. It is also fraudulent for a leader to campaign on a ticket of change and get entrusted with power by the nation, only to come and use that position of trust to settle personal grudges for any suffering endured during one’s walk to a position of leadership. It is also fraudulent for one to have convincing points of campaign only to come and abrogate almost all of them and leave behind a shocked voter.

The culture of violence, lack of respect for elders, politically motivated deaths, ineptitude and several other negative vises can only get worse and karma will bring it around to bare on you as well once your time is up and you no longer enjoy the trappings of power and influence.

HH search your soul. When you were hounded through the roof, out of that radio station by cadres on the Copperbelt, when you were detained for four months an endurance which was out of all proportions to the offence committed, when your cadres and innocent citizens lost their lives, you were energized and your commitment to lead and create a better society was energized too. Are you governing by that spirit? Are you living up to people’s trust in your governance? Do not govern by the failures of the previous regime as a standard measure of your performance. Your people’s argument that you also used to be stopped from freely going about your activities lacks wisdom.

STATE NOT READY IN THE HABEAS CORPUS HEARING INVOLVING FOUR FOREIGNERS IN THE GOLD-CASH GATE SCANDAL

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STATE NOT READY IN THE HABEAS CORPUS HEARING INVOLVING FOUR FOREIGNERS IN THE GOLD-CASH GATE SCANDAL

THE habeas corpus hearing involving four foreigners, among them Egyptians in the ‘gold scam’ case, failed to proceed today because the State was not ready.

In the application for habeas corpus, the four foreigners are challenging their continued detention without being formally charged or taken to court.

The four foreigners want a Judge to assess the legality of their continued detention.

But when the case was called today for inter-parte habeas corpus application hearing, the State informed the court that it was not ready to proceed because it had received instructions today in the morning.

A State advocate however informed the court that the State will file the documents and serve them on the lawyers for the four applicants.

The matter has since been adjourned to September 1,2023.

The four foreigners are Ali Abdulla Ali Al-Safi, a Saint Kitts and Nevis national resident in Egypt, Noha Salaheldin Aly Nadim, an Egyptian, David De La Cruz Castilla, a Spaniard national and Teunis De Mooij, a Spaniard.

Through their lawyers, the four submitted in the High Court that they were engaged as a crew pilots in-flight service attendants by Flying Group Middle East FZCO, the operations and management company that runs the Bambardier Global XRS, serial No SN9159 and registration No. T7-WSS.

They say that on August 14, 2023, DEC officers and other investigators detained them at the Kenneth Kaunda International Airport (KKIA) on suspicion of, among others, money laundering.

They contend that their detention was on unfounded grounds.

Upon hearing of their detention at the KKIA, Flying Group Middle East FZCO engaged lawyers, Lungu Simwanza and Company and Andrew Musukwa and Company, to represent them.

They submit that on August 14 and 15, despite their numerous protests, the four were denied access to their lawyers and vice versa.

They complain that they were not provided access to basics like food and water at Chelstone police station where they are currently detained.

The four submit that they were only allowed access to their lawyers last week Wednesday after being transported to the National Command Center, in Lusaka’s Sikanze Police Camp where they were held from 09:00hours to 23:00hours before being warned and cautioned for allegedly giving false information to a public servant.

They further add that the offence they were cautioned for is purportedly contrary to section 106(a) of the Penal Code Chapter 87 of the Laws of Zambia but argue that the section is non-existent as it has been repealed.

The four submit that investigators informed them that they cannot be released on bond until further notice because investigations are yet to be concluded.

Mr Al-Safi and others have accused the police at Chelstone of abusing their powers by declining to grant them bond considering that they have neither been changed nor taken to court from the time they were detained.

They further complain that their continued detention is against their rights.

(Credit @Mwebantu, Wednesday, 23rd August, 2023)

HICHILEMA MUST STOP GAMBLING WITH MEALIE MEAL- Fred M’membe

HICHILEMA MUST STOP GAMBLING WITH MEALIE MEAL

Why are Mr Hakainde Hichilema and his league gambling with mealie meal? Why are they changing policy every day? Does this government know what it is doing?

This country currently faces serious mealie meal challenges, which have resulted in shortages of nshima in many households. People are desperately seeking solutions to these challenges but all this government can do is fidget or mess around with mealie meal supply and pricing policy in an irresponsible fashion.

Will this leadership ever be serious enough to take care of the numerous problems our people face? This is the highest form of recklessness and sheer incompetence.

Looking at the indecision, clumsiness, lack of patriotism and love for the people exhibited by Mr Hichilema so far, it is correct for us prepare Zambians to expect the worst because this government has failed to navigate the mealie meal challenges and ultimately guarantee stable national food security and sovereignty.

The Zambian people must know that the underlying cause of these unstable and high mealie meal prices is Mr Hichilema’s excessive loyalty to commercial interests and profits at the expense of starving Zambians. This is typical of far-right governments and leaders, including Mr Hichilema.

We want to repeat the counsel we offered him last month that he must be extremely cautious with the manner in which he is handling the mealie meal situation in the country. History has shown that the poor have never been friendly in their response to unprecedented high food prices. When their lives and wellbeing are threatened due to unaffordable food prices, the poor have always sought solutions differently and in their own way. But there is no need to tempt people to reach such desperate levels.

Let this government acknowledge that its failure to manage mealie meal supply and prices poses a serious security risk both in the short and long term. Let it prioritise the supply chain and ensure that mealie meal pricing is affordable and consistent. It must guarantee food security for every household in the country, thereby creating a cohesive society.

The mealie meal situation is unbearable and citizens have been inconvenienced and have had to wrestle with prohibitive prices for a while. This situation can’t continue.

The writing on the wall is so clear: Mr Hichilema and his corrupt puppet regime have failed.

One bad term doesn’t deserve another, aleya!

Fred M’membe
President of Socialist Party

Police charge widow with hubby’s murder

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Police charge widow with hubby’s murder

WIDOWED Ministry of Finance assistant director Mildred Mwila Kasase has been charged with the murder of her husband Alex Kanyama Zulu.

Zambia Police Service spokesperson Rae Hamoonga confirmed to Kalemba in a statement that Kasase had been charged along with her 20-year old son, Madiba Alex Zulu Junior.

#Below is the background of story!

Police hold MoF assistant director over hubby’s death

Police in Lusaka have arrested a 47-year old assistant director at the ministry of Finace Mwila Kasase, accused of murdering her husband, Alex Kanyama Zulu.

Following his death last week, Kasase took her grief to Facebook wondering how she would mourn her husband.

“My husband, this has broken me. Chafina how, how…..My God why 😭😭😭 I am so lost for for words. How do i even mourn you! How will i live without you! Bashi Madiba this hurts so deep,” she posted.

However, following Zulu’s burial, suspicious relatives proded Police to investigate the matter upon which the findings were heart-wrenching.

Police found that Zulu actually died from a painful beating at the hands of his wife and two sons for delaying to bring back the family car while out on business duty.

Initial reports indicate that the victim, Zulu, had ventured out for business affairs within Lusaka, returning home well into the night.

At that time, his wife, Kasase had been visiting a friend, momentarily absent from the home.

The narrative took a dramatic twist when Kasase contacted her son, Madiba Zulu, instructing him to retrieve her from the friend’s location, using her husband’s motor vehicle.

A hitch emerged when it was discovered that the vehicle was unavailable, given that Zulu had not yet returned.

In frustration Kasase’s went for alternate transportation back home but could hardly contain her agitation.

However, her return marked the beginning of a sinister chapter, as she allegedly joined forces with Madiba Zulu to teach her husband a physical lesson on returning home early.

In the brutal attack, unconventional weaponry, including a plunk and various kitchen utensils were used.

The suspicious circumstances surrounding the husband’s untimely death prompted his relatives to demand a comprehensive post-mortem investigation.

Yesterday, at approximately 12:30 hours, the lifeless body of Alex Zulu was exhumed for a thorough post-mortem examination, conducted within the confines of the graveyard.

The findings unveiled a grim tale of suffering – the deceased had endured broken bones, fractured limbs, shattered ribs, and an agonizing array of bodily injuries, all attributed to the alleged assault.

Police spokesperson Rae Hamoonga confirmed the incident stating investigations were still ongoing.

From police cells, Kasase and her son now await the VISA formalities of a long stay in jail where they will not stress about delayed arrival of vehicles as the Zambia Correctional Service has enough transportarion to transfer them to any prison facility within the country.

By Moses Makwaya

Kalemba

One Bad Term Doesn’t Deserve Another, Hichilema Aleya!- Fred M’membe

ONE BAD TERM DOESN’T DESERVE ANOTHER, HICHILEMA ALEYA!

We were back at the police yesterday because Mr Hakainde Hichilema and his far-right corrupt, puppet regime is being haunted by our exponential growth, support, and solidarity among the poor masses of this country.

Mr Hichilema is unsettled by the fact that more and more of our people, including his own supporters, agree with our message and vision for a more equal, fair, just and united Zambia.

Our people have read through this one-term puppet regime’s corrupt and divisive rhetoric and have resolved to correct the mistake they made in the last general election.

Even Mr Hichilema and the masters who control him know that we not only support our people, but that more and more of our people, especially the poor masses, heavily support us too.

This is why Mr Hichilema and his league are desperate and willing to practise autocracy while preaching democracy. But we fully understand what is happening to them and how this unstoppable mass movement of the people affects them.

We know this, and global history has shown that the more corrupt a regime becomes, the more intolerant and repressive it is towards opposition political parties and critical voices. And what we are facing today is the standard outcome that unfolds whenever a regime’s corrupt, incompetent, and authoritarian path is unmasked.

But we have a message for Mr Hichilema and his league, and that is: “The struggle to liberate our people from poverty and squalor will never die. This is one struggle we are willing to sacrifice and pay a heavy price for”.

So, let them know they’re in for a tough fight with us as we pursue justice, equity, and peace.

We will not be deterred by scared, evil puppets and their equally evil masters, who are willing to strangle our people with poverty while they greedily share our minerals and natural resources.

Time is ticking and time will tell. The damage being done to our country will be accounted for someday soon by those inflicting severe losses, suffering, and destruction on innocent people.

Our people have suffered indignity and injustice from imperialists and their puppet regimes, such as the one governing our country today, for far too long.

One bad term doesn’t deserve another, aleya!

Fred M’membe
President of the Socialist Party

Socialist Party President Fred M’membe Released on Bail After Assault Charges

M’MEMBE CHARGED WITH ASSAULT, RELEASED ON BOND

Police in Lusaka have arrested and charged Socialist Party President Dr. Fred M’membe with one count of acts intended to cause grievous Bodily harm and two counts of assault occasioning actual bodily harm.

Ibex Hill Police station yesterday arrested and charged Dr. Fred M’membe aged 64 of house 7354 Nangwenya road in Lusaka for the offence of Acts intended to cause grievous Bodily harm contrary to Section 224 of the Penal Code Act Chapter 87 of the Laws of Zambia.

Dr. Fred M’membe has further been jointly arrested and charged with M/Daniel Mumba aged 44 of Chamboli in Kitwe for two counts of Assault Occasioning Actual Bodily Harm (OABH) contrary to Section 248 of the Penal Code Act chapter 87 of the Laws of Zambia.

Brief facts of the matter are that in the first count: It is alleged that Dr. Fred M’membe on April 8, 2023 between 14:00 hours and 18:45 hours at four ways Kamilamba at Mulilima area in Serenje District of the Central Province of the Republic of Zambia with intent to maim, disfigure or disable or do some grievous harm did shoot at M/Emmauel Simposya using a firearm pistol bearing serial number A7988 CZ 97B causing him to sustain injuries on the head.

In the second count: It is alleged that on April 8, 2023 between 14:00 hours and 18:45 hours at four ways Kamilamba at Mulilima area in Serenje District of the Central Police of the Republic of Zambia jointly and whilst acting together with M/Daniel Mumba and others persons unknown, did assault M/Emmanuel Simposya thereby occasioning an actual bodily harm on him.

And in the third count: It is alleged that Dr. Fred M’membe on April 8, 2023 between 14:00 hours and 18:45 hours at four ways Kamilamba at Mulilima area in Serenje District of the Central Province of the Republic of Zambia jointly and whilst acting together with M/Daniel Mumba and others Persons unknown did assault M/Haggai Kwenda thereby causing him occasioning actual bodily harm.

The duo have since been granted police bond but are expected to appear in court soon.

COST OF LIVING TO KICK OUT UPND IN 2026 – FRANK NG’AMBI

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COST OF LIVING TO KICK OUT UPND IN 2026 – FRANK NG’AMBI

….says hunger will unite the people and compel them to change Government

Ndola, Tuesday, August 22, 2023 ( Smart Eagles )

Patriotic Front (PF) Chairperson for Industries Frank Ng’ambi has said the prevailing high cost of living will force the people of Zambia to vote out the UPND Government in 2026.

Mr. Ng’ambi, the immediate past Chifubu Member of Parliament, said hunger will unite the people and compel them to change Government in 2026.

Commenting on the UPND’s first two years in office, the former lawmaker described the first two years of the UPND regime in office as failure.

He said the people changed Government in 2021 with the hope that the New Dawn Government would improve their welfare.

The cost of living for a family of five as measured by the Jesuit Centre for Theological Reflection (JCTR) for the month of July 2023 in Lusaka, stood at K9, 301.18 in comparison to the recorded figure of K9, 239.45 in June 2023, signifying an increase of K61.73.

The average cost of living across all towns monitored stood at K6, 752.91, reflecting an increase of K236.64 in comparison to June 2023.

“People change governments to better their living standards. Any government that fails to improve the living standards of its people is a failed Government and the people would want that Government replaced. Fundamentally as a member of the community I want to support something that will improve my quality of life. As long as growth and prosperity does not fall within the benchmark of any government for me it means it is a failed Government,” Mr. Ng’ambi said.

“Let’s look at the survival of our majority Zambians, the first thing that we want to look at is pa mala (stomach). We left the bag of mealie meal at K120; it is now over K300, cooking oil, fuel, bus fares and so on. All these have had their prices increased to the extent of some of them being doubled. Yes, the prices of goods and services have gone up, do we have a corresponding salary structure that has responded to the increased cost of goods and services. The answer is no. Do we have a business environment that has provided growth for small and medium scale businesses? The answer is no. So when these fundamentals are not addressed, no matter what English you are going to use, no matter what grammar you are going to use, people’s homes will speak to them,” he said.

Mr. Ng’ambi cautioned UPND praise singers against misleading the Government with praises

“I am a very happy leader that this UPND Government will be booted out of office in 2026. Why do I say that? I know that hunger will unite the people of Zambia to vote out the UPND. For me the two years of UPND in government is a failure, this is a failed Government and urging the Zambian people especially those praise singers to stop praising this government because we go to the same shops, we board the same buses. My description of UPND under the leadership of President Hakainde Hichilema is that it is a failed leadership,” he said.

But UPND Copperbelt Youth Chairman Wallen Hinyama has said the New Dawn government is making frantic efforts to lower the cost of living.

Mr. Hinyama said the UPND regime has performed well in the last two years it has been in office.

Foreign Gold Scam Suspect Sues State Over Illegal Detention

More gold ‘mafia’ demand release from detention

FIVE more suspects involved in the frustrated gold scam have continued to pester law enforcement agencies for their release from detention.

Ali Abdulla Al-Safi, Noha Nadim an Egyptian national, David De-la Cruz Castilla a Spanish national, Tennis De-mooiy a Dutch national and ZamQlik solutions limited director Oswald Diangamo have filed writs of Habeas corpus before the High Court demanding that law enforcement officers appear before an adjudicator to explain why they continue to be detained on bailable charges.

According to an affidavit in support of ex-parte summons for leave to issue a writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum, the foreign nationals indicted that they were engaged as pilots and flight attendants by Flying Group Middle East FZCA, the operations and management company that runs the Bambardier Global XRS, serial No SN9159 and registration No. T7-WSS.

They said on August 14, 2023, they were detained by the Drug Enforcement Commission and other law enforcement agencies on allegations of money laundering among other charges at the Kenneth Kaunda International Airport (KKIA) on unfounded grounds

The quartet said following its arrest, its employers engaged lawyers to represent them and give them an update.

The four said on August 16, 2023 they were charged with an offence of giving false information to a public servant contrary to a purported section 106(a) of the penal code, chapter 87 of the laws of Zambia.

They said according to their lawyers the cited section was repealed.

The four stated that the citing of repealed law is a scheme to infringe on their basic human rights.

“We have been informed by the joint team of law enforcement agencies that we could not be released on police bond until further notice as they have not yet concluded their investigations,” the suspects said.

The foreign nationals said the joint team of law enforcement officers are abusing their power by refusing to grant them police bond or arraign them before Court.

They said their continued detention is unconstitutional as their fundamental rights to freedom and liberty are being blatantly violated.

“It is only fair and just that a writ of Habeas Corpus Ad Subjiciendum be issued forthwith to secure our protection under the law. This is the only available interim means by which validity of our unjustifiable continued detention can be effectively questioned,”said the foreign nationals.

“We strongly believe an order for our release will prevent the high likelihood of any delay by our custodians defeating the due course of justice. We are foreign nationals who have never been to Zambia and have no relations who can offer us solidarity or provide us with essential necessities during our unlawful detention which leaves us at the mercy of the police and DEC.”

Diangamo indicated that he was charged with the offence of disposing of property suspected to be proceeds of crime.

He said the offence he is charged with is bailable and he has sureties ready to sign for his release but he has not been granted police bond by the State.

Diangamo said he has been held in a police cell under unsanitary conditions by the police at Kabwata police station and the law enforcement officers have not given a valid reason for his continued detention.

He said the delay in granting him bond is unreasonable and unconstitutional.

Diangamo requested that the Court issues a writ of Habeas Corpus so that the officers can explain their inordinate delay to release him from detention.

By Mwaka Ndawa

Kalemba August 23, 2023.

I thank God PF lost 2021 general elections- Chilufya Tayali

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EEP President Chilufya Tayali

HOW TO GET, KEEP AND LOSE POLITICAL POWER IN ZAMBIA (PART 1)

Think of how many people have been hacked, or shot to death in political violence or fighting to change Govts. Others have sustained life changing wounds, while others have been sent to jail due to political differences or conflicts.

Dr Chris Zumani Zimba is in prison without a conviction because of politics, not because he is a criminal.

Make no mistake to think politics is like walk in the park, “politics teyabana iyoo” (it’s not a child’s play), it can be a war with casualties and fatalities, anywhere in the World, including America.

Zambia is no exceptional in fighting for political power, though not so extreme, albeit being a democratic Country.

Truth be told, ALL our Govts have not lived up to the tents of democracy par excellence, they have cut corners and abused their power in various ways to keep political power.

Those in Govt create and empower systems that ensure that their power is protected right up to the smallest community through #CADRISM.

To finance cadrism, corruption, illegal taxes and thuggery is employed. This has happened in all our successive regimes.

Political parties that have ascended into power, have done so at a great cost, in terms of resources, people going to prison, casualties and unfortunately, even loss of lives.

During UNIP we had vigilantes and the famous “By Air” where opponents, or citizens with dissenting views, were violently lifted shoulder high and taken to UNIP offices and beaten like children.

MMD became even more deadly, they introduced machetes (eg Chawama incidence) and abduction of opponents. They could easily pick you in the middle of CBD, bundle you in a car to unknown place and beat you up.

Do you remember the Iron Lady “Nakawala”? Bowman was also very famous in beating up people, as a cadre of whoever paid him.

Then we had PF who employed everything, including using the police to fight their opponents or anyone who did not agree with them. If you are not beaten by cadres, then the police will corner you, harass and detain you at WILL.

I have forgiven but will never forget, the way PF treated me in May of 2021; it was very brutal and they meant business to send me to jail. Honestly speaking I could have been in jail by now, if PF had won 2021 general elections.

I will forever live to appreciate Mutembo Nchito SC, for fighting for me, during that difficult time. When I think of Joseph Mweenda, in relation to that time, I see him as the Biblical Peter, he made sure my wife was okay and facilitated Mutembo to save me from the jaws of the lion.

McDonald Chipenzi came in to sign bond when no other person could. I am very grateful to all these people.

Though on Principle I voted for Edgar Lungu, but I thank God PF lost 2021 general elections. I know some of you may not understand that, especially if we even bring in “Alebwelelapo” issues, but one day I will explain.

We are now, under UPND and they are no better than other political parties that have ruled this Country. UPND is behaving as if PF was their teacher and they are doing even more than what they learnt.

Since they came into power, I have been arrested nine times and I guess I am still counting, unless I completely shut-up.

UPND is determined to send me to jail, not because I am a criminal but they hate the fact that I confront them on their failures and bad governance.

Of course other political leaders, especially those in PF, have been arrested and more will be arrested. I am not talking about those who genuinely stole our money, or broke the law.

The question is, why do all these political parties engage in violence, both the ruling and opposition?

I will try to give my views on this by analyzing how political parties can get, keep and lose political power in Zambia.

In my next article on this, I will discuss how to get political power in Zambia. I am trying to keep it short because most of you don’t like reading.

TAYALI THE PUBLIC LAWYER OF THE PUBLIC COURT OF OPINIONS!!!

THE INSPECTOR GENERAL OF POLICE SHOULD NEVER PORTRAY GLARING INEPTITUDEAND INCOMPETENCE IN UNIFORM- Edwin Lifwekelo

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PRESS STATEMENT FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE.

THE INSPECTOR GENERAL OF POLICE SHOULD NEVER PORTRAY GLARING INEPTITUDE
AND INCOMPETENCE IN UNIFORM…

Lusaka………23rd August 2023

Silence is golden but does the Political cadre otherwise known as Inspector General of Zambia Police care?

Silence when everyone expects you to say something is a sign of intelligence coupled with great wisdom. Men of wisdom through out ages spoke when it became necessary to speak and only with facts. Anything else is a sign of
foolishness.

In higher offices of public service it is paramount that those occupying those offices rarely speak unless they have something to say and have all the facts on the table otherwise it becomes the routine comments of a glorified political cadre but in Police uniform of Zambia Police Service and openly portraying ineptitude and incompetence of the worst kind.

The recent utterances of the Inspector General of Zambia Police Service over the unfortunate harassment of the Sixth Republican President, Mr.Edgar Lungu, at the Malila Traditional ceremony in Eastern Province must not only be condemned but clearly shows that the methodical and meticulous appointing authority is just a shame and a true reflection of the lack of leadership in the appointing authority.

The former Head of State is supposed to be one of the most protected properties in the nation and must not be subjected to what happened to him at the Traditional ceremony. It reflects badly on the Inspector General and above all, it puts the President of the Republic in a place of shame and humiliation in the sight of right thinking Zambians and foreign leaders and their nationals who are daily watching Zambia.

It is not about Edgar Lungu but about the office of the Sixth President of the Republic of Zambia and for the Inspector General to trivialise the harassment as a “rumour’ and not worthy his attention, is tantamount to trivialising the office he holds and above all belittling the appointing authority as the appointing authority is the President of the Republic of Zambia who is also the Commander In Chief of the Armed forces.

If threats to the life of the sixth President of the Republic does not matter to the Inspector General and his appointing authority where does it leave the ordinary people in Shang’ombo and elsewhere in the Republic?

It is time for the Zambian people to take stock and prepare to look for people who have their interests in their hearts and not on their lips as 2026 fast approaches.

ZAMBIA, YOU DESERVE BETTER!!!

Edwin Lifwekelo

Acting PF Media Director

Leadership matters: remembering Levy Mwanawasa- Sishuwa Sishuwa

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Leadership matters: remembering Levy Mwanawasa

By Sishuwa Sishuwa

What has largely determined the legacy of successive presidents in Zambia – except Kenneth Kaunda’s – is their attitude towards corruption. Zambians love, trust, and respect a national leader who shows clear or demonstrable will to fight past and especially present corruption, to deal decisively with the corruption of their officials or associates including those in the inner circle. This is what sets Levy Patrick Mwanawasa apart. A decade and half years after his death on 19 August 2008, Mwanawasa is still fondly remembered by many as the best President of Zambia since 1991. Here is his full story.

On 19 August 2008, Levy Patrick Mwanawasa, the third President of Zambia, died in a French hospital after reportedly suffering a stroke. Fifteen years later, Mwanawasa remains as vivid in death as he was in public life. He is widely regarded as one of Zambia’s most effective leaders, who secured debt relief, steered the country through a period of sustained economic growth, promoted constitutionalism and the rule of law, and consolidated the country’s democratic tradition.

Although many people know him as president, the presidency was simply the ultimate platform on which Mwanawasa enacted important values whose origin lay in his early life, and which define his legacy. These include the importance of family and community, a deep love for learning and growing, capacity for effective and selfless leadership, loyalty to principle, moral force of character, faith in one’s fellow human being, and the proactive use of the law as a shield for the weak and ordinary citizen and not as a sword for the elite and the powerful. Throughout his life, Mwanawasa consistently gave expression to these ideals, starting with his formative years.

Birth and early years

The second born in a family of six, Mwanawasa was born on 3 September 1948 in the mining town of Mufulira on the Copperbelt. His parents were Myria Mokola and Patrick Chipokota Mayamba Mwanawasa, who was working as a domestic employee to a mine captain before he later established himself as a successful businessman. Mwanawasa went to Arusha Primary School in Luanshya in 1958. He then attended Fiwale Mission school before proceeding to Chiwala Secondary in Ndola, where his leadership qualities were first noticed by the school authorities who appointed him Head Boy in 1969, the year when he completed Grade 12.

While at Chiwala, an English lawyer, Jack Dare, and Julius Sakala, the first black Town Clerk of Ndola City Council, came to the school to give lectures on career choices. It was these talks that greatly influenced the career of Mwanawasa. His former schoolteachers, according to Amos Malupenga’s book, Levy Patrick Mwanawasa: An Incentive for Posterity, recalled an ambitious young man who told them that he wanted to become “a big solicitor to serve people”.

A student leader

After completing secondary education, Mwanawasa joined Ndola City Council as a trainee cadet under the leadership of Sakala, the Town Clerk who would later go on to become a distinguished member of the Zambian bar. Impressed with his hard work and keen to buttress its legal department, the council sponsored Mwanawasa to study law at the University of Zambia (UNZA) in 1970 where he graduated with a Bachelor of Laws degree three years later.

While studying at UNZA, Mwanawasa’s leadership qualities were further developed when he was elected Vice-President of the University of Zambia Students Union (UNZASU), a platform that gave him an early opportunity to hone his political skills and appreciate the importance of fostering competitive democracy. His UNZASU executive negotiated for the introduction of the National Youth Service initiative, a six-month military-like training programme that saw school leavers and university students taught various skills aimed at instilling discipline, fostering national unity, building patriotism, and enhancing their occupational abilities.

A leading lawyer

Following his completion of legal studies, which included passing the qualifying courses at the Legal Practice Institute (now known as the Zambia Institute for Advanced Legal Education – ZIALE) at first attempt, Mwanawasa worked as an assistant at Jacques and Partners, a prominent private law firm under the leadership of distinguished lawyers like John Mwanakatwe and Willa Mung’omba. He remained at the firm from 1975 to 1978 when he formed his own law practice, Mwanawasa and Company.

The development of his leadership qualities was given another boost when he was elected as vice-president of the Law Association of Zambia in 1982. President Kenneth Kaunda noted Mwanawasa’s growing profile and, seeking to utilise his talents for wider public good, appointed him as Solicitor General in 1985. The two however differed over what Mwanawasa characterised as the practice of detaining people without trial, prompting the President to dismiss him a year later.

Mwanawasa’s star rose sharply over the course of the 1980s, developing from a young advocate to a leading lawyer who successfully defended prominent dissidents of one-party rule and high-profile suspects like then Zambia Congress of Trade Union (ZCTU) Chairman-General Frederick Chiluba and treason-accused former army commander, Lieutenant General Christon Tembo.

A pro-democracy leader

After 17 years of one-party rule, calls for the re-introduction of multiparty politics gained considerable momentum in the second quarter of 1990. The two prime organisers were Akashambatwa Mbikusita-Lewanika, then chairperson of the Economics Association of Zambia, and Mbita Chitala, who, on 20 July that year, established the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) as a pressure group to campaign for the return of multiparty democracy in a forthcoming referendum. Other notable figures who were present at the MMD’s founding meeting at Garden House in Lusaka included Edith Nawakwi, Muna Ndulo, Fred M’membe, Baldwin Nkumbula, Simon Zukas, Katele Kalumba, Arthur Wina (who was chosen as the leader of the interim national committee), Chiluba (operations and mobilisation chairperson), and Vernon Mwaanga (information and publicity chairperson). Mwanawasa was elected in absentia as MMD chairperson for the legal committee, but he flatly rejected the honour, unhappy that he was not consulted. After great persuasion from his wife, Maureen Kakubo, he reluctantly accepted and went on to offer free legal services to the civil society organisation.

In September 1990, President Kaunda cancelled the referendum and subsequently signed the law that paved the way for the creation of more political parties other than the governing United National Independence Party (UNIP). The MMD transformed itself into a political party on 4 January 1991. At the party’s inaugural convention in February 1991, Mwanawasa, in another public show of confidence in his leadership qualities, was elected MMD vice-president with 63.3 percent of support, defeating Nkumbula and Tembo. Of particular importance was that he had initially refused to stand for any position, declaring that “I want to go back to my practice because we have achieved what we wanted. Dr Kenneth Kaunda has agreed to revert to multiparty democracy and to me that is an achievement, so I want to go back to my practice.”

It took other people, mainly a group of educated and reform-minded professionals such as Kalumba, Dean Mung’omba, Robert Sichinga, Mathias Mpande, Gilbert Mudenda and Chitala, who, in recognition of his impressive character traits, persuaded him to change his mind and put forward his name for election. As Akashambatwa Mbikusita-Lewanika recalled in Malupenga’s book, “we put forward Levy Mwanawasa as our candidate for the vice-presidency. He did not propose his name. We thought if the MMD’s dreams had to be realised, a grouping of individuals of that character was necessary. We were saying if UNIP was dictatorial, then we needed to be more democratic. We wanted a leadership that was different from the past.” Chiluba, overcoming competition from three others, was elected party president.

Earlier, President Kaunda, responding to popular demands for an early election, had cut short his five-year term, which was due to end in 1993, and set general elections for October 1991. The MMD, featuring as the main opposition challenger, went on to defeat UNIP in an election that saw Mwanawasa elected as member of parliament for Chifubu constituency in Ndola. Chiluba, the party’s presidential candidate, defeated Kaunda and, after he took office on 2 November, named a Cabinet that included Mwanawasa as Zambia’s vice-president.

The vice-president who resigned on principle

On 8 December 1991, barely a month in power, Mwanawasa was involved in a road traffic accident after his vice-presidential motorcade collided with another car that was driven by Godwin Chirwa, an official from State House and a designated driver of the then First Lady. The cause of the accident was inconclusive. A Commission of Inquiry that was appointed to investigate the issue found that Chirwa was in a drunken stupor when the mishap happened. Unfortunately, Chirwa himself was found dead in unclear circumstances four days before he was due to give testimony in court about the cause of the accident. As well as claiming the life of Mwanawasa’s aide-de-camp, Brown Mwale, the accident left the vice-president with severe injuries that required specialised treatment in South Africa.

Mwanawasa continued to serve as vice-president until 3 July 1994 when he resigned his Cabinet position in protest against growing levels of corruption in government and the lack of transparency and accountability. “It is not often that a vice-president of a country resigns,” Mwanawasa wrote in his letter of resignation to President Chiluba, but “if my resignation will serve to shake this government into realising the implication of the behaviour of some of our ministers, which basically goes unpunished, my action will have served a useful purpose to our party and this nation.” He retained his MMD membership and parliamentary seat.

In December 1995, the former vice-president unsuccessfully challenged president Chiluba for the leadership of the MMD before he chose not to defend his parliamentary seat in the 1996 elections. He retired from active politics that year and returned to private law practice, where he remained successful over the course of the 1990s.

In July 2001, following the collapse of President Chiluba’s third term bid, Mwanawasa learnt that Chiluba was considering nominating him as his successor and immediately set out to reject the plans. “When I received information that the MMD wanted to have me as their presidential candidate”, Mwanawasa is quoted as saying in Malupenga’s book, “I went to see Dr Chiluba and said ‘I hear that this is what is being contemplated, but I am not interested. If the party needs any opinion from me, I am able to offer that, but I am not interested in party politics’.” It took over a week of persuasion to convince him to change his mind and accept the invitation. Influenced by Chiluba, the MMD National Executive Committee subsequently elected Mwanawasa as the party’s presidential candidate. In this intra-party poll, he defeated then Vice-President Enoch Kavindele, MMD National Secretary Michael Sata, Minister of Presidential Affairs Eric Silwamba, former Minister of Finance Emmanuel Kasonde, and Minister of Defence Chitalu Sampa.

A champion of good governance, democracy, and economic reform

Mwanawasa took office as President of Zambia in January 2002 after defeating ten other candidates in the 27 December 2001 election. He immediately set out a clear vision for his presidency in a mission statement where he pledged to “provide continuity with change. In the interest of our Nation, Zambia, and the common good, sacrificing all and expecting little in return, I wholeheartedly commit myself…to serve Zambia and Zambians to the best of my ability with loyalty, honour and integrity with all my heart and strength, with love and justice, with consideration and compassion, with commitment and dedication and in collaboration with all stakeholders, women and men of goodwill, to give fresh hope to our people, to create opportunities for all and bring honour, dignity and prosperity to our country, through honest selfless hard work above and beyond the normal call of duty.”

Over the course of the next five years, Mwanawasa, in another move that demonstrates the meaning of competent leadership, put together the right subordinates with the required knowledge, skills, discipline and judgement to help him achieve or bring about the desired results. For instance, he appointed to public office principled and talented individuals such as N’gandu Magande (arguably Zambia’s best Minister of Finance), Caleb Fundanga (Bank of Zambia Governor), Mundia Sikatana (Minister of Agriculture) and Mumba Malila (Attorney General). Mwanawasa also carefully ensured that his appointments to public office reflected the ethnic diversity of the country. Tongas, Bembas, Chewas, Kaondes, Lozis, Lundas and Luvales all found room in his Cabinet. This commitment to fostering a sense of national inclusion was further shown in his choice of the four different individuals he appointed to the position of Vice President of Zambia, starting with Enoch Kavindele in 2002, followed by Nevers Mumba in May 2003, Lupando Mwape in October 2004, and Rupiah Banda, who replaced Mwape after the latter lost his parliamentary seat in the 2006 general election. Such a high turnover of vice presidents demonstrated the willingness of President Mwanawasa to take responsibility whenever required and nurture alternative leaders by exposing them to positions of greater responsibility.

In addition to rehabilitating, maintaining, and building new public infrastructure, with clear project selection and high priority investments, Mwanawasa’s government also instituted a number of important policy reforms such as decentralisation and an anti-corruption campaign that saw the prosecution of several former government figures, including his predecessor.

Mwanawasa inherited a poorly performing economy. Among the issues that he had to grapple with was the mass unemployment that had resulted from redundancies from privatisation and the liquidation and closure of over 250 state enterprises. Others were soaring inflation, high interest rates and the devastating consequences of the January 2002 decision by Anglo-American Corporation to pull out of Zambia’s mining industry due to the declining price of copper, the country’s biggest export earner. The government’s attempts to reverse the economic decline were severely undermined by a staggering external debt amounting to US$6 billion, which condemned Zambia to the classification of a Highly Indebted Poor Country. Under the leadership of Mwanawasa, the MMD moved to revive the economy in three main ways.

First, his government prioritised food security by enhancing its support to agriculture. For instance, Mwanawasa made the Farmer Input Support Program (formerly the Fertiliser Support Program) a cornerstone of Zambia’s agricultural policy, one that helped to increase private sector participation in agricultural input markets and improve household food security. He also launched the winter maize project, which turned out to be a success in addressing critical food shortage especially after he rejected the importation of genetically modified maize consignments from the United States of America on the grounds that the food could be harmful to human beings and the environment.

Second, Mwanawasa’s administration resuscitated the mining industry, which had been in freefall since the 1970s, by bringing new investors mainly from Canada, Europe, and China. As well as generating significant revenue in form of taxes for the government, the move led to job creation and the revival of the industrial Copperbelt.

Third, in an effort to qualify for debt relief as prescribed by the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, Mwanawasa presided over the implementation of deeply unpopular but necessary austerity measures, including a one-year wage freeze on civil servants’ salaries, a significant increase in taxes, a halt in hiring public service labour and reduced funding to social services.

While the President defended the implementation of the new structural adjustment policies as essential to economic recovery, the opposition, led by the Patriotic Front (PF)’s Michael Sata, cited them as evidence of a government that was unresponsive to the concerns of urbanites and promised to deliver (without explaining how) better working conditions such as “lower taxes, more jobs and more money” in people’s pockets. The net result of Mwanawasa’s policies was the near-total cancellation of Zambia’s foreign debt in 2005. The considerable resources freed from debt repayments enabled the government to tackle unemployment and invest in key social sectors such as education, agriculture, and health.

Another area that became the focus of the government under Mwanawasa was constitutional reform. In 2003, he worked with civil society to constitute a broadly representative Constitution Review Commission (CRC), headed by Willa Mung’omba, that was tasked to collect views from the public for constitutional amendment and recommend the best mode of adopting the new constitution. The CRC completed its work in 2005, but the constitutional reform process was not concluded until after President Mwanawasa’s death.

Mwanawasa’s first term was however not without its challenges. For instance, his 2001 victory was the subject of an election petition that dragged on until February 2005 when the Supreme Court dismissed it. Lacking a clear majority in parliament, Mwanawasa sought to address the problem by co-opting into Cabinet several articulate opposition MPs such as Sylvia Masebo and Dipak Patel, consequently earning criticism that he was undermining the capacity of the opposition to control the already dominant executive and modify its policy proposals. The nomination of Mumba, a losing presidential candidate in the 2001 elections, to the position of Vice-President attracted the ire of the then main opposition United Party for National Development (UPND), which argued that the move violated the constitution’s prohibition of any person being appointed to the National Assembly if they had been a candidate in the preceding general election. In view of this, the UPND moved an impeachment motion against Mwanawasa, one that he survived in August 2003 after members of parliament voted 92-57 against it.

His leadership of the MMD was also tenuous and it was not until July 2005 that he was elected party president, having occupied the position in an acting capacity since 2002. In addition, the attempted deportation of Post newspaper satirist Roy Clarke in January 2004, on the allegation that the white British national who had lived in Zambia since 1962 had insulted the President and his ministers, attracted criticism that Mwanawasa was trying to undermine free speech. In a show of judicial independence that was characteristic of Mwanawasa’s presidency, the High Court quashed the deportation order of the then Minister of Home Affairs, Ronnie Shikapwasha. Notwithstanding the Clarke incident, Mwanawasa remained mostly supportive of media freedom, tolerated political debate, and refused to curtail the mobilisation activities of opposition parties and civil society.

On a personal level, Mwanawasa radiated elegance and grace, basic rectitude, authentic love for family (even in its extended structure), care and respect for the dignity of others, and wisdom in judgement. Together with Maureen, he raised his children well and taught them never to be corrupt or extend their hands to public coffers. Despite his demanding public office commitments, Mwanawasa made time for his wife, children, and best friends, showing by example that family and community are at the core of our lives than, say, wealth and status. Tragedy also occasionally befell him. He suffered a minor stroke in April 2006, two months before his mother died in June. The President recovered and won a second term in September 2006. He continued with many of the progressive reforms that he had initiated in his first term in office, centred on service delivery, spearheading economic reform, enhancing food security, creating more jobs, supporting the fight against corruption, and the promotion of good governance, constitutionalism, and the rule of law.

When Sata, who had been at loggerheads with the president since their time in the MMD in the early 1990s, suffered a heart attack in April 2008, Mwanawasa, consistent with his pledge to serve Zambians with selflessness, sacrificed his qualified personal dislike for Sata to further the leadership ideals that underpinned his presidency. In a move that demonstrated his humanity, he ordered that his main rival be evacuated to South Africa for specialist treatment. Mwanawasa later explained why he took the decision in a response that revealed his clear appreciation of the role of opposition parties in a competitive multiparty democracy and the benefits that accrue to those in power when they are receptive to criticism. Without such an effective opposition politician as Sata, Mwanawasa suggested, both his leadership and Zambia would have been poorer for it.

“If you had asked me before [Sata suffered a heart attack], I would have told you that I don’t like this person. I don’t even like to hear his voice. That is how much I detested this man because he was maliciously making my job difficult to govern this country. But the news of his illness gripped me with sadness. I realised just how much I needed him. To be President, I do not want to be hero-worshipped all the time. I want people who can correct me, show me that the best it is done would be this way. Of course, if I do not agree, I will tell them that I do not agree for this and this reason. So, I realised just how much I need him around. He is a good fellow to have around,”, Mwanawasa told the media at a press briefing that was also attended by the recovered PF leader, who thanked him for his magnanimity.

Death and the address to Zambians from the grave

On 29 June 2008, President Mwanawasa left Zambia to attend the African Union Heads of State and Government Ordinary Summit in Egypt. Later that day, Mwanawasa was reported to have suffered a major stroke that left him in a critical condition. He was subsequently flown to Percy Military Hospital in France for treatment but died on 19 August 2008, aged 59, following what was said to be complications arising from the stroke. President Mwanawasa was put to rest on 3 September 2008.

Addressing Zambia from the grave, in a pre-recorded video statement of farewell dated 23 March 2005 that was broadcast on national television, Mwanawasa stressed the values that guided his public life. Expressing gratitude for the opportunities that fell his way and displaying the profound awareness, decency and firm moral compass that were characteristic of his deep sense of self-identity, the address implored future governments to especially fight corruption and is worth quoting at length:

“I am grateful to all of you, for giving me the opportunity during part of my life to serve you as President. It was a privilege which I cherished up to my death. I did all my best to improve the standards of living of you my people. I strove to attend to the production of sufficient food for domestic consumption and for export. I worked hard to encourage investments, both local and foreign, so as to create jobs and so as to enhance the growth of our economy.

“I believed that national development could only be sustained if good governance, respect for the rule of law and democracy were encouraged and not taken for granted. To spur these virtues, the fight against corruption had to be waged relentlessly and without treating anybody as a sacred cow. I regret that in my zeal to facilitate this fight, I lost friendship with a number of some of my best friends and at many times my own life and that of my family members were threatened. I want to assure the nation that no malice or ill will was intended in these initiatives.

“I was driven purely by love for my country and the urgent need to transform it from poverty to prosperity. I have always been grieved to see so much poverty, hopelessness and anguish in the faces of our children, the leaders of tomorrow. It has always been my belief that nobody has the right to take away what we should be giving to these children and keep them in their selfish pockets. I do hope that the party, the Movement for Multiparty Democracy, can continue with this vision for our nation pursuing the fight of zero tolerance to corruption.

“I was sad when some of you our members appeared to embrace corruption and actually criticized me for fighting the scourge. This vice will not develop our country. It is my desire that all future governments will continue to wage this fight. If in my endeavours to provide only the best for my country I offended some of my compatriots, all I can ask is that they should find a place in their hearts to forgive me as no deliberate intentions to harm their feelings without just cause was intended.

“To those who attended my funeral and to those who mourned with my family, I say I am extremely grateful to all of you. I am certain that I speak on behalf of my family that their burden has thereby been lightened.”

I miss Levy Mwanawasa. He was a damn good president, who demonstrated that leadership matters and embodied the ethos of basic integrity, soundness in decision-making process, a resilient sense of optimism, and respect for one another’s humanity. Constantly rising above partisan considerations and providing decisive leadership, Mwanawasa ended the culture of political violence by party cadres and the humiliating practice of lining up women to dance and welcome the President at airports. Ministers accused of corruption were dismissed even before the public complained and subsequently prosecuted. While he saw himself primarily as a lawyer, many Zambians fondly remember Mwanawasa as the President of Zambia that the present demands, a good foot soldier for justice and freedom, and one of the country’s genuine post-independence heroes, whose leadership was anchored on the promotion of ethical values and social justice.

Sishuwa Sishuwa is a Zambian writer, historian, and senior lecturer at Stellenbosch University in South Africa. Email: sishuwasishuwa@yahoo.com

ZAMBIANS ARE STILL LICKING WOUNDS OF THE PF’s BRUTALITY

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ZAMBIANS ARE STILL LICKING WOUNDS OF THE PF’s BRUTALITY

Authored By Mupishi Jones

The Patriotic Front was a government of Gamblers and Corrupt Officials,no contest about that!
To shield their levels of grand corruption,they resorted to brutalising and humiliating individuals who were pointing at their corrupt activities.The PF became a brutal force against it’s own citizens.


The levels of corruption under the PF’s administration permeated their entire structure from top to bottom.Even cadres from the lowest ranks were able to syphon funds from the treasury through dubious contracts to their hearts content.It became a political party synonymous with corruption.


Unfortunately, this tag damaged the reputation of this country beyond borders.Both local and the international communities lost confidence in the PF’s government.We had reached a stage where any government pronunciation that requires public funding, citizens where receiving it with a pinch of salt…ati,so naba lyamo!The PF’s administration reached a point where even the institutions where they were initially borrowing loans stopped talking to them.Thats how they were compelled to start hiring private firms to be talking to their lenders because they became untrustworthy!


This country had lost its good brand name.Is it not the Bible that teaches us that a good name is better than riches?
Besides Zambians still licking the wounds of the PF’s brutality and other negative vices, the other most annoying behavior of the PF is their incessant and sustained campaign of trying to demonize, dehumanize and humiliate a person who is working day and night to restore the dignity of this country.Accussing a person of failing to correct the mistakes that they, the PF themselves, created.


President Hakainde Hichilema is spending sleepless nights, trotting across the globe in search of solutions to the problems created by the PF’s administration.His background can tell you that he is not a person who can be driven by excitement of jumping on a plane to visit the places he is visiting.Neither is he a person who can be incentivised by an allowance for traveling out.He is neither an extravagant nor a play party person.As a matter of fact, records still indicates that the man has never drawn a salary from the time he assumed office.
He is making economically radical decisions just to restore the dignity of this country.Zambians must appreciate that there are few leaders of his kind who make decisions based on the future generation and not based on the next general election date,sometimes even risking rejection from his own people.


The PF are busy boasting about their infrastructure projects, but the bitter truth is that the general citizens see these so-called PF’s legacy projects as nothing but painful remainders of how a government can create conduits of stealing from itself and it’s own people! Infrastructure projects offered an easy conduit for the PF to steal public resources more than rebuilding the economy.To rebuild the economy, especially a battered economy in negative growth rate to sustainable levels requires radical decisions from bold leaders…. it’s not for the faint hearted driven by political trappings.


How come that during the PF’s tenure, it’s government contracted excessive loans beyond acceptable limits,and yet during the same period,the government treasury became so broke that it started defaulting on its loan repayment obligations,but paradoxically, individuals who were in leadership positions together with those in the forefront of the PF’s activities, accumulated excessive wealthy during the same space???


Collectively, the PF members became more rich than the government they were running.It was common to find entire government departments like police stations, forest department, social welfare department and others without a single movable vehicle but when you visit private yards of PF members,you would find not less than three top-of-the-range vehicles.


Today President Hakainde Hichilema is changing that narrative.He’s provided a vehicle for project monitoring in each and every 156 constituencies,He is providing Zambia Police security vehicle to all district police stations across this country.


During their tenure,we were importing desks for our schools, today desks are being manufactured at district level.Yesturday we were entirely looking forward to foreign contractors to work on most of our infrastructures, but today our own citizens within our respective districts are constructing classroom blocks, mounting bridges, opening feeder roads.


Yes the PF might boast about grand projects like airports, but what they forgot was that any development that doesn’t touch the lives of the majority citizens is no development! A country can have state of the art airports, good tarred roads, five star hotels but as long as the people in that country are poor,then that country is poor.
I submit

Mupishi Jones
+260977480386

Mason Greenwood ‘fears he will be unable to join a club in Saudi Arabia due to a feud with Cristiano Ronaldo’ after he described the Al-Nassr star’s career as ‘dead’

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Mason Greenwood reportedly fears he has no chance of continuing his career in Saudi Arabia due to an ongoing feud with Cristiano Ronaldo.

The 21-year-old is currently looking for a new club following news on Monday that he would leave Manchester United after they conducted an internal investigation into his future.

Greenwood, who was arrested in January 2022 on suspicion of a number of offences including attempted rape, will not play for United again and is likely to depart on loan or see his contract settled.

The Crown Prosecution Service subsequently dropped the charges in February of this year after key witnesses withdrew and new material came to light.

According to The Sun, Greenwood – who has been linked with clubs in Saudi Arabia – believes that avenue may not be possible after a comment he made about Ronaldo when he was younger.

While the Portuguese superstar was playing for Real Madrid, where he won numerous honours and highlighted his status as one of the greatest players of all-time – Greenwood was reported to have openly said Ronaldo’s career was ‘dead’ – slang for ‘finished’ – when referencing the 38-year-old’s perceived decline.

He received a telling off from United chiefs at the time who felt it demonstrated a lack of maturity on his behalf.

However, the report went on to say how when the forward was informed of Greenwood’s comments, he was infuriated, and urged Saudi League chiefs to never make a move for the Englishman.

One source told The Sun: ‘Ronaldo isn’t known for his thick skin. He was really annoyed at what Greenwood said — but he has good reason to be when you consider what Ronaldo has achieved in his career and where Greenwood finds himself.

‘Greenwood had his nose put out of joint when Ronaldo signed for United because he ended up playing a lot less than he had hoped for, so their relationship was difficult.’

Ronaldo was the first major name to move to the Saudi Pro League when he joined Al-Nassr at the end of last year and is reportedly hugely influential in the kingdom.

The source added: ‘Ronaldo is treated as royalty in Saudi and what he says goes.

‘He would have enough influence there to kibosh clubs from signing Greenwood if he wanted to.’

The report also stated Saudi league bosses are wary of making a move for Greenwood anyway given the kingdom already suffers from bad PR.

RESPONSE ON ALLEGATIONS OF SMUGGLING OF MEALIE MEAL BY ZAMBIA NATIONAL SERVICE (ZNS)

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RESPONSE ON ALLEGATIONS OF SMUGGLING OF MEALIE MEAL BY ZAMBIA NATIONAL SERVICE (ZNS)

It has been noted in the recent past that some members of the public have been alleging that the Zambia National Service (ZNS) is engaged in smuggling of mealie meal to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), thereby threatening the country’s food security.

My Ministry therefore, wishes to address and clarify the matter. Contrary to the allegations, ZNS has never and will never engage in illegal activities to the detriment of the Zambian people and country at large.

The Zambian people may wish to recall that in April this year, the Minister of Agriculture, Honourable Reuben Mtolo, MP announced that the Government of the Republic of Zambia had allowed the importation of mealie meal from South Africa as a measure to suppress demand for Zambian mealie meal along the shared border with the Democratic Republic of Congo.

As Zambians may recall, ZNS in 2022 registered private companies under Eagles Holding Limited meant to operate in various sectors of the economy as a way of Government creating job opportunities and to also lessen the burden of over-dependence on funding from the central Government. To this effect, Eagles Milling Company, registered under the Eagles Holding Limited Group of Companies, was authorised to work with an established South African private milling company to produce eagles branded mealie meal using the South African maize grain for export to the DRC.

An import/export permit was thereafter obtained and the programme commenced in June this year, with an initial 5000 metric tonnes of mealie meal.
It is important to note that the packaging of the mealie meal intended for the DRC market distinctly differs from the locally-milled brand meant for local consumption. The labeling on the bags can attest to that fact, as they are clearly labeled “For Export” and the prints are in black colour while the local brand printed are in green colour.

This differentiation has even been brought to the attention of Zambia Revenue Authority (ZRA) which strictly monitors the entry of the commodity at Kazungula Border and the exist to the DRC at Kasumbalesa Boarder. This is crucial to avoid any confusion and to ensure that the quantities imported correspond with those exported.

There is no doubt therefore that ZNS has been adhering to ethical business practices in its dealings. The Institution remains devoted to the wellbeing of the Zambian people
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and is committed to upholding the integrity of its operations. It will therefore be folly for an Institution that has been mandate to thwart smuggling of maize and its byproducts to engage in the same vice.
We reiterate that Zambia National Service, has conducted the mealie meal trade above board and in strict adherence to all legal provisions.

The allegations about smuggling of locally produced mealie meal are therefore unfounded. As government and my Ministry in particular, we have granted ZNS full support and blessings as they engage in this legitimate trade.

It may be appreciated that ZNS took advantage of the prospect to export as a direct response to the policy by the New Dawn UPND Government for Defence wings to take advantage of business opportunities to supplement Government efforts.
Besides, the initiative was also aimed at addressing the nagging issue of mealie meal smuggling due to high demand across the border; with the added advantage of boosting the nation’s foreign exchange earnings.

We encourage members of the public, the media and other concerned stakeholders to please feel free to verify this information with ZRA and the Ministry of Agriculture. Zambians are equally encouraged and/or challenged to provide any evidence of impropriety in this matter, by any ZNS personnel, to 0977827057 and/or the Zambia Police Service.

Illegality will not be entertained by this Administration. Any personnel (military or otherwise) involved in any form of illegalities if found shall face the full force of the law. Suffice to say, you are on your own if you break the Laws of the Land.
We wish to assure Zambians that ZNS being an Institution that has been involved in making a significant contribution to national food security for decades, through agricultural production and anti-smuggling efforts, will not abdicate its responsibility by becoming the very agent that engages in practices that endangers the food sovereignty and security of the nation.

As the Ministry of Defence we believe that Food Security is National Security. The Ministry therefore, encourages the Media to feel free to approach the ZNS through the Public Relations Office or My Ministry for that matter, to verify any information on this matter before proceeding to publish their news articles.

May I take this opportunity to inform the public that the Ministry maintains an open-door policy as regards such issues and that therefore it will remain at your disposal should you need or seek any further clarification on the subject matter.

I Thank you.
The Minister of Defence
MINISTRY OF DEFENCE

ZAMBIA WILL NOT BENEFIT FROM THE MINING SECTOR- Nobert Mumba

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ZAMBIA WILL NOT BENEFIT FROM THE MINING SECTOR

By Nobert Mumba

The Economic Performance Report just delivered by the Minister of Finance vindicates my position that tax deductibility of Mineral Royalty Tax would just make the country poorer with no corresponding return from the mines.

This goes for CDF whose current design is consumption focused rather than development focus. It also brings into question the integrity of our economic team. Why did they fail to see what we were seeing? Why did they call us names when we told them the truth.

If global copper production can only increase by 6 million tonnes in 10 years why did we think we alone can increase output by 3 million in 10 years with our procrastinating over mining licences.

We disputed their growth projections and now halfway through the year we revise the target when it is almost too late to take corrective action? What has happened to Agriculture because it is a growth driver?

Our interventions are non-partisan premised on our global experience. Now that the Ministers statement reveals that the mining sector has not responded as expected to the generous and contentious tax deductibility with lower half-year output and lower tax revenue, a downward revision of growth from 4+% to 2+%, decline in foreign reserves by $100m despite the latest IMF injection and despite the NAPSA early withdrawal. WHAT NEXT AND IS THERE LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL?

My answer is of course yes. But only if we can be honest with ourselves and only if we can have integrity. The “gold” saga is not isolated. There are many more. Even the so-called established mining firms may not even be accounting for the gold the produced and let alone the copper.

They failed to account for export proceeds and claimed in-flows of capital when we introduced SI 55 only to run to their masters who accused us of policy shift, threaten us and we cowed down. We tell the truth and our truth is always vindicated by the outcomes.

My submission is that government must re-visit deductibility of mineral Royalty to maximise tax revenue from the current mining activity given that the ore is a depleting asset and cannot wait for increased revenue arising out of new fields.

Re-introduce legislation on monitoring and acquittal of earnings from exports. Book all revenues from exports through a Zambian bank to enable ZRA have full and unfettered power to detect cheating.

And also introduce registration of foreign debt to stop cheating. All companies externalising funds to repay debt must prove the money or capital came into the country in the first place as it is indisputable that there is more foreign exchange getting out of Zambia than the value it is receiving.

Re-establish the equivalent of Metal Marketing Corporation (MEMACO) for Zambia to effectively monitor its mineral wealth.
On CDF re-orient CDF to focus on procuring equipment and setting up factories in constituencies that will inspire activities targeting value addition.

This will include mechanising agriculture, setting up high-end wood processing and furniture factories at constituency level according to their competitive advantage and naturally occurring activity in their areas. Chicken rearing, tailoring will on its own take the economy anywhere.

Cosmetics is what it is – it easily washes off.

Have a pleasant week family and friends.

Monze Central Constituency Invests K6,399,775.00 In Road Maintenance Equipment To Enhance Road Infrastructure

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MONZE CENTRAL CONSTITUENCY INVESTS K6,399,775.00 IN ROAD MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT TO ENHANCE ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE

In a bid to improve the state of its roads and enhance infrastructure, Monze Central Constituency has recently purchased a range of road maintenance equipment at a total cost of K6,339,775.00. The equipment, which includes a grader, a compactor, and a tipper truck, will be used to ensure timely and efficient maintenance of the roads within the Constituency.

Furthermore, the Constituency has also acquired a water bowser, which is expected to be delivered by the supplier soon. This addition will further contribute to the smooth execution of road maintenance projects in the area by providing a reliable water supply for dust suppression and other necessary tasks.

The decision to invest in these road maintenance assets is expected to have a significant impact on the overall quality of road infrastructure within the Constituency. By utilizing the new equipment, the local authorities aim not only to improve the condition of the roads but also to ensure that maintenance work is carried out promptly, minimizing disruptions for the local residents.

Funding for the purchase of the equipment was secured through the Constituency Development Funds for the year 2023. This shows a commitment from the leadership of Monze Central Constituency to prioritize the development and improvement of local infrastructure for the benefit of its residents.

As news of the equipment purchase spreads, residents of the Constituency are expressing their joy and anticipation for the positive changes that will follow. They are hopeful that the investment will result in smoother and more accessible roads, which will have numerous benefits for both residents and local businesses.

It is worth noting that the Monze District comprises three Constituencies, namely Moomba, Bweengwa, and Monze Central Constituency. In the past, all three Constituencies had to rely on a single grader to carry out maintenance work on the feeder roads. However, with the recent equipment acquisition, Monze Central Constituency is now equipped to address its road maintenance needs independently.

The Member of Parliament for Monze Central Constituency, Hon. Jack Mwiimbu, is expected to officially handover the equipment to the responsible authorities in the coming weeks. This event will mark a significant milestone in the Constituency’s efforts to improve its infrastructure and ensure better mobility for its residents.

Overall, this investment in road maintenance equipment reflects a proactive approach by the Monze Central Constituency to address the crucial issue of infrastructure development. With the new assets in place, residents can look forward to improved road conditions and a more efficient transportation system, ultimately enhancing the overall quality of life in the Constituency.

Issued By:
Kanchele Kanchele,
Public Relations Officer,
MTC.

BRICS Summit Commences in South Africa Without Russia’s Putin

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Leaders from the BRICS nations convened in South Africa on Tuesday for the BRICS Summit. This coalition of major emerging economies is striving to amplify its influence as a counterbalance to Western dominance in global affairs. The BRICS acronym represents Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, collectively accounting for a quarter of the global economy. Interest in joining this alliance has surged in anticipation of its three-day summit in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Stringent security measures are in place throughout the city, where South African President Cyril Ramaphosa is set to host China’s President Xi Jinping, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and approximately 50 other world leaders.

Notably absent from this year’s BRICS summit is Russian President Vladimir Putin, who faces an international arrest warrant over alleged war crimes in Ukraine. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will represent Russia in his absence.


President Xi, the most influential BRICS member, met with President Ramaphosa before the BRICS summit. This marked Xi’s second international trip of the year.

“Now as friends and BRICS partners, we stand together in our shared objective and quest for a better and more egalitarian world that frees the potential of all the people in the world,” said Ramaphosa in Pretoria at the opening of Xi’s state visit.

“Today, standing at a new historical starting point, inheriting friendship, deepening cooperation, and strengthening coordination are the common aspirations of the two countries, and are also the important tasks entrusted to us by the times,” added President Xi.

While representing 40% of the world’s population, the BRICS nations exhibit varying economic growth rates. Nonetheless, they share a common vision for a global order that better aligns with their interests and growing influence.

More About the BRICS Summit
The 15th BRICS summit is themed “BRICS and Africa” and takes place as Africa becomes a renewed focal point for diplomatic engagement, with the United States, Russia, and China vying for influence. The summit highlights divisions over the Ukraine conflict and the support Russia garners from its fellow BRICS members during a period of global isolation.

South Africa, China, and India have refrained from condemning Russia’s actions in Ukraine, while Brazil has declined to join Western nations in supplying arms to Ukraine or imposing sanctions on Moscow. Prior to the summit, President Ramaphosa emphasized his country’s commitment to not aligning with any dominant bloc of nations, asserting that South Africa would not be drawn into a contest of global powers.

Near the BRICS summit venue, a group of demonstrators displayed blue and yellow Ukrainian flags, along with placards reading “Go home Lavrov.”

Interest in the BRICS bloc is on the rise. It initially consisted of four nations in 2009 but expanded with the inclusion of South Africa the following year. In the lead-up to this summit, at least 40 countries have expressed interest in joining, including Iran, Saudi Arabia, Bangladesh, and Argentina, according to officials.

South Africa will present a proposal to expand BRICS membership to the leaders, with a decision expected at the close of the summit. However, the question of BRICS expansion is divisive, especially among its two most influential members, China and India. While China is eager to rapidly expand the group to bolster its influence, observers note that India, China’s regional rival, approaches this matter with caution.

The BRICS operates on consensus, and according to some analysts, the China-India rivalry is likely the primary challenge the BRICS will eventually face.