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ZAMBIA’S BEST DAYS ARE STILL AHEAD OF US- HARRY KALABA

ZAMBIA’S BEST DAYS ARE STILL AHEAD OF US.

WE are a nation that has endured hardship in every area, from the rising cost of living and crippling unemployment to fuel shortages and the painful absence of basic medications in our public hospitals and clinics. Yet even in these difficult times, wherever I go, I am constantly encouraged by hardworking citizens who continue to believe that better days are still possible for our beloved country.

They believe that one day we will live in a Zambia that gives it’s people a fair chance to thrive in their own economy without being politically aligned, corrupt, or connected.

A Zambia where promotion is earned by one’s effort and not their loyalty. Where young people do not have to dance in party regalia to access opportunities, and where jobs are created through productivity, because that is what fairness looks like.

Although it has not been delivered under the so called “New Dawn”, it is a principle we in the CF have always embedded in our structures. Our track record shows that this is what we have always stood for, equality of opportunity for every Zambian, regardless of affiliation.

Zambia’s future must belong to those who work for it, not to those who have danced to the tune of whistleblowers.

HARRY KALABA,
CITIZENS FIRST.

CYBER-HARASSMENT TRIAL UNDERWAY AS MUTALE MWANZA FACES CHARGES IN LUSAKA MAGISTRATE’S COURT

CYBER-HARASSMENT TRIAL UNDERWAY AS MUTALE MWANZA FACES CHARGES IN LUSAKA MAGISTRATE’S COURT

Lusaka | February 7, 2026 – The trial of Lusaka-based media personality Mutale Mwanza, accused of cyber-harassing fellow media figure Daisy Lusumpa, popularly known as Chichi Daisy, commenced yesterday at the Lusaka Magistrate’s Court before Magistrate Mbuywana Sinvula.

The case, which had been adjourned several times since Mutale Mwanza took plea on December 1, 2025, marks the formal start of trial proceedings. Ms. Mwanza, aged 37 and widely known for her social media persona “The M-Nation,” denied the allegations against her at that time.

She is charged under Section 69 of the Cyber Security and Cyber Crimes Act, which criminalises the intentional use of electronic communication to coerce, intimidate, harass, or cause emotional distress to another person. Upon conviction, an offender may face a fine not exceeding 500 penalty units or imprisonment for up to five years, or both.

During proceedings, the first witness, a 27-year-old Copperbelt University student, narrated how he came across a Facebook post allegedly made by Ms. Mwanza on November 7, 2024, on her page, M-Nation. The post is said to have contained statements that demeaned Chichi Daisy. The witness promptly informed the complainant, who instructed him to report the matter to the police.

The witness testified to the court on the circumstances surrounding the post, including the device he used to access it.

During cross-examination, he clarified the timeline of when he saw the post and confirmed the device he used was no longer in his possession.

The prosecution applied for an adjournment to enable further preparation, particularly verification of digital evidence, which the defence team vehemently objected to. Notwithstanding the objection, honorable Mbuywana Sinvula granted the prosecution’s application. The matter was adjourned to March 6, 2026, for mention, with trial continuation scheduled for March 13, 2026.

From a legal standpoint, the prosecution’s case focuses on three key elements that must be established beyond reasonable doubt:

  1. Use of electronic communication –
    Evidence must show that the accused sent messages or posts using a computer or digital platform.
  2. Intent to harass or cause emotional distress – It must be demonstrated that the messages were deliberately directed at the complainant with the purpose of intimidation or harassment.
  3. Impact on the complainant – Proof is required that the complainant experienced emotional distress or harassment as a result of the communication.

Evidence being relied upon includes digital posts, witness testimony, and police procedural records.

This case serves to clarify legal obligations on electronic platforms and illustrates the justice system’s authority in protecting individuals from online harassment. It also stresses the careful and methodical approach of the prosecution team in presenting a case based on evidence, procedure, and the law, ensuring fairness while seeking accountability.

KONDWANI BANDA ARRESTED IN KENYA, EXTRADITION TO ZAMBIA LOOMS

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KONDWANI BANDA ARRESTED IN KENYA, EXTRADITION TO ZAMBIA LOOMS


Just when people thought the drama had cooled down, the story has taken a serious international turn, boom KONDWANI BANDA ARRESTED IN KENYA

Reports coming in indicate that Kondwani Banda has allegedly been arrested in Kenya today after being tracked down with the help of Mercy Geh Arts’ husband and others who have reportedly been following his movements. Sources say authorities moved in after locating him, bringing an unexpected twist to a story that has already been dominating social media conversations.

Now the focus shifts to what happens next.

Insiders say once all legal and formal procedures are completed in Kenya, Kondwani Banda is expected to be extradited back to Zambia to face the issues surrounding the controversy that sparked everything online.

One thing is clear: what started as online drama has now crossed borders and entered real legal territory.

And knowing how fast stories unfold these days, this saga is definitely not over yet. 👀

INVESTIGATION REPORT ON SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI:  – Betrayal !!!!

💔🇱🇾 INVESTIGATION REPORT ON SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI:  – Betrayal !!!!

Private sources in the parliamentary investigation committee: The number of bullets that lodged in the body of SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI was 19, and the weapon used in the operation was a KALASHNIKOV.



One of the bullets penetrated the head of SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI above his left eyebrow and exited from the back.

The determined time of death was 05:57 PM LIBYA time.



The withdrawal of guards from the vicinity of SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI’S residence occurred an hour and a half before the incident for unknown reasons.



SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI was using a WhatsApp number from SERBIA, according to his phone which was later found with his companion, AHMED AL-AJAMI AL-ATIRI.



There were no AFRICAN workers in the house at the time of the incident.



The internal surveillance cameras were functioning, and they were linked to the phone of another person outside ZINTAN, who is close to SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI.

Pure betrayal from his inner circle 💔

EGYPT has in less than 10 years constructed from scratch a Modern City in the Desert

EGYPT 🇪🇬 has in less than 10 years constructed from scratch a Modern City in the Desert



The New Administrative City has been built from scratch, and construction started in 2015



The City is planned to be the new Capital of Egypt, with most Government operations shifted to the City



Besides Government Operations, the City is expected to host diplomatic Embassies

The City is located about 45 KMs East of Cairo, and is expected to host 6.5 Million residents



It houses some of the tallest Skyscrapers in Africa, including the Iconic Tower, the tallest in Africa


The City sits on an area estimated as 720 Sq.KMs (approximately the size of Nairobi)

The idea behind the City was to relieve Cairo City of its congestion



The City has some of the most modern infrastructure including railways, metros, an airport among others

SOURCE: DataSpeaks

Julius Malema pushes for compulsory voting as turnout declines

Malema pushes for compulsory voting as turnout declines

EFF leader Julius Malema has called for major changes to South Africa’s voting system, saying democracy is being weakened by low voter turnout.



Malema wants voting to be compulsory and for citizens to be automatically registered as voters when they turn 18. Currently, voting in South Africa is voluntary, and people must register themselves with the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC).



He also proposed that national and municipal elections be held in the same year. At present, these elections are held in different years, which Malema says causes voter fatigue and increases costs for the state.



South Africa has seen declining voter turnout in recent elections, with millions of registered voters choosing not to vote. Malema argues that making voting easier and compulsory would ensure broader public participation and strengthen accountability in government.



The proposals have sparked debate, with supporters saying they could revive democracy, while critics argue that voting should remain a personal choice.

#M21

“IF HE HAD LISTENED TO ME, THEY WOULD STILL BE AMONG THE LIVING”
— MUSEVENI’S SOBER WARNING TO GADDAFI

“IF HE HAD LISTENED TO ME, THEY WOULD STILL BE AMONG THE LIVING”
— MUSEVENI’S SOBER WARNING TO GADDAFI



Africa, this quote hits different. Deep. Painful.
Historical.

And full of lessons we can no longer ignore. ✊



Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni once reflected on his private advice to his old friend, Muammar Gaddafi — advice that, if taken, might have changed the course of African history.



They were not just presidents.
They were comrades.
Two young revolutionaries who came to power through struggle, sacrifice, and the barrel of the gun.



Museveni recalls how Gaddafi entered power 17 years before him, how they laughed together, debated together, and dreamed together about an Africa that stands tall in the global system.



An Africa that is not a second-class citizen.

An Africa that controls its destiny.

An Africa that speaks with one voice.

But then came the turning point.



Gaddafi began to challenge the global order — pushing into the arena of world superpowers

without a strong military shield,
without a solid economic structure,
without reliable allies.



And Museveni saw it coming.

He warned him like a brother:

“You are pushing too fast; take it easy. In my culture, you don’t challenge a wrestler you’re not sure you can defeat.”



But Gaddafi replied with fire in his heart:
“Alkebulan is Africa. Africa doesn’t have to bend!”

Powerful words.

But in a brutal world system, words without power structures are not enough.
And today, Gaddafi is gone.



Libya is broken.

Africa lost one of its boldest voices for unity.
This is not just about Gaddafi.

This is about every African leader who dares to challenge the system without first building real power — military, economic, technological, and diplomatic.



The lesson? ⚠️

You don’t confront an empire with emotions.
You confront it with strategy.
With alliances.
With institutions.



With economic independence.
Africa must rise — yes.
But Africa must rise wisely.
Not with noise alone.



But with structure, unity, and long-term vision.
Because history has shown us one thing:
The world does not forgive the unprepared revolutionary.



 One Africa. One Voice. One Future.

 Follow Truvision international Global blog  for daily African awakening, real history, and unapologetic Pan-African truth.
— Truvison Africa

Namibia to Host Global Nuclear Test Detection Exercise in 2026

Namibia to Host Global Nuclear Test Detection Exercise in 2026.



Namibia will host a major international security exercise in October–November 2026, when the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO) brings hundreds of global experts to the country.



Around 250 inspectors, scientists and technical specialists from many countries will arrive with specialised equipment to practice how the world investigates a suspected nuclear weapons test.
The exercise will simulate a nuclear explosion investigation.



There will be no real bombs, radiation or dangerous activity…it is only a training operation.

The goal is to prepare international teams to confirm if a country secretly tests a nuclear weapon and to strengthen global peace and security.



Namibia was chosen because it already supports the nuclear test ban treaty and hosts monitoring stations near Tsumeb that help detect underground and atmospheric explosions worldwide.



Only Kazakhstan (2008) and Jordan (2014) have hosted this exercise before, placing Namibia among a small group of countries trusted with this responsibility.



Besides nuclear monitoring, the same detection systems also help scientists track earthquakes, tsunamis and environmental changes.
#M21

Mnangagwa Defends Seizure of White-Owned Farms

Mnangagwa Defends Seizure of White-Owned Farms

Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa has defended his country’s land reform programme during the World Governments Summit, saying the takeover of farms from white commercial farmers was necessary to correct colonial land ownership.



Mnangagwa said the policy was aimed at restoring land to Black Zimbabweans and strengthening national sovereignty after independence. He argued the decision was about reclaiming economic control, even though it triggered years of international sanctions and isolation from Western countries.



Zimbabwe’s fast-track land reform began around 2000, when thousands of large commercial farms were redistributed to new local farmers.

Supporters view it as correcting historical injustice from the colonial era, while critics say it contributed to economic collapse, food shortages and loss of agricultural production in the years that followed.



The president maintained that Zimbabwe would not reverse the reforms, insisting the land issue is settled and part of the country’s independence legacy.

#M2

Trump’s Interests in Namibia Grow as Oil Discoveries Put Country on Global Map

Trump’s Interests in Namibia Grow as Oil Discoveries Put Country on Global Map

Following major offshore oil discoveries along Namibia’s coast, international attention toward the country has increased sharply…including from the United States.



The U.S. already maintains one of its larger diplomatic missions in the region in Windhoek, and during Donald Trump’s presidency Namibia stood out as one of the few Sub-Saharan African countries where a U.S. ambassadorial appointment was prioritised, signaling the importance Washington attached to relations with the country.



Observers say the warmer diplomatic engagement aligns with a broader strategy of strengthening ties with emerging energy producers. Namibia’s Orange Basin discoveries are among the most significant new oil finds in recent years and could turn the country into a future oil exporter.


Under Trump’s foreign-policy approach, the U.S. placed strong emphasis on energy security, trade influence and partnerships in resource-rich regions.



Closer relations with Namibia would help Washington:

• Secure future energy cooperation

• Maintain influence in Southern Africa

• Counter expanding Chinese and Russian presence on the continent



Namibia remains an independent state making its own decisions, but history shows that when a country discovers large energy resources, global powers move quickly to deepen political and economic ties.

In short: Namibia’s oil potential is increasing its geopolitical importance.
-M21

Trump Signals Possible U.S. Support for Compensation of White Farmers in Zimbabwe

Trump Signals Possible U.S. Support for Compensation of White Farmers in Zimbabwe



Discussion is growing around whether the United States could support compensation efforts linked to Zimbabwe’s past land seizures.



During Zimbabwe’s land reform programme in the early 2000s, thousands of white-owned commercial farms were taken over by the state and redistributed. The policy was meant to address colonial-era land ownership imbalances, but it led to sanctions, international disputes and long legal battles over compensation.



Recent diplomatic talk has focused on Zimbabwe’s plan to compensate former farm owners for improvements made on the land (such as buildings and infrastructure), not for the land itself. Reports suggest Washington has shown interest in supporting a settlement framework that could help Zimbabwe normalise relations with Western countries and unlock international financing.



Under a Trump-style foreign policy approach, backing a compensation arrangement would fit a strategy of resolving disputes, restoring economic stability in Southern Africa and opening trade opportunities.



No final agreement has been confirmed, but the issue is being watched closely because a compensation deal could affect sanctions, investment and Zimbabwe’s re-engagement with global financial institutions.
M21

EXILE DEATH OF BLESSED GEZA SHAKES ZIMBABWE POLITICS

BREAKING: EXILE DEATH OF BLESSED GEZA SHAKES ZIMBABWE POLITICS

Zimbabwean war veteran Blessed Geza, who rose to prominence after boldly calling for President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s resignation, has died in exile in South Africa, his family has confirmed. He had been battling cancer.


Geza became a household name in recent months after launching fierce public attacks against Mnangagwa, accusing him of attempting to manipulate the Constitution to unlawfully extend his presidency beyond the 2028 limit to 2030. His outspoken stance won him a large and loyal following, particularly among frustrated war veterans and ruling party supporters opposed to term extension.



Forced into exile amid mounting political pressure, Geza continued to speak out from across the border, cementing his image as a defiant voice of resistance.



Politically, Geza was widely regarded as an ally of Vice President Constantino Chiwenga, who is seen by many as the front runner to succeed Mnangagwa when his term ends in 2028. His death is likely to deepen tensions within Zimbabwe’s already fractured political landscape, as allies and critics alike weigh the impact of losing such a controversial figure.

Zelensky says the US wants the Ukraine-Russia peace deal by June, despite the failure to reach the breakthrough so far

Zelensky says the US wants the Ukraine-Russia peace deal by June, despite the failure to reach the breakthrough so far


Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that the United States wants a peace settlement between Ukraine and Russia by early summer, despite repeated rounds of talks failing to reach a breakthrough over the issues of territory and security guarantees.



“They say they want to get everything done by June,” Zelensky said in remarks published Saturday by the Presidency. “And they will do everything to end the war. They want a clear schedule of events.”



“If the Russians are really ready to end the war, then it is really important to set a deadline,” he added.



Zelensky said that Washington had proposed that Ukrainian and Russian delegations meet in the United States, probably in Miami, in a week’s time. “We have confirmed our participation.”



The Kremlin has insisted that Kyiv give up all of the Donbas region, about a quarter of which is still held by Ukrainian forces. Ukraine has refused to cede the territory.


“We stand where we stand,” said Zelensky, with the current frontline the basis for a ceasefire.



“The American side says they can guarantee the monitoring,” Zelensky said, referring to the trilateral negotiations in Abu Dhabi this week.



“There can be no end to the war without security guarantees. This is absolute certainty.”



He added that there were signs that some bilateral discussions between the US and Russia might impinge on Ukraine. “Ukraine will not support any such even potential agreements about us that are made without us,” Zelensky asserted.

THOUSANDS GATHER IN LIBYA FOR FUNERAL OF SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI

THOUSANDS GATHER IN LIBYA FOR FUNERAL OF SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI

THOUSANDS of people have attended the funeral of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi’s most prominent son, who was shot dead this week.



The burial took place on Friday in the town of Bani Walid, some 175 kilometres (110 miles) south of Tripoli.

Nearly 15 years after the elder Gaddafi was toppled and killed in a 2011 NATO-backed uprising, thousands of loyalists turned up to mourn his son, who was once seen as the former leader’s heir apparent.



Saif al-Islam Gaddafi was killed on Tuesday in his home in the northwestern city of Zintan. His office said in a statement that he had been killed during a “direct confrontation” with four unknown gunmen who broke into his home.



The office of Libya’s attorney general said investigators and forensic doctors examined the 53-year-old’s body and determined that he died from gunshot wounds and that the office was working to identify suspects.



“We are here to accompany our beloved one, the son of our leader in whom we placed our hope and our future,” said Waad Ibrahim, a 33-year-old woman from Sirte, nearly 300km (186 miles) away from Bani Walid.



Saif al-Islam Gaddafi was once described as the de facto prime minister under his father’s iron-fisted 40-year rule, cultivating an image of moderation and reform despite holding no official position.



Championing himself as a reformer, he led talks on Libya abandoning its weapons of mass destruction and negotiated compensation for the families of those killed in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988.



But that reputation soon collapsed when he promised “rivers of blood” in response to the 2011 uprising, which led to his arrest that year on a warrant issued by the International Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity.



In 2021, he announced he would run for president, but the elections aiming to unify the divided country under a United Nations agreement were indefinitely postponed.



Today, Libya remains split between Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah’s UN-backed government based in Tripoli and an eastern administration backed by Khalifa Haftar.



The killing of Gaddafi, seen by many as an alternative to the country’s power duopoly, occurred less than a week after a reported January 28 meeting in France’s Elysee Palace, which brought together Haftar’s son and advisers to Dbeibah.

Al Jazeera

Iran Deploys Khorramshahr-4 Missile, Signals Shift to Offensive Deterrence

Iran Deploys Khorramshahr-4 Missile, Signals Shift to Offensive Deterrence

Iran has deployed its most advanced long-range ballistic missile, the Khorramshahr-4, inside an underground Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) “missile city,” marking a clear shift from a primarily defensive posture toward a more offensive deterrence strategy.



The Khorramshahr-4 has a reported range of up to 2,000 kilometres and can carry a warhead weighing approximately 1,500 kilograms, making it the most advanced active ballistic missile currently in Iran’s arsenal. The missile is designed for high payload capacity rather than extended range, increasing its effectiveness against hardened and strategic targets.



Military analysts say the underground deployment enhances survivability against pre-emptive strikes, allowing Iran to maintain second-strike capability in the event of a conflict. The use of fortified missile cities reflects Tehran’s long-standing strategy of protecting key assets while demonstrating readiness.



The deployment sends a clear message to Iran’s regional and global adversaries, particularly amid rising tensions in the Middle East. It signals that Iran is not only focused on defending its territory but is also positioning itself to project power and deter attacks through credible offensive capabilities.



The move is likely to draw increased attention from rival states and international observers, as it underscores Iran’s evolving military doctrine and its willingness to openly showcase strategic weapons.
#M21

THEY KILLED A DREAM: HOW SAIF GADDAFI WANTED TO JOIN TRAORÉ AND THE AES TO REVIVE LIBYA

🔥 THEY KILLED A DREAM: HOW SAIF GADDAFI WANTED TO JOIN TRAORÉ AND THE AES TO REVIVE LIBYA 💔🇱🇾🇧🇫



“They didn’t just kill a man.
They killed a vision.”

When Vladimir Putin revealed that Saif al-Islam Gaddafi wanted to join forces with brave African leaders like Captain Ibrahim Traoré and the AES, the world felt a deep, painful silence.
Because this wasn’t just politics.



This was hope.

This was Africa and Libya rising again.

A SON TRYING TO FIX A BROKEN NATION

Saif Gaddafi carried the burden of a destroyed country on his shoulders.
A Libya once respected. Once stable. Once powerful.



He wanted to rebuild.
Not with IMF chains.
Not with NATO bombs.
Not with foreign puppets.


But with sovereignty, unity, and African solidarity.

He believed in a new axis of brave leaders — men like Ibrahim Traoré, standing against external control, saying NO to modern slavery, and choosing self-determination over submission.



THE AES SYMBOL: A NEW AFRICAN DIRECTION 🌍🔥

The Alliance of Sahel States (AES) is not just a political bloc.
It is a statement to the world:
Africa is tired of being managed.
Africa is ready to lead itself.
Saif Gaddafi saw in Traoré what many young Africans see today:
A leader who doesn’t beg.
A leader who doesn’t sell.
A leader who doesn’t bow.
He wanted Libya to be part of that movement.
To walk with Africa.
To rise with Africa.



THEY STOLE MORE THAN A LIFE… THEY STOLE HOPE 💔

“My heart bleeds that Libya would be dragged ten steps behind.”
Those words hit hard because they are true.
Libya has been turned into a playground for foreign interests.
Militias. Chaos. Oil theft. Political games.
And just when a new path was forming…
Just when a new generation was dreaming…
They killed him.
Not because he was weak.
But because he represented a threat to the old system.



THE REAL FEAR OF THE WEST 😡

Let’s speak the truth nobody wants to say:
They are not afraid of guns.
They are afraid of African unity.
They are afraid of sovereign leaders.
They are afraid of young Africans waking up.



A Libya aligned with AES?

A Libya working with Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger?
That would have shaken the global order.
And they couldn’t allow that.



BUT IDEAS DON’T DIE ✊🏾🔥

You can kill a man.
But you cannot kill a movement.
From Ouagadougou to Bamako.
From Niamey to Tripoli.
From Accra to Johannesburg.
A new Africa is being born.
An Africa that says:
No to mental slavery.
No to foreign control.



No to leaders without courage.
Saif Gaddafi may be gone…
But the dream he carried is alive in millions of African hearts.
This is not the end.



This is the beginning of a continental awakening.

Follow Truvision international Global blog or daily African truth, awakening, and revolutionary stories.

One Africa. One Voice. One Future.

✍🏾 Truvison Africa

PHOTOA: Saif-Al Islam Gaddafi is seen here a day  before his ass@ss!nation

Dr. Saif-Al Islam Gaddafi, PhD(Uni. London), is seen here a day  before his assassination. The room looked modest, especially for a man who grew up in wealth and  fame.



Although his siblings and many who served in his father’s government fled to exile, Islam chose to remain in his country where he died with a gun in his hand fighting the assassins who had raided his home in the city of Zintan.



Curiously the guards who had been  guarding his home were withdrawn hours before his assassination.



Today after a post-mortem, his Qadhadfa tribe and the Warfalla arrived in Zintan to collect his body for burial in the city of Bani Walid where he will be laid to rest  next to his brother Khamis.



The family decided to bury him in Bani Walid, because the city and Sirte, were Muammar Gaddafi’s final strongholds before his fall in 2011 and have remained loyal to his family .



Thousands of Libyans carrying green flags turned up on the streets to wave Islam’s body goodbye.



Amnesty International said the assassination highlighted “the pervasive climate of impunity in Libya”.

Credit: Odhiambo Levin Opiyo

CHAPTER ONE FOUNDATION HAILS HH FOR REJECTING CCTV BILL.

‎CHAPTER ONE FOUNDATION HAILS HH FOR REJECTING CCTV BILL.

‎The Chapter One Foundation has commended President Hakainde Hichilema for declining to assent to the CCTV Bill, a decision disclosed by the Clerk of the National Assembly in Parliament.



‎Chapter One Foundation Executive Director Josiah Kalala says the move demonstrates constitutional responsibility, restraint, and respect for due process, noting the serious human rights implications associated with surveillance legislation.



‎Mr. Kalala says the President’s decision sets an important governance standard that should apply to all legislation, emphasizing that where a law risks overreach, constitutional safeguards must take precedence before enactment.



‎Using the CCTV Bill as a national reference point, the Foundation has called on the President to direct a comprehensive, human-rights-based review of all existing and proposed laws that affect fundamental rights and freedoms.



‎Mr. Kalala says the matter goes beyond a single Bill and requires a coherent, system-wide national respons, adding that the objective should be to establish a legal framework that is constitutionally compliant, rights-respecting, accountable, and trusted by the public.



‎The Foundation has further called for a more accountable law-making process, urging meaningful public participation, timely publication of draft laws in accessible language, and rigorous constitutional and human rights impact assessments before and during parliamentary consideration.



‎Mr. Kalala says the review process should include precise legal drafting, clear limits on discretionary authority, independent oversight, and effective judicial safeguards, particularly in cases involving intrusive state action.



‎He also stresses the need for strict data governance standards, transparent reporting obligations, and accessible remedies where rights are violated.



‎The Chapter One Foundation maintains that respect for human rights is not a barrier to security or development, but rather the foundation of legitimate and sustainable governance, essential to building strong institutions and long-term public trust.

‎By Joseph Tamali Banda

UPND MORE USEFUL AS OPPOSITION PARTY – SHAMENDA

UPND MORE USEFUL AS OPPOSITION PARTY – SHAMENDA

YOU must be back in the opposition to provide effective checks and balances, former minister of labour Fackson Shamenda has told the ruling United Party for National Development (UPND) government



In an interview with The Mast Wednesday, Shamenda said the UPND performed well as an opposition political party and should be praised for keeping the government of the time in check.



“The UPND was a force to reckon with when it was in opposition, showcasing remarkable discipline and unity that ultimately propelled it to power. The UPND kept government in check. It gave government then sleepless nights,” he said.


Shamenda, however, expressed disappointment with the UPND’s performance in the four years they have been in government.



“They were good before they formed government, compared to now,” he said.

Shamenda suggested that the UPND’s strength lay in opposition, where it could effectively hold the weak government accountable.



“I admire the UPND as an opposition political party. They are very disciplined, strong and united. In my view, I would rather have UPND in opposition because they will keep the weak government in check,” he said.



A strong opposition was needed in a democracy for checks and balances.

Shamenda said in a democracy it was not possible to give a blank cheque to the ruling party because it would compromise governance.



“In any democracy, a strong opposition is important and cardinal. It plays its oversight role effectively, a government is kept in check for excessive power or abuse of power,” he said.



Shamenda said it was better for the nation to have a weaker ruling party in power than in the opposition.



“I would rather have a weak political party in State House rather than a weak opposition,” he said



Shamenda said the regime change that took place in 2021 “…even the fall of Bill 10, was because of the discipline exhibited by UPND in the opposition. It defeated Bill 10 during the Patriotic Front (PF) regime. And the UPND did well in that area,” Shamenda said.

The Mast

Tonse’s New Strategy: Legitimacy by Structure, Symbolism by Family

 VIEWPOINT | Tonse’s New Strategy: Legitimacy by Structure, Symbolism by Family

The Tonse Alliance is no longer merely managing an opposition coalition. It is now actively constructing a centre of power.



Its official communiqué issued after the Council of Leaders meeting on February 7, chaired by Brian Mundubile, reads like a movement consolidating authority in real time. The language is deliberate: Mundubile is described as the “duly elected President of the Tonse Alliance and 2026 Presidential Candidate,” and the Council affirms the General Congress resolutions as “valid and binding.”



This is not procedural wording. It is political positioning.

At a moment when Tonse itself is split into competing camps, the Mundubile faction is using formal structures to settle the legitimacy question through paperwork, appointments, and institutional rhythm.



The communiqué makes three things clear.

First, Tonse is building a parallel state within opposition politics.

The Council approves a national executive politburo, expands sector portfolios, and appoints chairpersons for energy, labour, civil society, security affairs, religion, foreign relations, arts, and youth. These are not symbolic titles. They are the architecture of a campaign machine preparing for 2026.



The alliance is signalling that it is not an informal pact. It is presenting itself as an organised government-in-waiting.

Second, Tonse is moving from alliance politics into succession politics.



The most politically loaded appointment in the communiqué is also the most obvious: Hon. Tasila Lungu Mwansa is named National Youth Chairperson.



In Zambia’s current opposition climate, the Lungu name is not neutral. It carries emotional weight, historical loyalty, and unresolved grief, especially with Edgar Lungu having died on June 5, 2025, and his burial saga still forming part of the national political atmosphere.



By placing the former president’s daughter into a senior mobilisation portfolio, Tonse is doing more than empowering youth structures. It is anchoring itself to the most powerful remaining symbol in the PF ecosystem: the Lungu family.



This is where politics becomes inheritance.

In a fractured opposition space, legitimacy is no longer only contested through courts or conventions. It is contested through proximity to legacy.

Third, the alliance is quietly responding to the Kasama lesson.



The communiqué devotes its first resolution to the Kasama by-elections, citing “widespread intimidation, voter suppression, electoral violence, vote-buying, and institutional failures.”



The Council resolves to strengthen “electoral preparedness, mobilisation structures, and security response mechanisms.”

That language suggests Tonse believes future contests will not be won by rhetoric alone, but by organisation, protection of the vote, and ground discipline.



This is a shift from alliance symbolism to operational politics.

Yet even within this consolidation, the communiqué reveals unfinished business.

Provincial leadership appointments are deferred. The consolidated manifesto is still under consultation. And unity is reaffirmed precisely because unity is contested.



Tonse is building structure, but it is also managing fracture.

What emerges is a clearer strategic picture: the Mundubile camp is attempting to outgrow the opposition’s chaos by formalising authority, expanding portfolios, and capturing political symbolism, particularly through the Lungu name.

Whether this becomes renewal or subjugation will depend on what follows.

Does Tonse become a genuine coalition of equals with a programme?

Or does it become a vehicle where legitimacy is inherited, loyalty is absorbed, and rivals are marginalised through organisational control?

For now, the communiqué is not just an announcement.

It is a power map.

And it confirms that Zambia’s opposition battle is no longer only about removing UPND.

It is increasingly about who inherits the opposition itself.

© The People’s Brief | Political Desk

MUSEVENI BESTOWS PRESTIGIOUS MILITARY AWARD ON SON

IN UGANDA: MUSEVENI BESTOWS PRESTIGIOUS MILITARY AWARD ON SON


President Yoweri Museveni on Friday awarded his son, Chief of Defence Forces General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, a prestigious military medal recognising his leadership in regional anti-terror and stabilisation operations.



The award was presented during the 45th Tarehe Sita celebrations in Kabale District, which mark the anniversary of the National Resistance Army’s 1981 bush war launch.



The medal was given as a result of Kainerugaba’s command in operations against the Al-Shabaab insurgency, as well as his role in missions across the Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan, and Somalia.

Credit: New Age TV

MY LATE FATHER REMAINS ONE OF THE MOST MISUNDERSTOOD LEADERS NIGERIA HAS EVER PRODUCED… YET HE WAS A GOOD MAN

MY LATE FATHER REMAINS ONE OF THE MOST MISUNDERSTOOD LEADERS NIGERIA HAS EVER PRODUCED… YET HE WAS A GOOD MAN.

-Zainab Abacha, Daughter to Nigeria’s fmr President



“My father helped Nigeria build savings for the rainy days. Whenever the country looks like it’s going broke, those reserves he kept overseas come in to save the day… just like that.



If my dad had been more interested in luxury and appearances, he would have spent the money on yachts, private jets, and countless hotels in Dubai or Saudi Arabia. But no—he saved it for the rainy days.

Someday Nigerians will truly understand who my dad was.”

THE MUNDUBILE FACTION CROSSES THE LINE WITH TASILA APPOINTMENT – BEFORE BEING REJECTED

MUNDUBILE’S DESPERATION
IS SCARING

THE MUNDUBILE FACTION CROSSES THE LINE WITH TASILA APPOINTMENT – BEFORE BEING REJECTED



By Dr José

What I have seen today in politics, awe sure. It is a new low. We are used to undignified politics in this country, but today awe awe bane. We seem to be inventing new lows. What unfolded in the Brian Mundubile breakaway Tonse Alliance camp today belongs, quite frankly, in the gutter.



The decision to appoint Honourable Tasila Lungu as National Youth Chairperson while she remains in mourning was not just careless. It was culturally offensive and morally bankrupt. In any society that still remembers itself, mourning is not a technical inconvenience to be worked around. It is a sacred pause. A time when ambition is supposed to lower its voice and human decency is meant to lead.



That pause has already been violated enough.

Tasila Lungu remains in mourning in a climate poisoned by President Hakainde Hichilema’s insatiable desire to win arguments that do not concern him. Instead of allowing the late Edgar Chagwa Lungu to be laid to rest with dignity, the nation has been dragged into an ugly spectacle where a sitting President sues a former First Family in a Pretoria court, demanding control over the funeral of a predecessor the country knows he hated and disrespected. This is not leadership. It is ego in judicial robes.



Against this painful and unresolved backdrop, the Mundubile faction thought it appropriate to drag Tasila Lungu into factional politics.



What makes this even more disgraceful is the selective amnesia at play. This is Tasila, the daughter of the very man Brian Mundubile, through the Munyaule Zambia page and its ecosystem, helped vilify. The record is public. The hostility is documented. The contempt is known. To then attempt to extract political legitimacy from the Lungu name by appointing his daughter is not strategy. It is opportunism of the lowest order.



It is politics without shame, without memory, and without restraint.

And yet, in the middle of this moral clutter, something quietly instructive happened.

Tasila Lungu declined the appointment.



Her letter, dated 7 February 2026, was calm, measured, and devastating in its dignity. No theatrics. No public quarrel. Just a clear refusal grounded in timing, propriety, and self-respect. In a few short lines, she restored boundaries that seasoned politicians had chosen to ignore.



Where others saw a surname to exploit, she saw a season to honour. Where others chased relevance, she chose restraint. In doing so, she reminded the nation that leadership is not always about accepting titles. Sometimes leadership is knowing when to say no.



Hopefully, this puts the matter to rest.

But more importantly, it should stand as a warning. There are lines in politics that must not be crossed. Culture is one. Mourning is another. And the dead, especially those who once bore the weight of the Republic, are not props for factional games.

Some pauses are sacred. And sometimes, a refusal speaks louder than any appointment ever could.

KAMBWILI DISMISSES KWACHA APPRECIATION AS FICTITIOUS

KAMBWILI DISMISSES KWACHA APPRECIATION AS FICTITIOUS

FORMER Information and Broadcasting Minister Chishimba Kambwili has described the recent appreciation of the Zambian Kwacha against the US Dollar as purely fictitious.



Speaking in an interview at his residence in Luanshya, Mr. Kambwili, who is also former Roan Member of Parliament, expressed shock that the UPND government claims the economy is performing well while the situation on the ground tells a different story.



He said the Kwacha can only gain real strength through increased productivity, noting that Zambia’s manufacturing sector has collapsed and the country is not exporting enough to bolster the currency.



Mr. Kambwili added that government claims of economic improvement are part of electioneering tactics ahead of the August 13 general elections.



He warned Zambians to be cautious, saying the UPND is attempting to manipulate figures to present a misleading picture of the economy.



Meanwhile, he refuted assertions that Zambian mines were closing every month before the UPND assumed power.

RoanFM Newsroom

CHAWAMA LAWMAKER SAYS VOTERS REJECT SOLO PF RUNS

🟠 CHAWAMA LAWMAKER SAYS VOTERS REJECT SOLO PF RUNS

Bright Nundwe (Tonse/FDD), the newly elected Member of Parliament for Chawama, says voters do not want senior Patriotic Front figures to head into the August 2026 general election as separate presidential candidates.

In an interview with Daily Revelation, Nundwe said people do not want to see Given Lubinda, Makebi Zulu, and Brian Mundubile standing independently of each other.

Nundwe’s warning centers on one idea: split votes. She said PF members do not want their leaders to go into the election divided, and she linked that concern to ongoing infighting among PF leaders. She said she had hoped the disputes would be resolved but was not sure that would happen. Her argument is that division creates confusion and weakens coordination when voters are focused on leadership choices and outcomes.

She also addressed claims that she does not live in Chawama. Nundwe said those claims are laughable and stated she was born in Chawama constituency and has lived there from Grade Seven. She rejected claims that she lives in Rufunsa and said she does not want politics reduced to petty talk. Her message was that these distractions pull attention away from what residents want fixed.

On constituency priorities, Nundwe pointed to issues she said people raise regularly, including security concerns and the state of a police post construction that she said was almost completed.

She also spoke about development potential linked to water and referenced the Blue Water dam, describing opportunities such as irrigation and other activities connected to water-based development.

Her comments combine election messaging with local concerns. Nundwe’s position is that unity matters, distractions should be rejected, and the political conversation should stay focused on practical issues voters live with every day.

Tasila Lungu Rejects Mundubile’s Breakaway Tonse Alliance Appointment, Stays Put in PF Central Committee

Tasila Lungu Rejects Mundubile’s Breakaway Tonse Alliance Appointment, Stays Put in PF Central Committee


Hon. Tasila Lungu has rejected an appointment as National Youth Chairperson offered by Hon. Brian Mundubile’s breakaway Tonse Alliance faction, choosing instead to remain a loyal member of the Patriotic Front (PF) Central Committee.



In a clear political snub, Ms. Lungu declined the position, distancing herself from the splinter Tonse Alliance structure amid growing internal fractures within the opposition space.

PF FACTIONAL BATTLES INTENSIFY AS CHABINGA CAMP SERVES LUBINDA AND MUKANDILA WITH CONTEMPT OF COURT PAPERS

PF FACTIONAL BATTLES INTENSIFY AS CHABINGA CAMP SERVES LUBINDA AND MUKANDILA WITH CONTEMPT OF COURT PAPERS



By Augustine Chewe | Freelance Journalist

The deepening rivalry within the opposition Patriotic Front (PF) over control of the party and the presidential ticket ahead of the August 2026 General Election has taken a decisive legal turn.


The Robert Chabinga-led PF faction has formally served the Given Lubinda faction with Contempt of Court documents obtained from the Kabwe High Court. The documents were served on PF Acting President Given Lubinda and PF Deputy Secretary General Celestin Mukandila, following the recent expulsion of several PF Members of Parliament and ongoing efforts by the Lubinda camp to organise an Extra-Ordinary Convention, alongside other political activities allegedly conducted in the name of the PF.



According to sources close to the developments, the court action is aimed at restraining the Lubinda faction from what the Chabinga camp views as attempts to hijack party structures while a substantive leadership matter remains before the courts.



“The intention is to preserve the status quo and prevent unilateral decisions that could irreversibly alter party structures ahead of the general elections,” a senior PF insider told this publication.



The power struggle is already manifesting at grassroots level. On the Copperbelt, traditionally a Patriotic Front stronghold, some party structures, particularly in Kitwe, are reported to have been wrestled from the control of the Lubinda faction, further exposing the depth of internal divisions.



Meanwhile, a third camp aligned to former PF MP for Mporokoso Brian Mundubile is also accelerating mobilisation efforts. The Mundubile faction is reportedly securing endorsements from party structures in the Copperbelt and Luapula Provinces, with plans to extend outreach to Northern and Muchinga Provinces.



Sources further indicate that former PF Secretary General Davies Mwila is expected to tour the Copperbelt and Luapula in the coming week to consolidate support and influence grassroots structures to endorse Brian Mundubile’s presidential candidature.



As the situation stands, the PF remains sharply fractured, with loyalty among the Chabinga, Lubinda and Mundubile factions increasingly being tested in both the courts and at grassroots level. With the 2026 General Election fast approaching, the party’s internal turmoil shows little sign of easing, raising serious questions about its cohesion and electoral readiness.

Jito Kayumba did not just block me for no reason. I made a mistake – Junior Bally

Junior Bally writes  ✍️

Mr. Jito Kayumba did not just block me for no reason. I made a mistake, and it is normal for someone to take that decision when boundaries are crossed.



At that time, I was still young and lacked maturity in how to manage opportunities and resources. During the interviews I had on Power TV, I was frustrated and emotional, especially after seeing someone who had helped me block me. That frustration shaped my thinking then.



I want to be clear: I am not saying Mr. Jito Kayumba is a bad person. Not at all. He did his part by lifting me up, and for that I am truly grateful. Thank you for everything you did for me.



Today, I am growing. I understand things better, I am learning responsibility, and I am trying to build my life the right way. I sincerely apologize to Mr. Jito Kayumba. I am just a young man trying to find his path and do better.


#letlovelead
Mr Jito Kayumba sorry Boss thanks 👍

God bless you son. You will go far.

#Seer1

HH REFUSES TO SIGN CCTV BILL, SENDS IT BACK TO PARLEY TO AVOID INTRUSION INTO PRIVATE LIVES

HH REFUSES TO SIGN CCTV BILL, SENDS IT BACK TO PARLEY TO AVOID INTRUSION INTO PRIVATE LIVES



By Joseph Kamanga

President Hakainde Hichilema has refused to sign into law the Closed-Circuit Television (CCTV) Public Protection Bill, referring it back to the National Assembly for further consideration because “it poses a potential risk of intrusion into the private lives of citizens”.



According to Cabinet, President Hichilema emphasised the need to safeguard constitutional rights, particularly the right to privacy, before such legislation can be enacted into law.



The Head of State urged broader consultation with stakeholders to ensure that it strikes the right balance between enhancing public security and protecting civil liberties.



The CCTV Bill seeks to establish a legal framework for the regulation and management of surveillance systems, including the collection and handling of data obtained through such systems.

It also outlines structures intended to oversee the operation and coordination of public security surveillance mechanisms.



President Hichilema’s decision to refer the Bill back to Parliament therefore calls for refinement and wider engagement with relevant stakeholders to address concerns raised during its review process.



The Bill is now expected to return to the National Assembly for reconsideration by the members of parliament. Once approved, it will be sent back to the President for possible assent.

©️Zambia Reports, 7 February, 2026.

The Price of Dishonesty: Why British Leaders Fall and Zambian Leaders Flourish-Linda Banks

The Price of Dishonesty: Why British Leaders Fall and Zambian Leaders Flourish



By Linda Banks ©

SUSSEX, FEB 7- There is something i absolutely love about my adopted home, the British electorate possesses in abundance, an allergy. Not to error or complexity, but to lies. Once exposed, the reaction is swift. Authority weakens, colleagues retreat and exit becomes inevitable..



Britain’s recent political history reads like a warning label on how not to govern, David Cameron promised closure and delivered rupture. Theresa May promised certainty and offered paralysis, Boris Johnson denied what everyone else could see. Liz Truss sold fiction as economics, Rishi Sunak promised integrity and found himself explaining fines and family interests. Each fell, not because governance is hard, but because truth was treated as optional.



Britain forgives mistakes, but she does not forgive contempt for honesty.

The Pattern of Political Accountability or lack there of.

David Cameron assured the Nation that a referendum  would settle the question of whether a divorce from Europe would bring the much needed prosperity and sovereignty. It did the opposite, when the promise collapsed, so did his authority. In waltzed Theresa May, she  insisted that her Brexit deal was workable- even as Parliament rejected it repeatedly. The gap between rhetoric and reality widened, and Trust quickly drained away.



Before we could say fish and chips; In bumbled Boris, Johnson danced the nights away as elderly citizens died alone in nursing homes & hospital beds. He denied that his team was having lockdown parties, not once, not twice but he denied them again and again. Sadly for him, evidence later emerged that he lied, and police fines followed. Parliament was clearly misled and that was the moment his premiership ended in substance, even if he did not immediately leave office.



Liz Truss strutted into number 10 as the 3rd female PM under a Conservative government, but the 4th in one tenure. She was also a poor student of history, she withheld the full truth about the ambitious economic risks she had embarked on. The markets responded within days, Confidence quickly evaporated and so did she: lasting only a record breaking 49 days.


Right, surely by now the Tories would have learnt that the Brits are allergic to leaders who tell pokies, oh no… so in staggered in a sharp looking Rishi Sunak. The chap was excellent with numbers and popular with his peers (though the British public didn’t vote for him, rumours circulated that his Indian heritage was blamed by some) Rishi  promised integrity but found himself explaining fines and pandemic-era conflict of interest. His millionaire wife and father in law ‘s multimillion business was alleged to have been benefiting from the UK’s Covid policies; the same policies made by Rishi. Though no laws were proved to have been broken, but it broke the British trust.



I am sure by now you’ve caught my drift?The pattern is unmistakable, Brits tolerate error but they will not tolerate dishonesty.



Sir Keir Starmer: A Test of Judgement

Which brings us to Sir Keir Starmer, the man  did not socialise with Jeffrey Epstein- that must be stated plainly. Politics, however, is not only about personal innocence. It is about judgment, perception, and the company one keeps in positions of power. He Appointed a man to the position of Ambassador to the United States who is embroiled in the life of the infamous disgraced sexual offender, Jeffery Epstein. Peter Mandelson has since been fired from his position as Ambassador to the USA.



Now, Will Sir Keir survive a storm built on association, scrutiny, and questions of due diligence? In Britain, even proximity to scandal tests credibility. The public asks not only, “Did you do it?” but also, “Should you have known better?” As things stand politically, ousting Sir Keir will inevitably- unwittingly and inadvertently usher in Trump’s best buddy, the unapologetic far right leader; Nigel Farage. Will the British have foresight not to throw out the bath water out together with the baby? Well, I guess as they say; ‘The proof of the pudding is in the eating’, time will tell.



Nyuko mwangala

Now turn to Zambia, 🇿🇲 a country where promises are made loudly, revised quietly, and forgotten officially. Where the language of reform thrives, but consequences struggle to appear.



President Hakainde Hichilema came to office on a moral platform, he promised a new way of governing: transparency, restraint, respect for institutions. Yet several pledges remain unfulfilled, and in some cases blatantly ignored.



He said he would never tamper with the Constitution, yet a constitutional process was pushed forward aggressively against the wishes of the people. He celebrated publicly, and even bragged about it at a rally; where Parliament was described as having been “outmanoeuvred.” In Britain, that alone would have triggered resignations. But in Zambia , it triggered applause.



He spoke of compassion and reconciliation. Yet questions linger around former President Edgar Lungu’s health and pension entitlements.

He promised cheaper living. Citizens ask, Akabunga, is it at K50? He promised farmer support. They ask, Nga ama farmers, are they getting eight bags at K250?



He promised freedoms. Has the Public Order Act been repealed, or merely renamed? Was cyber law reversed, or enhanced under another guise? Ministers have repeated assurances contradicted by facts.



And still, the President remains in power.

Why does Zambia tolerate what Britain would not? Because institutions are weaker than personalities. Loyalty outranks truth. Calling out your own is mistaken for betrayal. Voters are told to be patient while standards quietly lower.



In Britain, institutions outlive leaders. In Zambia, leaders often outgrow institutions. Progress does not come from slogans or hashtags. It comes from standards applied consistently, especially to friends. Development does not survive selective honesty, neither does democracy.



A leader may survive broken promises, a nation does not survive normalised dishonesty.

Power built on half-truths is borrowed, and borrowed power eventually, is reclaimed.



Linda Banks is a Journalist covering politics, justice, social issues and international affairs across Africa and the UK.

© 2025 Linda Banks. All rights reserved.

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How Ghana Media Machinery Turned a “Blouse” Social-Media Comment Into a Success Story for their President

How Ghana Media Machinery Turned a “Blouse” Social-Media Comment Into a Success Story for their President


There is nothing more uniting than a factor ghat evokes national identity and national sovereignty.

Some young Zambians on social-media commented about President John Dramani Mahama’s choice of outfit when he arrived calling a strange top as a “blouse”!



Wode Maya (real name Berthold Kobby Winkler Ackon) Ghana’s most influential social media personality and travel vlogger, picked up the mockery and “educated” Zambians anout the Fugu.



The Ghanaian President’s Fugu—also widely known as the Batakari or simply the Ghanaian Smock—is a traditional handwoven garment originating from Northern Ghana that has become a powerful national symbol of leadership, unity, and identity



You can excuse the young ones. They have no recollection when our founding fathers, to appear anti-western and anti-colonialism or wear african identity adopted the Toga amd wore the Kente cloth, a traditional handwoven textile from the Akan and Ewe ethnic groups, often draped in a toga-like style over one shoulder.



Further the PR machinery of the President of Ghana horned on this arguement and amplified an insignificant comment on social media by a Zambian and created a big story out of it which made Ghanaians defend their attire and their President with pride, and Zambians also reacted to Ghanaians on Social Media.



The winner in all this is the President of Ghana; his image has been boosted across party lines back home. Everywhere in Ghana, people have been wearing or showing off pictures adorning the Fugu and praised, with admiration, their President for produly show/casing their traditions and culture abroad.

Stop using AI for fake images, news, use it for business – Hichilema

Stop using AI for fake images, news, use it for business – Hichilema



PRESIDENT Hakainde Hichilema says artificial intelligence (AI) should not be reduced to a toy for producing fake news and generating fake images, but must instead be used as a serious tool to grow businesses and connect African markets.



Speaking during the Ghana-Zambia Business Dialogue in Lusaka yesterday, President Hichilema said he had no problem with the rapid rise of AI, but warned that the technology must not be turned into a platform for mischief.



“We are able to assess through now AI, quickly you can tuck in there, get to know who wants what you produce, are they able to pay or they’re not able to pay,” President Hichilema said.



“So that’s a better use of AI than generating fake news and images.”

The Head of State said African entrepreneurs should embrace the technology as a bridge to new markets, not as a weapon for online chaos.



Furthermore, Zambia and Ghana had agreed to cooperate under what is called digital Ubuntu, a commitment to share knowledge and strengthen each other’s digital capacities.



The President said technology had already made the world small enough saying that if young people can meet online and end up marrying, then Zambia and Ghana have no excuse failing to find business opportunities for each other.



“I hear now there’s a lot of marriages where young people meet on the internet and they end up marrying each other,” President Hichilema said.



“So there’s no place too far. So if there’s no place too far in that sphere, in that space, there should be no place too far in business, in investment, in trade.”



President John Dramani Mahama, who departed yesterday, was in the country for a three-day state visit alongside First Lady Lordina Mahama.

By George Musonda

Kalemba, February 7, 2026

Zambia Sends Aid to Flood-Hit Mozambique

Zambia Sends Aid to Flood-Hit Mozambique

Zambia has provided humanitarian relief to Mozambique, donating 550 metric tonnes of food, including 500 metric tonnes of maize and 50 metric tonnes of beans, to support flood victims. The aid was handed over at Chanida Border Post, with Zambia’s Acting Minister of Finance and National Planning, Hon. Peter Kapala, saying the donation reflects the country’s commitment to regional solidarity.



The move follows an appeal by Mozambique for international help, with widespread flooding affecting several provinces. Zambia has also deployed two aircraft from the Zambia Air Force to support disaster response operations.



Minister Kapala stated that the donation was made on the instructions of President Hakainde Hichilema, highlighting Zambia’s understanding of climate-induced disasters and its commitment to Ubuntu principles.



Mozambique’s Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Maria de Fatima Manso, received the aid, praising Zambia’s timely support. This is not the first time Zambia has assisted Mozambique, having provided aid during Cyclone Freddy in 2023.

MWEETWA URGES PUBLIC TO JOIN DELIMITATION TALKS

MWEETWA URGES PUBLIC TO JOIN DELIMITATION TALKS

INFORMATION and Media Minister Cornelius Mweetwa has urged Zambians to take part in the upcoming nationwide stakeholder consultation meetings on constituency delimitation.



Mr. Mweetwa told ZNBC News that the release of the delimitation roadmap by the Electoral Commission of Zambia today marks an important step towards transparency and adherence to constitutional provisions.



He said the delimitation process, now anchored in the Constitution, places the responsibility of determining constituency boundaries and names in the hands of citizens through consultations, rather than government or the ECZ acting alone.



Mr. Mweetwa, who is also UPND National Spokesperson, encouraged opposition political parties to participate fully and make submissions to the ECZ during the consultation meetings.



He said political players who previously opposed Bill Number Seven should now engage in the process, adding that earlier differences should be set aside in the national interest.

ZNBC

PRESIDENT HICHILEMA TO DELIVER KEYNOTE ADDRESS AT MINING INDABA 2026 IN SOUTH AFRICA

PRESIDENT HICHILEMA TO DELIVER KEYNOTE ADDRESS AT MINING INDABA 2026 IN SOUTH AFRICA



By Victoria Kayeye Yambani

President Hakainde Hichilema is scheduled to attend and deliver a keynote address at the Investing in African Mining Indaba 2026, to be held from 9th to 12th February in Cape Town, Republic of South Africa.



Speaking in a statement, Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation,Rodney Sikumba,  says the President’s participation reflects Government’s commitment to leveraging the mining sector as a key driver of economic growth, industrialisation and sustainable development.



He notes that the President will be accompanied by the Minister of Mines and Minerals Development,  Paul Kabuswe,  alongside other senior government officials.



Mr Sikumba has explained that President Hichilema’s attendance comes at a pivotal moment as Zambia continues to implement a comprehensive reform agenda in the mining sector, focused on regulatory certainty, transparency, strengthened institutions and the adoption of modern mining technologies to unlock long-term growth.



He adds that these reforms have significantly enhanced global investor confidence in Zambia’s policy environment, governance standards and commitment to predictable, rules-based engagement.



The Acting Foreign Affairs Minister further says Zambia’s participation in the Country Showcase Sessions at Mining Indaba aligns with global discussions on access to critical minerals, resilient supply chains and sustainable resource governance, while also providing a high-level platform to present the country’s mining vision, policy reforms and investment opportunities to global investors and industry leaders.



The Minister  also disclosed that on the margins of the conference, President Hichilema is expected to hold bilateral engagements with mining companies, institutional investors, development partners and fellow Heads of State, as part of Zambia’s broader economic diplomacy drive aimed at attracting investment into the mining sector.

#NewsOnTheGo

EX-PRESIDENT CHAKWERA FACES POSSIBLE ARREST…Malawi Police Allegedly Obtain Warrant Over Corruption Claims

EX-PRESIDENT CHAKWERA FACES POSSIBLE ARREST
…Malawi Police Allegedly Obtain Warrant Over Corruption Claims

Former Malawian President Dr Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera is reportedly facing possible arrest over corruption allegations, according to reports emerging from Malawi.

The Lilongwe Times, monitored by Zambian Eye, reports that the Malawi Police Service has allegedly obtained a warrant of arrest for the former Head of State in connection with corruption scandals that occurred during his administration.

Full story https://zambianeye.com/ex-president-chakwera-faces-possible-arrest/

CHAKWERA OWES MALAWIANS “I’M SORRY, I FAILED YOU”

CHAKWERA OWES MALAWIANS “I’M SORRY, I FAILED YOU”

Former President Lazarus Chakwera owes Malawians a public, unambiguous apology. Not tomorrow. Not wrapped in scripture. Not diluted by excuses. Now.



The looting that allegedly took place under his administration, at Greenbelt, NOCMA, and the East Bank–West Bank (East Bridge) project, was not minor, accidental, or isolated. It was massive, systematic, and shameless, involving billions of kwacha while ordinary Malawians sank deeper into poverty. This was not governance; it was national betrayal.



And what did Malawians get from the man who promised to “clear the rubble”? Silence. Cold, arrogant silence.



Dr. Chakwera rose to power on a moral pedestal. He sold himself as a pastor-president, a man of God who would cleanse the state of corruption. Malawians trusted him, not just politically, but morally. That trust was abused. Under his watch, corruption did not retreat; it thrived.


Let us be clear: whether courts eventually convict individuals is irrelevant to this demand. Chakwera was the Head of State and Government. He appointed ministers. He presided over institutions. He enjoyed power, privilege, and praise. He cannot now pretend to be a helpless bystander to the rot that defined his tenure.



When scandals exploded, he did not stand before the nation to accept responsibility. He did not show empathy to citizens who watched their future being looted. He did not act with the urgency of a leader who cared. Instead, he appeared detached, shielded by State House walls, more concerned with personal comfort and legacy than national accountability.



That is failure. Total failure.

An apology is not a favour to Malawians. It is a debt. It is the minimum moral requirement for a leader whose administration presided over unprecedented allegations of theft and institutional collapse. Refusing to apologize only confirms what many already believe: that he feels no remorse and no shame.



History is unforgiving to leaders who hide behind silence. Without an apology, Lazarus Chakwera’s legacy will be sealed not as a former president, but as a president under whom Malawi effectively had no leadership, only sermons and slogans while the country was stripped bare.



Malawians are not asking for miracles. They are asking for honesty.

Dr. Chakwera must look Malawians in the eye and say: I failed you. I am sorry.

Anything less is cowardice. Anything less is contempt for the people he once swore to serve.

DR. LAZARUS CHAKWERA: THE MORAL COLLAPSE OF A PASTOR-PRESIDENT

DR. LAZARUS CHAKWERA: THE MORAL COLLAPSE OF A PASTOR-PRESIDENT

Dr. Lazarus Chakwera,

History will remember your presidency not for servant leadership as you made us to believe, but for silence in the face of monumental looting. For a nation that entrusted its future to a man who ascended to power on the language of morality, your tenure stands as one of Malawi’s most painful betrayals.



The revelations of billions of kwacha allegedly looted at Greenbelt, NOCMA, and the East East Bridge project are not just alarming, they are humiliating. They shame the nation. Worse still, they unfolded under a president who presented himself first and foremost as a pastor, a moral compass in a country desperate for ethical leadership.



When Malawians cried out, when civil society, the media, and ordinary citizens raised red flags, you chose silence. No visible remorse. No decisive leadership. No sense of urgency. You watched as the nation bled, and you said nothing. That silence was not neutrality; it was complicity.



You spoke eloquently about clearing the rubble. Yet under your watch, corruption did not merely continue, it mutated, expanded, and became more audacious. The scale of alleged theft during your administration has forced Malawians to ask an uncomfortable but necessary question: Was there a leader at all?



While public institutions were allegedly being milked dry, you appeared detached, preoccupied with personal comfort, image management, and the security of your inner circle. The responsibility Malawians entrusted to you, to govern, protect public resources, and act decisively against wrongdoing, was treated as optional.



For many citizens, your presidency represents a tragic paradox: a pastor who presided over unprecedented scandal; a leader who led by absence.



Whether courts will pronounce guilt is a legal matter, But politically and morally, the verdict among Malawians is already forming. Your failure to act, to speak, and to show empathy has placed you among the most disappointing leaders this country has known. Some will go further and argue that your tenure symbolizes the most catastrophic moral failure in Malawi’s leadership history.



That is a painful legacy to carry, but it is one written not by your critics, but by your own inaction. And that is the saddest truth of all.- Lilongwe Times

TIKTOK TOLD TO CHANGE ‘ADDICTIVE DESIGN’ BY EU OR FACE MASSIVE FINES

TIKTOK TOLD TO CHANGE ‘ADDICTIVE DESIGN’ BY EU OR FACE MASSIVE FINES

THE EU has told TikTok it must change its “addictive design” or face heavy fines, after it found the video sharing platform had breached its online safety rules.



It follows an investigation which began in February 2024 into the Chinese-owned app by the European Commission.



In its preliminary findings, external, the Commission said TikTok did not “adequately assess” how features like autoplay could harm the wellbeing of its users, including children, and said it failed to implement measures to mitigate the risks.



A TikTok spokesperson told the BBC the findings presented a “categorically false and entirely meritless depiction of our platform” and it planned to challenge them.



The platform has been invited to respond to the EU’s findings. Depending on the outcome of this step, the Commission could fine TikTok up to 6% of its total global annual turnover – estimated to be in the tens of billions.



EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen told reporters if TikTok wanted to avoid being fined, it would have to “change the design of their service in Europe”.



The Commission gave several suggestions for actions the platform could take, including implementing “screen time breaks” when people are using it at night and changing its algorithms, which feed users personalised content.



It also suggested TikTok disable so-called “infinite scroll”, which allows people to quickly cycle through millions of videos on the platform.



“The Digital Services Act makes platforms responsible for the effects they can have on their users,” Virkkunen said.

“In Europe, we enforce our legislation to protect our children and our citizens online.”



Professor Sonia Livingstone at the London School of Economics said while TikTok had introduced some tools to improve the online safety of its users, it was not enough to comply with the guidelines set down by the EU.



“Young people are calling for such changes,” she said.

“They are frustrated that the platform does not prioritise their wellbeing over profit.”



And social media expert Matt Navarra said while the use of the word addictive was “often abused” in these debates, the Commission’s findings seemed to be rooted in “true behavioural science”.



He added it marked a “seismic shift” in the way in which regulators were looking at social media platforms.

“This seems to be the first time a major regulator has said that the design is the problem,” he said.



“It’s no longer about just toxic content, it’s about toxic design.”

‘Warning shot’
It is not the first time the EU has looked into the workings of big tech firms or threatened them with fines.



In December 2024 it began a separate investigation into TikTok over alleged foreign interference during the Romanian presidential elections.

It has also launched an inquiry in January into Elon Musk’s X over concerns its AI tool Grok was used to create sexualised images of real people.



Meanwhile in December 2025 the EU fined X €120m (£105m) over its blue tick badges, saying they “deceive users” because the firm is not “meaningfully verifying” who is behind the account.



Social media analyst Paolo Pescatore said the latest announcement was a “reality check” for TikTok – and a “warning shot” for every social media platform.



“The market is shifting from ‘maximise engagement’ to ‘engineer responsibility’ – and regulators now have the tools to enforce it,” he said.



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BBC

US Threatens Algeria with Sanctions Over Historic Russian Su-57 Stealth Fighter Deal
On Tuesday, February 3, 2026, the United States State

US Threatens Algeria with Sanctions Over Historic Russian Su-57 Stealth Fighter Deal
On Tuesday, February 3, 2026, the United States State.


Department issued a stern warning that it may impose punitive sanctions on Algeria, Africa’s second-most powerful military, in response to its landmark acquisition of Russian Su-57 stealth fighter jets. Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Robert Palladino, head of the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs, characterized the deal as “problematic” and a significant concern for the Biden-Trump transition team’s regional security interests.

Washington is threatening to invoke the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA), a 2017 law designed to penalize nations that engage in “significant transactions” with Russia’s defense sector.

Algeria, which is ranked 27th globally and second in Africa behind Egypt in the 2026 Global Firepower Index, became the first foreign customer for the Su-57E in February 2025 as part of a broader effort to modernize its aging air fleet and maintain strategic superiority in the Maghreb.



The escalating tension underscores a broader “sanctions-versus-sovereignty” confrontation as the Trump administration intensifies pressure on African partners to sever deep-seated defense ties with Moscow.

Despite private diplomatic warnings, reports indicate that the first two Su-57E aircraft have already been delivered to Algerian soil, with pilots currently undergoing advanced training in Russia to operate the platforms.