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Patson Daka’s maiden Leicester City season ‘not really like I expected’

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Patson Daka has admitted his maiden Leicester City campaign did not go as well as he had hoped.

The Zambian striker, a £23m signing from RB Salzburg last summer, netted 11 goals in his first season in blue to finish as the club’s third-highest scorer. However, he had a difficult conclusion to the campaign, scoring just once in his final 15 outings.

After scoring 60 goals over the previous two seasons with Salzburg, it seems Daka may have been expecting more of himself at the King Power Stadium. Nevertheless, he retains faith in his ability and hopes to can kick on now he has settled into a new country.

“It has been an okay season, not really the best like I expected, but it’s a season I can say I can build on,” Daka said. “It’s not easy to go into a foreign land and to adapt there and then. It takes a bit of time. I put pressure on myself.

“I have to continue working extra hard because I know what is expected of me and what I expect of myself. At the end of the day, I know I have everything that it takes for me to be what I want to be. It’s all in me. I just have to be true to myself and believe in myself.”

Daka is currently away on international duty with Zambia as they play the first two of their qualifying matches for the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations.

They take on tournament finals hosts Ivory Coast on Friday and then Comoros next Tuesday.

As hosts, Ivory Coast have already qualified, so only the best of the other three teams in the group will make it to the finals, rather than the top two of four in all of the other pools.

Pleasingly for City, the tournament will be played next summer, so will not disrupt their season, especially as Wilfred Ndidi, Kelechi Iheanacho (both Nigeria), and Daniel Amartey (Ghana) could all be competing, as well as Ademola Lookman (Nigeria) if he returns permanently.

PF IS NO LONGER THE MAIN OPPOSITION

PF IS NO LONGER THE MAIN OPPOSITION

The Candidate’s Comment

SOCIALIST Party National Chairman for Youths and Security Kelvin Kaunda says the former ruling party, the Patriotic Front (PF) is no more and that everyday this party is getting worse.

Kelvin’s remarks have attracted a scornful reaction from PF National Youth Chairman Christopher Kang’ombe who argues that his party remains the main opposition, larger than any other in Zambia because it has 60 Members of Parliament.

Is Christopher normal? Is he being honest?

We agree with Kelvin that PF is getting worse every day and that this party is no more.

The arguement by Christopher that his party is the largest opposition in Zambia is ,of course, based on his personal feelings. Christopher has chosen to believe in his personal feelings and what he wishes to see.

Having a large number of MPs in Parliament doesn’t make your party the largest. A party must be judged on the premise of its effectiveness and impact to the people. Does PF have any impact in its checks and balances? Whom does PF influence at the moment? No matter how PF talks , no one is taking them seriously. PF is a tainted party that still suffers from the many crimes it committed against Zambians, which necessitated its loss in the previous elections.

We draw our convictions from history. When PF won the election in 2011, based on numbers in Parliament, Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) was the largest opposition party. In that election, PF had 60+ MPs while MMD had 55 MPs and UPND had only 28 MPs.

In consideration of votes, the PF got 1,037,108 ( 38.42%) while MMD had 902,619 (33.44%) and UPND had 464,527 (17.21%).

While these results portray that the main opposition was MMD after the 2011 elections, the reality was different on the ground.

UPND became a de facto main opposition party immediately after the election until it won in 2021. We all know that UPND was more effective in providing checks and balances to the PF more than MMD. We all know that MMD became useless immediately it lost power despite having many MPs than UPND. From having 55 MPs, MMD has crumbled to a point where in its current mode, the only person known as a member of that party is Nevers Mumba who appears to be a member of the UPND than a President of his party.

PF and its minions can argue all they want but the truth is that, their party is on its deathbed. It will soon be exactly one year after PF lost elections and there is no sign that this party is going anywhere.

They keep cheating themselves that they are rebranding after the loss. When you look at the developments in their party after losing elections, clearly, they have not rebranded into anything. If anything, they have carried on with their style of hooliganism, ignorance and arrogance.

The mere appointments into positions of people you sleep with doesn’t mean you’re going anywhere. Look at the characters who have been awarded positions in various party structures. Who are they? What was the criteria used to appoint these elements into these positions?

In a normal situation, these positions, including the one Christopher is occupying should be subjected to a vote. The entire Central Committee was appointed by one person, Edgar Lungu. They’re elements occupying those positions not because the general membership support and want them. They’re in those positions because that is what Edgar wanted. In normal circumstances, they should all be subjected to a vote. But knowing PF, those who feel they have some sort of power will want to manipulate their way into leadership and in order to do that, they have go maintain those appointed by Edgar into the Central Committee. We all know that Chishimba Kambwili is the most wanted person to be in Central Committee by the general membership of PF but until now, those who have some sort of power have decided to keep him out. Why? Is that rebranding? The way they’re treating Chishimba and other Presidential aspirants is the same way they behaved even while they were in power. Nothing has changed and yet some fools want to have us believe they have rebranded.

Of course, the truth is that PF is no longer the main opposition. Yes, they have some MPs but if an election was held today, can PF still maintain the number of MPs it has? Who,in their normal senses can again vote for such a party that is locked in confusion?

The truth is PF is no longer the main opposition. The same way MMD crumbled is the same way they will crumble. In fact, most of their MPs are only with them because they cannot afford a byelection. They have already decided to leave. When Parliament dissolves in 2026, Christopher and his friends will understand better that their party is shell.

Changes At The Judiciary Should Be Blamed On Careless Statements Issued By Opposition Political Leaders- Maxwell Chongu

By Maxwell Chongu
CHANGES AT THE JUDICIARY SHOULD BE BLAMED ON CARELESS STATEMENTS ISSUED BY OPPOSITION POLITICAL LEADERS.
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I expect politicians to be morally upright as they politic and not issuing misguided political statements that pose a threat of compromising our justice system.

Lately there has been a statement purported to have come from a senior political player which says and i quote ” We are in full control of the system, they are loyal to us ” end of quote

It’s nonsensical to accuse PRESIDENT HAKAINDE HICHILEMA of being a dictator over changes made at the judiciary yet we have opposition political leaders carelessly boasting of being in full control of the system, something that triggered mistrust which led to unprecedented changes at the lusaka magistrate courts.

The judiciary should be a neutral ground void of any political manipulation or interference as it is the last and final hope for any agreived citizen in terms of justice, inline with laws enshrined in our supreme document of our land herein referred to as the CONSTITUTION.

Changes at the judiciary have sparked several debates across the nation with some sections of the society accusing the head of state President Hakainde Hichilema of trying to compromise the justice system in his favour while others are saying the changes were long overdue as no results were seen particularly in the fight against corruption.

Personally i feel opposition political leaders are to blame for the changes made at the judiciary due to their untimely public outbursts.

Lately we have seen several political figures being summoned by investigative wings questioned, arrested and taken before the courts of law for a fair and just trial which has seen others being acquitted.

However careless political utterances by certain opposition political leaders claiming to be in charge of the system have agitated state house creating suspicions that eventually affected the judiciary through unprecedented changes at the lusaka magistrate courts which has seen ten (10) magistrates being moved to different places a very unfortunate turn of events which could have been avoided.

Clearly carelessness in terms of issuance of political statements claiming to be in control of the system will not only pose as a threat to our justice system but will also disadvantage any PF affiliated person including the innocent ones appearing before the courts of law.

I expect politicians to stay clear from the civil service and arms of government as they politic to avoid compromising service delivery from noble institutions.

Let me also take this opportunity to advise politicians above all the Zambian citizenry not to believe convictions made by the public courts of opinion but to allow our courts legally mandated to discharge such duties do their job.

Let me make my humble appeal to the Patriotic Front Party acting President Hon. Given Lubinda to caution his members when making political statements to the public because careless statements could act as a recipe for civil disobedience.

Maxwell Chongu 🐍
YOUNG KING COBRA
#2031

Munthu Ozitukumula Anankala Pa Nsimbi Yokupywa, Given Lubinda Mocks President HH

PF acting president Given Lubinda has mocked President Hakainde Hichilema for “speaking highly of himself” while discrediting others.

Mr Lubinda said the Head of State wanted to portray himself as the only “clean” and caring leader while labeling “his friends” as a clique of thieves.

The opposition leader frowned at the President over his stance on the death penalty.

He said this at the opposition party secretariat in Lusaka last week when he met with the PF women’s League.

“He is claiming that he is getting rid of the death penalty, he wants to be seen as the one who loves people, no. The last time someone was killed in Zambia as a result of death penalty was in 1997. From 1997 up to date there is no single person who had been killed,” he said.

“President Mwanawasa never killed even a single person, Rupiah Banda never killed a single person, Micheal Sata never killed a person, Edgar Chagwa Lungu pardoned even those on death penalty saying he didn’t want his hands to be blood stained, he reduced their sentences. Now this one now wants to portray a picture that he is the one who loves people, the one who doesn’t want death penalty, ati boza bati.”

The opposition leader also slammed President Hichilema for claiming to have been the first President to have done certain things which Lubinda said even previous leaders had done.

“I have been a Minister of Foreign Affiars before, together with president Micheal Sata we brought the Secretary General for the United Nations. Iye kwabwela chabe ka under Secretary, it is the first time in Zambia!” he said.

“Azimai ndi azibambo muntu ozitukumula, anaimba a Sakala brothers….anankala pa nsimbi yokupya. He has a habit of saying whatever he does this is the first time.. and then he labels all his friends as a clique of thieves. He thinks he is the only one who is a clean person and the rest are criminals.”-ZR

Not everything done in the past was wrong.DEBT SWAP was the best thing done by the previous govt- Dr. Brian Sampa

Dr. Brian Chota Sampa – BCS
DEBT SWAP IS NEED

We will say this again.Not everything done in the past was wrong.DEBT SWAP was the best thing done by the previous government.

Let’s live in reality.Civil servants are suffering due to debt.The government owes them alot of money in terms of arrears,settling in allowances, gratuities and other personal emoluments.Before cancelling debt SWAP pay the civil servants what you owe them.

The government should not run away from responsibility.As you improve the economy know that some people need help now not tomorrow.Even if the economy improves those with debt won’t have what to spend.

In planning we have long term and short term goals.In medicine we have the ABCs(airway, breathing and Circulation).When a patient is unconscious after an accident you can’t start by collecting blood to take to the lab,this is because by the time results are coming the patient may be dead.

So you check the airway,then the breathing and now circulation.The aim is to save the patient first then you can do other things.Same applies,the reviving of the economy can’t be done in one day,but the people need to feed and survive.So you can’t let them die as you fix the economy.Lets first attend to their immediate needs then we can do other things later.

If only the government knew what these civil servants are going through they can’t believe that they even manage to go for work.People are attending court sessions due to debt others are in depression while others are in hospitals due to strokes.Things are not ok.We receive calls of civil servants crying in the middle of the night asking for help to push for their first from government.Its so uncaring for the government to removes the only thing that helped some people put food on the table.Its unacceptable and inhuman.

We were supposed to be discussing how to extend the debt SWAP to council workers not scraping it off.

We won’t develop if we will be starting from scratch each time a new government is formed.

30//05//2022..BCS

Tulekakwa Abengi In This Dictatorship, One Year For Calling The President An Anti-christ-Chilufya Tayali

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By Chilufya Tayali

TULEKAKWA ABENGI IN THIS DICTATORSHIP, ONE YEAR FOR CALLING THE PRESIDENT AN ANTI-CHRIST, SURELY ARE THESE THE CRIMES CITIZENS SHOULD BE GOING TO JAIL FOR?

I will not argue with the magistrate because they say, “A judge (or Magistrate) passes judgement in his/her wisdom or lack of it”.

But in my opinion, a person should not go to jail for thinking that the President is not Christian or he belongs to whatever religious group.

I personally don’t care what other people think about my religious beliefs. In my life I have been called a Satanist but I was never bothered.

BESIDES, IT IS NOT SO MUCH ABOUT WHAT PEOPLE CALL YOU, BUT WHAT YOU DO.

You can be called a Church elder, but if your actions are devilish, people would think you are a fake Christian and instead associate you to the Anti-Christ.

ACTIONS SPEAKS LOUDER THAN WORDS, SHOULD A PERSON BE PUNISHED FOR A YEAR IN PRISON, IN A CHRISTIAN NATION FOR THIS?

Basically I am giving my personal opinion on the issue of a driver from Evelyn Hone College who has been sentenced to one year imprisonment by the Lusaka Magistrates’ Court for alleging that President Hakainde Hichilema is a disbeliever in Christ.

Andsen Zulu, 46, who was facing a charge of defamation of the President failed to prove that the Head of State is atheistic and admitted bringing his name into ridicule.

Zulu on April 29, 2022 with intent to bring the name of the President into hatred, ridicule or contempt published defamatory matter on his Facebook page alleging that “HH is a member of the anti-Christ so we can’t get surprised.”

Appearing before magistrate Chrispine Hampungani, Zulu who pleaded guilty to the charge of defamation of the President, said he did not intend to bring the Head of State into contempt.

Asked if he had lawful justification to defame President Hichilema, the convict denied, saying he was only having a simple conversation with his friend Mohammed.

Magistrate Hampungani convicted Zulu upon his own admission of guilt.

In his mitigation, Zulu begged for the court’s mercy, saying he never meant his word neither did he know his comment would attract a serious offence.

In his judgement, magistrate Hampungani said Zulu’s actions brought the President’s name into disrepute especially on Facebook to which many people have access.

“To deter would be offenders, I hereby sentence you to one year imprisonment with hard labour effective today. Leave to appeal is granted within 14 days if you are disatisfied with the judgement of this court,” said magistrate Hampungani.

TAYALI THE PUBLIC LAWYER OF THE PUBLIC COURT OF OPINIONS!

EFF Statement On Glencore’s Bribery And Market Manipulation Admission

The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party has expressed as Glencore admitted to bribery and market manipulation charges involving $1.1 Billion.

The EFF speaks after the U.S. Department of Justice Tuesday last week issued a statement saying Glencore International A.G. (Glencore) and Glencore Ltd., both part of a multinational commodity trading and mining firm headquartered in Switzerland, each pleaded guilty and agreed to pay over $1.1 billion to resolve the government’s investigations into violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and a commodity price manipulation scheme.

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams for the Southern District of New York said Glencore paid bribes to secure oil contracts, to avoid government audits, and make lawsuits disappear.

These guilty pleas are part of coordinated resolutions with criminal and civil authorities in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Brazil.

Glencore is also a member of the Minerals Council South Africa, which has a “Membership Compact”.

In a statement, seen by Pindula News, the EFF party led by Julius Malema said the admission has vindicated the party that has in the past been castigating the company. Reads the statement:

EFF STATEMENT ON GLENCORE’S BRIBERY AND MARKET MANIPULATION ADMISSION
Sunday, 29 May 2022

The EFF is not shocked by Glencore’s admission of foreign bribery and market manipulation. Glencore, a company which is a major producer of commodities within mining and the oil sector, has pleaded guilty to charges of bribery and market manipulation in the United States to prevent further investigation by the Department of Justice, and agreed to pay a fine of more than R15 billion.

The charges by the US Department of Justice arise out of a decade-long scheme by Glencore and its subsidiaries to make and conceal corrupt payments and bribes through intermediaries.

The EFF is vindicated as we have consistently called Glencore a criminal syndicate that operates in a mafia style through deep state channels, using politicians as puppets. The guilty pleas by Glencore in the United States contains evidence beyond reasonable doubt that demonstrates corrupt payments to the tune of US$76 million, to secure improper advantages to obtain and retain businesses.

As a criminal syndicate, Glencore did not have any legitimate business anywhere where it operates as all its businesses, notably between 2007 and 2018, employed corrupt tactics throughout the world. Therefore, there is no reason to believe that any of Glencore’s business dealings in South Africa were above board. Glencore’s relationship with Cyril Ramaphosa, which started in 2012 when they sold him shares was nothing but a corrupt transaction. Glencore paid Ramaphosa through intermediaries to gain political influence and manipulate contracts with key state-owned entities, particularly Eskom.

Cyril Ramaphosa has been having business dealings with the very state he presides over, and this was done through Glencore which has been verified as a global criminal today.

The South African economy has suffered drastically because of Glencore and puppets like Ramaphosa whose wealth stems from corruption. The EFF warned Parliament during the Energy debate in 2016 that Eskom is collapsing because of inflated and corrupt coal prices. South Africa does not have stable electricity generation today because Glencore was central to manipulation of coal prices. When we refused to withdraw that Cyril Ramaphosa was involved with a criminal syndicate in a corrupt relationship, we were chased out of Parliament to protect criminals.

It is now a known fact that Glencore’s bribes and business dealings, were to advance particular neo-liberal economic policy, to ease the theft of international cartels which masquerade as companies.

The EFF is once again proven correct, that the private sector is one of the most corrupt, self-centred sectors in society, and their interest for profit maximisation has no ethical boundary.

The EFF calls on the South African Revenue Services to investigate all of Glencore’s transactions since 2007 to date and use their capacity to follow every cent. The EFF calls on the National Prosecution Authority (NPA) to establish a special task team to work with the Financial Intelligence Center (FIC) and the HAWKs to investigate all Glencore’s business dealings in South Africa.

The EFF will write to the Speaker of the National Assembly to demand an establishment of an Ad Hoc Committee to investigate all of Glencore’s transactions since 2007. The EFF will not waste any time writing to Cyril Ramaphosa or any of his cabinet ministers to demand anything as they are undoubtedly involved in the cover-up of Glencore’s corrupt activity in South Africa.

Mum became pregnant while already pregnant and gives birth to ‘miracle’ twins conceived one week apart

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A mum who suffered three miscarriages has revealed how she became pregnant while already pregnant.

Cara Winhold, 30, and her husband Blake, 33, hoped to expand their family after the birth of their son Wyatt in 2018.

The couple, from Texas, US, suffered three miscarriages with one of them nearly proving fatal.

Then Cara fell pregnant in March 2021.

During Cara’s second scan, she discovered she was actually expecting two babies that had been conceived a week apart.

The incredibly rare phenomenon is known as superfetation. It happens when a second, new pregnancy occurs during an initial pregnancy and can occur days or weeks after the first one.

Cara gave birth to Colson just after 4am on October 25, 2021, with Cayden following six minutes later.

The pair were delivered at 35 weeks with Colson weighing six pounds five oz and Cayden four pounds nine oz.

Cara, of North Richland Hills, Texas, said that there is currently a striking four pound weight difference between Colson and his little brother Cayden, meaning she buys two different sizes of clothing and nappies.

Cara said: “I got pregnant while I was already pregnant. I said to the doctor, ‘what happened? He wasn’t there the first time. What’s going on?’

“She said that most likely I ovulated twice, released two eggs and they got fertilised at different times, about a week apart.

“I 100% believe it was a miracle just because of everything that happened in my pregnancy journey.

“I like to believe that it was my way of getting back the two babies that I lost and kind of them helping out in a way.

Mum became pregnant while already pregnant and gives birth to

“I can’t think of any other explanation to having twins – it was 100% natural and they don’t run in my family. It was a total surprise.”

Ther former teacher miscarried a child in 2019, another in 2020 that almost cost her life, and another in February 2021.

She discovered she was expecting again the following month, March 2021.

Cara said: “My doctor had me come in for a scan at five weeks just to make sure everything was ok and on that scan there was just one baby.

“Because of my history she wanted to see me again in two more weeks just to check and make sure there was a heartbeat.”

When she returned with her husband seven weeks into her pregnancy, they were told that there were two babies.

“I broke down in tears and cried. I was overwhelmed, confused, but very happy,” Cara said.

“My husband was in shock. On the very first scan there was a sac with one baby and then when I went back there was a really tiny little sac in the corner that had another baby in it.

“You could see baby A [Colson] was more developed, whereas the other one was like a tiny dot.”

Cara said her seven-month-old boys have always been different sizes as towards the end of her pregnancy Colson was two weeks ahead of his little brother in terms of growth.

Cara advises mothers who may relate to her story not to give up if they feel that having children is part of their story.

She said: “If it’s in your story and your heart and calling then don’t give up on it because we didn’t and we got a huge surprise and a wonderful miracle in the process.

“I know it’s different for everybody but, I never expected to be a twin mom or have all boys.

“But I’m blessed with a house of boys.”

Economist Katiwenge Chirambo rubbishes reasons Malawi has given for Devaluation of the Kwacha

Malawi’s Kwacha currency devalued by 25% in 2022
Economics 101. You do not devalue your currency when you are a NET IMPORTER.

Countries use evaluation to boost exports due to the lowered value in currency perceived by countries that import the goods.

Malawi is a NET IMPORTER, not a NET EXPORTER. So, the devaluation of the kwacha will not yield it any benefit.

I will share more basics in the next post.

To see failures of devaluation as an economic policy or tool, look at Brazil. In 2011, the Brazilian real was steeply devalued. As a result, it encountered many other problems, such as declining crude oil and commodity prices.

Brazil, despite having commodities that it exports to other countries, such as oil, etc., devaluation did not achieve the intended goal.

The late Professor Bingu wa Mutharika (MHSRIP) warned against the devaluation of the kwacha. In fact, he fought against implementing that policy, and Malawi was saved.

For the MRB to resort to devaluation of a kwacha when we remain a net importer with a negative balance of payment remains a mystery.

The MCP government treats these policy instruments as gimmicks to use, but they fail to appreciate the dire consequences that it will have on ordinary Malawians.

Some “keyboard” and “Facebook Economists” are claiming that there would be “temporary” period of inflation that would finally stabilize. That is wrong and uninformed thinking.

As we speak, Malawi is facing a steep rise in inflation, which the government had no policy response to. Because Sosten Gwengwe and the MRB Governor have no policy response strategy.

It is the case of the blind who try to lead those who can see.

Currency devaluation at the height of a technical recession and sharp rise of inflation is equivalent to pouring petrol on fire.

Chakwera and his economic team have just sunk Malawi into a further economic crisis that is going to sink the country into further poverty.

My fellow friends, and patriots. Brace yourself for the worst times to come – and always remember, the problems were manufactured, by the MCP government that is clueless about how to run the economy.

I speak as a highly qualified Economist.

The Role of War Veterans in Zimbabwe’s Political and Economic Processes

Paper presented by Wilfred Mhanda to the SAPES Trust Policy Dialogue Forum in Harare on 7 April 2011. Wilfred Mhanda, aka Dzinashe Machinugura, was a commander of the Zimbabwe People’s Army (Zipa), and in the leadership of the alternative Zimbabwe Liberators Platform.

Zimbabwe’s former liberation fighters have become a household name for all the wrong reasons. This paper will seek to trace the development of the role of war veterans in Zimbabwe’s political and economic processes particularly from 1997 onwards to date and provide a contextual background for their perceived role and put the public perception of the former fighters in perspective.

The war veterans came into being with the demobilisation of those former ZIPRA and ZANLA fighters who were not attested into the Zimbabwe National Army, ZNA in 1980. The advent of Zimbabwe’s independence on 18 April 1980 and the subsequent formation of the Zimbabwe National Army made the former liberation armies both superfluous and redundant as their mission of liberating Zimbabwe had been accomplished. ZIPRA and ZANLA no longer had any role to play in an independent Zimbabwe. From then onwards, we could only refer to former ZANLA and former ZIPRA fighters. It is these fighters who then became referred to as veterans of the national liberation war. Maintaining the ZIPRA/ZANLA labels and their links to the liberation parties would have only served to undermine the unity and cohesion of the new army as evidenced by the counter-productive ZANLA/ZIPRA clashes in places like Entumbane in 1980/81.

The former fighters were weaned off from their parent political parties ZANU and ZAPU and their welfare became the responsibility of the new Government of Zimbabwe and not of their former mother parties. Any links with the political parties could only now continue in terms of individual membership of those political parties. It is instructive to note that, technically, the overwhelming majority of the former fighters were never card carrying members of the political parties ZANU and ZAPU that parented ZALNLA and ZIPRA; nor were they required to do so. They became registered members of the parties’ armed wings and not the parties. All that was required of them was the commitment to fight for the liberation of their country. For the fighters on the other hand, the political parties and their armed wings became vehicles and instruments for the liberation of Zimbabwe.

Indeed, the former fighters had both political and economic roles during the liberation war in addition to their fighting role. The liberation armies were simultaneously a fighting, political and economic force. Their role as a fighting force entailed waging war against the illegal racist, minority Smith regime to inflict defeat on them. Their role as political force encompassed fighting for democracy, self-determination and liberation and mobilisation and organisation of the masses of the people to support the liberation war as their war; a people’s war that could only be won by fully mobilising the people and relying on them. The economic role of the liberation forces was determined by their engagement in production related activities to sustain themselves. They hoped for external assistance but principally they were dependent on their own efforts which underpinned the concept of self-reliance. Furthermore, fighting the enemy did not only entail engaging his forces but the destruction of the economic base supporting his war effort like road, rail and communication infrastructure and the disruption of agricultural and farming activities. This was another economic role of the liberation armies; the destruction of the enemy’s economic lifeline to complement the United Nations economic embargo imposed on Rhodesia after UDI.

The period from 1980 to 1990 could be characterised as a phase of dormancy for the former fighters as they tried to adjust to the new reality of finding their way back into society. This was a very crucial period as it planted the seeds of some of the problems associated with the former fighters that surfaced almost two decades later, as the chickens came back home to roost. It is generally accepted that in post-conflict situations, there is a need to provide for equitable, sustainable assistance to veterans as part of their disarmament, demobilisation and re-integration into society. Failure to do so invariably leads to instability engendered by the disaffected veterans. Indeed, the ZANU-PF government has been castigated by independent researchers and analysts for failing to adopt a sound veterans’ policy for their re-integration back into society. They have also decried the initial efforts at demobilisation in 1981 as inadequate.

According to A.G. Dzinesa:

…no elaborate reintegration policy was designed, besides the provision of a grant of $400. The opportunity to plan a comprehensive DDR strategy at the earliest possible stage was lost. The limited reintegration strategy resulted in ineffective integration of these demobilised combatants, the majority of whom registered under the demobilisation Programme of 1981 .[1]

Gerald Mazarire and Martin Rupiya concur:

Given the impact of resources at the individual level, set at Z$185,00 per month over 24 months, the sums were generally far short of what was required to adequately assist former combatants to ease themselves back into the capitalist economy inherited from Rhodesia. Many lacked the necessary skills while those in command of the economy spurned the new entrants. Furthermore, serious government corruption was later unearthed in the selection and allocation of scholarships. As a result, these did not really benefit the intended beneficiaries – the ex-combatants. [2]

Muchaparara Musemwa adds:

The government’s demobilisation package which in the words of an ex-guerrilla Albert Nyathi was a ‘pitiful alternative to Operation Seed ‘, is in fact ‘notorious’ for falling far short of adequately preparing ex-combatants to returning to civilian society. It was an impetuously designed programme that overlooked the diverse socio-economic needs of each and every demobilised ex-combatant. Very little if anything was done to assess the extent to which society at large was prepared to absorb them. Some ex-combatants had practical problems like not having a place they could call home … [3]

According to Dzinesa:

Notwithstanding the existence of a dedicated Demobilisation Directorate, there were programmatic and institutional gaps. These included a lack of broad and consistent socio-economic profiling of combatants, the failure to implement financial management skills training for the many ex-combatants inexperienced in handling (demobilisation) money, incompetent and corrupt directorate staff, an absence of elaborate and workable business or cooperative support mechanisms and the lack of proactive monitoring mechanism. The majority of the ex-combatants enterprises collapsed due to these factors while agro-based enterprises were also hard-hit by drought. [4]

The same conclusions were also reached by Musemwa. [5]

It is instructive to note that the problems of violence, anarchy and lawlessness that Zimbabwe associated with war veterans from 1997 onwards can be attributed to the failure by the government, society and the donors to implement a sound, sustainable policy of demobilisation, catering for the welfare of the former fighters and facilitating their reintegration into society.

It is also noteworthy that the former liberation parties, ZAPU and ZANU were notable by their silence as the former liberation fighters struggled to find their feet in the new Zimbabwe that they fought so hard to bring about. War is a very excruciating and traumatic experience and the first thing that should have been addressed ahead of any financial and material benefits, was to facilitate the former fighters’ re-integration into society through providing counselling to help them cope with post traumatic stress disorders. Sadly this was never done.

The first decade into independence saw the former fighters slide into extreme poverty and destitution. They were so to speak, war veterans in themselves. It was this desperate situation and misery that saw them form the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association, ZNLWA as a vehicle to champion their forgotten interests. With the formation of the association in 1990, with Justice Charles Hungwe as the founding chair, the fighters transformed from being war veterans in themselves to become war veterans for themselves. It was against a lot of resistance that the association was formed as both the political and bureaucratic establishment were apprehensive about the move, with most of them not being former fighters. They feared that the new association could de-legitimise them on that account. The war veterans association was registered as a non-partisan membership organisation in terms of the Private Voluntary Organisations Act to cater for the welfare needs of the former fighters. It was not a case of all former fighters automatically becoming members of the organisation. Some of the actions that were later associated with the organisations are clearly inconsistent with the provisions of the Act and could easily be used as arguments for its de-registration.

The government responded with the enactment of the War Veterans Act two years later to cater for the welfare of the former fighters in a desperate effort to contain the reach of the new organisation. The Act was meant:

to provide for the establishment of schemes for the provision of assistance to war veterans and their dependants; to provide for the establishment of a fund to finance such assistance; to provide for the constitution and functions of the War Veterans Board; and to provide for matters incidental to or connected with the foregoing (War Veterans Act: Chapter 11:15, 1996).

These were indeed very altruistic and well-meaning objectives that could have gone a long way to uplift the former fighters and mitigate their miserable plight. But for the record, other than the formation of a War Veterans Board and the creation of a dedicated ministry nothing came of the Act’s noble intentions. The former fighters had to take to the streets five years later to get any form of assistance despite the clear provisions of the Act.

The country’s former liberation fighters hit the headlines in the in the years 1996-97 in connection with compensation payments based on War Victims Compensation Act that had been on the statute books since the time of the Rhodesian war against the guerrillas. The Victims of Terrorism (Compensation) Act of 1973 was introduced by the Smith regime to compensate for death, injury and damage or loss of property caused by an act of terrorism on or after 1972. [7] At independence, the Act was amended to include almost all who could have been negatively affected by the war be it in education or loss of income. The beginning and cut off period was set at March 1962 to March 1980. [8] Under the War Victims Act, injury means ill health, physical and mental incapacitation caused by war inside Zimbabwe and in the neighbouring countries between 23 December 1972 and 29 February 1980. [9] The ZANU-PF government established a War Victims Compensation Fund in 1980 for payments to victims in terms of the Act. As noted in the previous sentence, the majority of the former fighters were eligible for compensation in terms of the broad provisions of the Act. However the rank and file of the former fighters were not aware of its existence and provisions. The politicians, on the other hand, had drawn benefits from it. According to the weekly Zimbabwe Independent publication of 17 May 1996, with the column heading ‘Chefs help themselves to war veterans compensation fund’:

Top politicians, senior government officials and other influential people in Zimbabwe’s liberation war have allegedly drained the national fiscus of millions of dollars through inflated compensation claims for disabilities they say they sustained during the struggle.

Operatives in the pension’s office, most of them war veterans themselves, observed who was benefitting. Word soon got around in 1995 that the former fighters could submit applications for compensation for various claims. A flood of applications followed. These were processed by the relevant department in the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare. Initially a number of medical practitioners made the disability or injury assessments but subsequently it was Dr Chenjerai Hitler Hunzvi [10], then stationed at Harare Central Hospital, who took it upon himself to do the bulk of medical evaluations.

Queues of up to 500 fighters could be seen for weeks at the War Veterans Association HQ in Belgravia. The rank and file former fighters started drawing compensation from the fund in 1995 i.e. two years before the alarm was raised that the fund had been looted by the former fighters, primarily service chiefs, senior army commanders and civil servants. It was the Zimbabwe Independent which first exposed the scam in 1996. [11] Compensation payments were stopped in April 1997 following a public outcry. According to The HERALD of 18 April 1997:

The unexpected high figure, age of some of the claimants and purported beneficiaries and alleged abuses of the War Victims Compensation Fund recently led the Government to suspend further disbursements of funds under the facility and order investigations into the allegations and come up with a water tight policy on who should qualify.

The government subsequently established a commission of inquiry headed by then Judge President Justice Chidyausiku a couple of months later in 1997. Senior commanders and prominent fighters were paraded before it in a humiliating fashion to answer for their compensation awards and vouch for their disability.

According to the Herald report of 18 April, Minister of Public Service, Labour and Child Welfare, about 70 000 compensation applications had been processed, with a possibility of rising to 100 000. It is highly improbable that more than 20 000 former fighters had benefited from the fund by the time it was stopped. Besides, also according to the same issue of the Herald:

Whilst mostly former combatants are among the list of those who have benefited from the fund, former Rhodesian soldiers are also drawing from the fund which does not restrict it to former Zipra and Zanla combatants only as is now commonly believed.

Also in the same HERALD issue, Minister Chitauro commenting on the magnitude of the figure of beneficiaries says:

The figures were astronomical given that about 35 000 former Zanla and Zipra forces were demobolised in 1980 while the war veterans registers had even less.

Furthermore, the same HERALD issue under the headline ‘ 23-year-olds among war fund claimants’ quoted Minister Chitauro:

There were reported cases of 23 year-olds applying for compensation yet these should have been toddlers when the war of liberation was being waged in the country. “The youngest person to qualify should be around 33 t0 35 years old” she said.

The HERALD issue of 6 June 1997 also carried a report of a fraudster Lovemore Nyirenda who swindled the Pensions Office of Z$ 400 000 from unlawful claims from the War Victims Fund and was convicted of fraud by a Harare magistrates court.

All these foregoing factors suggest that the former fighters could not have been the major beneficiaries of the War Victims Compensation Fund although public perception suggested otherwise. This led the former fighters to conclude that they were victims of a deliberate campaign to target them for smearing. The Financial Gazette issue of 26 August 1997 carried a headline in its National Report of ‘Ex-combabtants cry foul as ernquiry unfolds – We are being made sacrificial lambs”:

Former freedom fighters in Zimbabwe’s war of liberation testifying before the presidentially-appointed commission charge that there are attempts by “hidden hands” in the top echelons of the party and the government to use them as fodder in the crisis surrounding allegations that the fund was looted of millions of dollars by top politicians and others in Zimbabwe .

“The is something wrong if we now must appear before a commission to explain why we were compensated for our injuries, while the real looters of the fund remained unscathed by the investigation” said Rushesha, now Minister of State for Gender issues. .. “We see a deliberate ploy to embarrass comrades yet there are people in the party and government who bought apartments in Harare and additional farms through the War Victims Fund but these people are not being hauled before this commission”: she added.

Her testimony and emotions dovetailed those of other ex-combatants highly active during the war who have appeared before the commission which enters its seventh day..

Chris Mutsvangwa, a former detachment commander with ZANLA forces, the armed military wing of ZANU PF during the liberation war said: “There is no doubt that this commission’s hearings are exposing what many of us who participated in the war have always known: the welfare of the ex-combatants was never on their priority list.. They were too busy lining their pockets to care about us.” He said it was unfair that ex-combatants continued to line up before the commission while ‘the real people with a case to answer continue to live in opulence and ridicule the lives of the ex-fighters.

Not all the fighters benefited as the payouts were abruptly halted with charges that the former fighters had looted the fund. [12] This development raised tensions between the war veterans and the state, as the former felt they were being used as a smoke-screen to disguise the looting that had earlier occurred by politicians and others who had been nowhere near the war. In addition, to many war veterans, the Chidyausiku Commission, established less than two months after the compensation payments had been suspended, was merely a device to discredit them.

The animosity between the war veterans and politicians was not something new. Norma Kriger has explored the differences between the two groups over state assistance to war veterans and state pensions for heroes. She based her study on excerpts from debates in Zimbabwe’s Parliament. Kriger refers to the lamentations of excombatants:

Excombatant MPs saw ‘the enemy’ as being within the government and the ruling party – the associates of Bishop Muzorewa and Ndabaningi Sithole, and the cabinet ministers who had advanced their education during the war. One excombatant said that some representatives left the House or went to drink tea when the House was going to debate ex-combatants. In 1980 some of these people were already ‘sitting pretty’ – they owned farms, supermarkets and so forth. ‘These same people do not like to see ex combatants near them. Some were working closely with Muzorewa and now they do not want ex-combabtants near them’ [13]

It is noteworthy that all the nationalist detainees who either died in detention before independence or were murdered by the Smith regime were recognised as heroes for their contribution to the struggle whereas those captured guerrillas that were executed by the regime have their remains still lying in prison cemeteries like Chikurubi without being either rehabilitated or recognised as heroes . [14]

The war victims’ compensation fund saga went a long way towards creating negative public perception of the former fighters and they never fully recovered their honour after this episode where they felt they were made scapegoats.

Their continuing miserable plight pushed the war veterans association in 1997 (now under the leadership of Chenjerai Hitler Hunzvi as national chairman) to demand for pensions and other related benefits from the state. President Mugabe finally succumbed to the demands of the former fighters, after facing unprecedented humiliation by the leadership of the former fighters. He undertook to make lump-sum payments of Z$50,000 (USD4000) to all the former fighters and agreed to pay them Z$2000 (US$150) monthly pensions; provisions for health, education and burial were also agreed. It has to be said that President Mugabe had his back against the wall when he acceded to the war veterans’ demands in the face of unrelenting and humiliating demonstrations against the government that the police did nothing to stop. The grants and pensions had not been budgeted for, thus throwing the fiscus off balance. Soon after the payouts to the veterans, the Zimbabwe dollar crashed on 13 November, 1997 losing its value to the American Dollar by 73 per cent thereby eroding the value of the payments and nullifying the intended benefit. [15]

There was a subsequent public outcry against the war veterans blaming them for crashing the economy. Most economists and analysts trace the economic slide down to the war veterans’ gratuities payments despite the rampant corruption within the state parastatals that ran into billions of Zimbabwe dollars and the DRC war that was consuming up to one million United States Dollars per day. There is need to put the payments in context. All countries that fought for liberation, resistance or patriotic wars have a special place for their heroes and heroines in both their institutional memory and their national history just as we hold Mbuya Nehanda, Lobengula, Sekuru Kaguvi and others in eternal esteem for their sacrifices. This is generally expressed in material and other forms of genuine appreciation. The material acknowledgement in the form of pensions, farms, residential stands etc that former Rhodesian soldiers, black and white, received from the British Empire for fighting its wars, is living testimony for this. To this end, the former fighters need neither be ashamed of nor be derided for what others elsewhere would ordinarily deserve or enjoy.

Hunzvi had been elected national chairman of ZNLWA in 1997. However one year later he was deposed by his executive, which passed a unanimous vote of no confidence in him for his authoritarian leadership style and allegations of corruption involving the embezzlement of the association’s investment companies’ funds. The companies were formed through the pooling of funds from the war veterans’ gratuities. His deputy was Moffat Marashwa with Cosmas Gonese as the association’s secretary general. Hunzvi did not accept his removal but did not contest it with the executive. Instead, he set up an alternative executive with Patrick Nyaruwata as his deputy. For the first time we had men appearing in the national executive such as Douglas Mahiya, Andy Mhlanga, Mike Moyo, Andrew Ndlovu and Joseph Chinotimba, whose junior status during the war gave them no authority to speak on behalf of the war veterans,. Mahiya, Mhlanga and Moyo had been in the Harare provincial leadership of the association. In early 1999, Hunzvi’s new executive split up again amid allegations of the embezzlement of funds of the association’s investment companies like ZEXCOM. Nyaruwata became the leader of one of the factions supported by Mahiya, Mhlanga and Moyo. Hunzvi’s new faction was supported by Chinotimba who now became his deputy with Ndlovu as the secretary general. Allegations of fraud and embezzlement continued to dog Hunzvi’s leadership and by the end of 1999, Hunzvi had been arrested by the police on allegations of corruption and remanded in custody for approximately three months. (He was subsequently released from custody before his case came to trial.) Shortly thereafter, the ZANU-PF politburo re-imposed him as leader of the war veterans with Joseph Msika, ZANU’s vice-president, announcing the fact to a bewildered nation on ZTV toward the end of 1999.

The active involvement of war veterans in the country’s political and economic processes can be traced back to this period of problems within the ranks of the association’s leadership amid serious allegations of corruption and embezzlement of association funds. This was at a time when the War Veterans Board had been disabled and emasculated with President Mugabe’s complicity. This was also at a time of the rise of civic activism in the form of demands for a new people driven and democratic constitution and accountable government. The government was under pressure with its back against the wall first from the war veterans’ demands for payments and civic demonstrations for a new constitution that soon gave birth to a new vibrant labour opposition party. The government enlisted the help of war veterans in brutally suppressing NCA demonstrations in 1998 marking the first partisan political involvement of the former fighters since independence in 1980. This was at a time when the war veterans association had no legitimate leadership and at time when those spearheading the suppression of civic demonstrations were facing serious corruption allegations of defrauding the association’s companies. Most of the former fighters had pooled their funds from the government gratuities to invest in ZEXCOM and never realised the expected returns.

The question to be asked is why the government chose to recognise people who had not been elected to their positions as the leaders of war veterans, people facing serious corruption allegations for prejudicing fellow war veterans? What was the trade off? Why did the ZANU PF government and the state controlled media turn a deaf ear to the legitimately elected executive of the association that had constitutionally and procedurally deposed Hunzvi? Is it any coincidence that these so-called war veterans were spearheading the repression of civil society with impunity and a time that the government had its back against the wall? In my view, it was the unconscionable decision by the government to ignore the elected leadership of the association that deposed Hunzvi and to turn a blind eye to the corruption of the unelected so-called leaders of war veterans that set the stage for the partisan political involvement of war veterans that continues to cast aspersions on their integrity. This development paved the way for the subsequent involvement of war veterans in ZANU PF election campaigns and the violent farm invasions that wrought untold havoc in our economy. An inglorious public perception was created that the former fighters had regressed from being war veterans for themselves to being war veterans for the ZANU PF state.

There was a lot of violence and well documented cases of human rights abuses in election campaigns from 2000 onwards that encompassed murder, rape, torture, destruction of property and internal displacement on perceived ZANU PF opponents. All these heinous actions were attributed to war veterans. The defeat of ZANU PF government’s constitutional review proposals in February 2000 saw the involvement of war veterans in violent farm invasions under the banner of the so-called ‘fast track land resettlement programme’. This marked the beginning of the involvement of war veterans in the country’s economic processes. Furthermore, the war veterans became involved in the dubious resolution of labour disputes from around 2002 onwards even before the formation of the Chinotimba led self-styled trade union federation ZFTU.

Notwithstanding the foregoing, the pertinent question to be asked is whose agenda were the war veterans pursuing by getting involved in these political and economic processes? Was it a war veterans’ agenda? If so was there any resolution passed by any legitimately constituted forum of war veterans calling them to engage in those activities? This could hardly be the case given that from 1998 onwards Hunzvi and the other characters purporting to be leaders of the war veterans association were not the organisation’s legitimately elected leaders as narrated above.

In the circumstances, I would argue that the ascription and attribution of violent election campaigns and brutal farm invasions to the war veterans association or war veterans in general is totally misplaced. These were the actions of ZANU PF supporters to further their partisan interests and bolster the party’s electoral fortunes by people who happen to be war veterans. It would therefore be a travesty of justice to hold the generality of war veterans or the war veterans association for that matter accountable for the actions of ZANU PF activists doing the party’s bidding. As discussed above, ZANU PF had lost popular support towards the end of the 1990s and could no longer count on the mobilisation of the party’s machinery to campaign for them. It therefore became necessary to enlist the services of some rogue war veterans to prop up their flagging electoral fortunes just as was the case with partisan abuse of the youth militia in ZANU PF election campaigns. It is little wonder that the involvement of the veterans in the country’s political economic processes coincided with the beginning of the breakdown in the rule of law, impunity for crimes committed by ZANU PF supporters and the selective application of justice.

It is noteworthy that war veterans never participated in partisan political party election campaigns under the label of war veterans until the elections of 2000 and thereafter. The major reason for this is that ZANU PF had become so unpopular that it was unable to win free and fair elections in the face of a vibrant opposition presented by the MDC. They had to throw caution to the wind and resort to unorthodox means to retain power at all cost. Hence the need to enlist rogue war veterans, youth militia and the security forces as shock troops to embark on a scorched earth policy ahead of all elections.

In the climate of lawlessness and anarchy it became difficult for war veterans with alternative views to be heard on account of the state’s support for rogue war veterans. My organisation, the Zimbabwe Liberators Platform, formed in response to the wave of lawlessness and anarchy that gripped the country, for example, was subjected to state repression with its assets seized and disposed of by state agents who also claimed to be war veterans. The organisation’s director and programmes coordinator endured a two year long lawsuit for misappropriation of funds that in the end came to nothing. State agents used the time to destroy the organisation leaving no alternative war veterans opposition voice to the ongoing state sponsored mayhem.

The rehabilitation and reorganisation of war veterans is compounded by ZANU PF’s meddling through the imposition of compromised and pliant individuals as leaders of war veterans, some with dubious liberation war credentials. I find it incomprehensible that senior army officers, with impeccable liberation war credentials have to endure the humiliation of subordinating themselves to such leadership on retirement from the defence forces.

All self-respecting and genuine war veterans have their role in the country’s political and economic processes cut out. They have to rise above partisan political interests and become role models in safeguarding the values and ideals of the liberation struggle that encompass freedom, democracy, social justice, respect for human dignity and peace. They should constitute the first line of defence against the violation of these sacrosanct principles of humanity and propagate the respect for the rule of law as the basis of an orderly society. During the war we prided ourselves on the philosophy of self-reliance in the struggle to liberate our country. We believed in liberation through our efforts and not in subcontracting the struggle. We should continue to cultivate a good work ethic and a culture of hard work and not expect to get something for nothing or reap where we did not sow.

We should strive to be successful farmers and entrepreneurs through hard work and not through expropriation, entitlement and preferential handouts ahead of the common people. We should not become negative role models that bring shame on the honour and integrity of the former fighters. Where we feel that our ideas and views are at variance with the people, we should engage in dialogue and persuasion to win their support just like the mobilisation during the war. We should spare a thought for our urban and rural folks who rendered unflinching support to the liberation war and not turn against them in furtherance of retrogressive partisan interests. That way, we reduce ourselves to the notorious level of our former oppressors who indiscriminately committed atrocities against the black population.

We, the former fighters should, through exemplary participation in the country’s political and economic process, help build a new Zimbabwe that future generations will feel proud of. We should uphold a value system founded on respect for the people’s rights, hard work, honour, service and integrity.

Rights reserved: Please credit the author, and Solidarity Peace Trust, as the original source for all material republished on other websites unless otherwise specified. Please provide a link back to http://www.solidaritypeacetrust.org

This article can be cited in other publications as follows: Mhanda, W. (2011) ‘The Role of War Veterans in Zimbabwe’s Political and Economic Processes’, 13 May, Solidarity Peace Trust: http://www.solidaritypeacetrust.org/1063/the-role-of-war-veterans/

References

1. Dzinesa A G. (2000), ‘Swords into ploughshares: Disarmament, demobilisation and re-integration in  Zimbabwe, Namibia and South Africa’, Occasional Paper 120, January, Institute of Security Studies, p.3. < http://www.iss.co.za/pubs/papers/120/Paper120.htm>

2. Mazarire, G. and Rupiya, R. M. (2000), ‘Two Wrongs Do Not Make  a Right: A Critical Assessment of Zimbabwe’s Demobilisation and Reintegration Programmes, 1980-2000’. Journal of Peace, Conflict and Military Studies, Vol. 1, No. 1, March 2000. University of Zimbabwe, Centre for Defence Studies, p.3.

3. Operation SEED is an acronym for ‘the Operation of Soldiers Employed in Economic Development’ introduced in 1981. It was designed to encourage excombatants to swap their guns for picks and shovels and to work on land acquired by the government for that purpose; ‘Zimbabwe Liberators- Guerillas Today’, Consolidating People’s Power, Afrosoc, Zimbabwe, University of Cape Town: 1981:42

4.   Musemwa, M. (1995) ‘The Ambiguities of Democracy: The demobilisation of the Zimbabwean ex-combatants and the ordeal of rehabilitation, 1980-1993,’ Transformation, 26.

5.   Dzinesa A G. (2000), ‘Swords into ploughshares’: op.cit., p. 6.

6. Musemwa, M. (1995) ‘The Ambiguities of Democracy’ op.cit. p. 37-8.

7. THE HERALD 18 April 1997

8. Ibid

9. Dzinesa A G.,  op cit..

10. Chenjerai Hunzvi was a ZAPU political activist who served as the party’s representative in Poland before independence. He subsequently studied medicine there after independence, and did his housemanship at Parirenyatwa Group of Hospitals before working at Harare Central Hospital. He subsequently established a private surgery in Harare’s Budiriro high density suburb. Senior ZIPRA commanders have disputed that Hunzvi ever underwent military training

11. Zimbabwe Independent January 16 1998 to January 22 1998

12. Seventy thousand war veteterans were said to have looted the fund of Z$45 million, a great deal of money in 1996. The Daily News, 10 February, 2010.

13. Norma Krieger: From Patriotic Memories to ‘Patriotic History in Zimbabwe, 1990 – 2005; Third World Quarterly, Vol 27, P 1159

14. For instance the remains of freedom fighters like James Bond and Lizwe are still interred at Chikurubi Maximum Prison cemetery and no efforts have been made to locate the remains of Edmund Kaguru (aka Benjamin Mahaka), a former member of the ZIPA MC who was shot and mortally wounded during the Nyodzonya attack and taken back to Rhodesia by Reid Daly’s  Selous Scouts.

15. Dzinesa A G. (2000), ‘Swords into ploughshares’: op.cit., p. 6.

16. Meldrum, A., The Guardian, Tuesday 5 June, 2001.

Zimbabwe has discovered 160 000 plus more war veterans who are set to get gratuities and monthly pensions

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Zimbabwe has discovered 160 000 plus more war veterans who are set to get gratuities and monthly pensions.

Just like in 1997 this was not budgeted expenditure. Without a magic increase in productivity and the tax base this will be financed by printing money.

On 14 November 1997 a day now commonly known as Black Friday local currency lost 75% value in a day. Then the war vets numbering about 50 000, led by Dr Chenjerai Hunzvi, armtwisted Robert Mugabe to pay lump sum gratuities even dancing kongonya at Heroes Acre and marching to Munhumutapa.

Prior to that war vets were claiming war time inflicted disabilities of as much as 80 per cent. Later, unofficially led by Chinotimba, they became the largest strata of population to get land after orchestrating audacious attacks on farmers and judges incensed by the MDC formation and Mugabe’s referendum defeat.

The debt created for land reform is US$3.5 billion payable to white farmers and US$200million awarded last week by an SA Court.

That Black Friday pensions, savings, insurance and assurance policies and long term investments from as far back as the 70s just died a death. Regardless of age everyone then started his/her working life at zero saving.

The economy will scream. This time expect complete death of the currency, accelerated inflation and exchange rate in thousands because 160k war vets is such a big leap in numbers compared to 50k of 1997.

Pensions, long term investments, savings, insurance and medical aid will die a bigger death and do so fast.

The economy will self dollarize and sovereign debt will multiply beyond the US$19 billion curtailing future growths. The little jobs in manufacturing will die, with erosion of income expect massive job actions and increase in protest vote.

We now have a total of about 200 000 war veterans which translates to a staggering 30% or so of all people above the age of 60 being war veterans. 60+ age group is estimated at 680k.

The economy will scream as this money supply added to this building of infrastructure ” nyika inowakwa newene wayo” using short term money is a disaster.

Should these war veterans be paid, I am not sure as the number is so staggering to be true.

The real challenge is that Zimbabwe is printing far too much money as compared to size of the economy and its growth.

Inflation is induced by using short term money for long term infrastructure projects, soon we have to import 400 000 metric tonnes of maize, pay 160 000 war veterans, budget a whooping us$3.5 billion to compensate ex-Rhodesian farmers and as late as last week US$200 million to compensate some farmers whose case could not proceed after Zimbabwe arbitrarily withdrew from the SADC tribunal court.

The economy will scream and with it political goodwill for a clean contest.

By Brian Sedze

Thabo Kawana Mourns Lungo Kawaya

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THABO KAWANA MOURNS LUNGO KAWAYA

Ministry of Information and Media Spokesperson and Director Thabo Kawana writes…

THE GOOD DIE YOUNG INDEED

As a young man myself, I was sent to work on the copperbelt. I remember praying to God and thanking God for the opportunity, but I had questions:

How do I live there? I had never being to the copperbelt before and I had no friend I knew there, how do I communicate in a predominantly Bemba speaking Province and I knew no Bemba word? All I could speak was English, Lsk Nyanja, Lozi, a mixture of Tumbuka and Nsenga.

But God been God knew exactly what was to happen and how I would live and communicate. So with faith, I moved to the Copperbelt 23 years ago.

And like an Angel sent to me, I met a young man who became my friend, my best friend and eventually a brother in a relationship that would span 23 years unbroken.

Over the years, we rode together, played together, worshipped together and shared moments together. We cried, argued, laughed and went through our high and low moments together. No matter what life threw at me, I always knew I had a friend and brother to turn to and to share my high and low moments with.

Politically, we always stood on different stand views. He was PF all his political life, he believed and held strong in PF in opposition, in office and in opposition again. This never affected our bond at all, infact, it strengthened our bond as we could argue and laugh at our leaders and political views we held different as it where.

He was there when my first child arrived and I was there when his arrived. We transitioned from boys to family men together and brought our families up together allowing our strong bond to grow from just the two of us to our families both nucleus and extended.

When death threatened his life some six years ago, we held together and fought until death gave up on him and left him alone, we did everything medical and otherwise until we defeated it together. The same happened when death threatened my life, we came together and held strong until we defeated it together.

The Hospital became our new meeting place as we shared the same days with myself on dialysis and himself on physiotherapy. I could go wait for him after my dialysis as he underwent physiotherapy and he would come to the Renal Unit to wait for me on the machine if he finished early. We wr together thru thick and thin, In good and bad times, in sickness and in health.

This time around, with us apart and him being in Kitwe and my self in Lsk, I was certain he would again pull through but it was not to be. This time it was not death threatening his life but God calling him home, to heaven.

Today I make a trip back to kitwe to be with my friend and brother for the last time, to mourn and put him to rest. The road from Lsk to Kitwe is full of memories we created together, the many times we traveled this road together. The stories we told, the jokes we made, the stop overs we made.

How do I travel this road alone today knowing I am going to pay my last respects, to say goodbye instead of hello? Dear God, give me the strength but above all, touch the family, his Wife, children and the many other friends he had and those known to him.

Give them the strength and understanding that this earth is not our home.

Rest in peace my dear friend and brother Lungo Kawaya (Bashi Muzo). Go well until we meet again, you have run your race well and you have been good and faithful through it all.

Indeed, the good die young.

MYSRIEP🙏🏾😭

British prosecutors ‘seeking to formally extradite Kevin Spacey from the US’ to face charges of sexually assaulting three men in London

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British authorities are reportedly planning the formal extradition of Kevin Spacey from the US to UK over four sexual assault charges.

According to Mail Online, the American actor, 62, may be detained by US police on behalf of the UK so that he can be formally charged.

On Thursday, May, 26, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) authorised the four charges in relation to alleged attacks on three men between 2005 and 2013 following a Metropolitan Police investigation.

Nick Vamos, a former head of extradition at the CPS, told the Guardian that formal extradition could take many months, with officials in the US needing to analyse papers sent over from Britain.

They would then need to feel that there was a ‘probable cause’ the offences happened, before finding and detaining the actor.

‘The US Department of Justice will task US marshals to find Mr Spacey and take him to a federal court. He always had the option of surrendering and not contesting extradition,’ Mr Vamos told the paper.

The former CPS official said that it is harder to resist an extradition request in the US than it is Britain.

If he does not contest the process, it could happen within weeks, Mr. Vamos explained.

He added that extradition provides greater protections, as Mr Spacey would only have charges brought against him that had been agreed by the US, as part of the process.

If he returns to the UK and is charged, he could then be back in the US fairly quickly, if bail arrangements allow him to cross the Atlantic.

The four charges relate to alleged attacks against three men in London and Gloucestershire.

The first alleged attack in London is said to involve a man, now in his 40s, in March 2005.

The actor is alleged to have caused another man, now in his 30s, to engage in penetrative sexual activity without consent in August 2008, in London. Mr. Spacey is also alleged to have sexually assaulted another man, now in his 30s, in April 2013, in Gloucestershire.

The actor, who was seen in House of Cards and was the artistic director of the Old Vic theatre in London from 2004 to 2015, has denied all of the allegations.

On Friday, Rosemary Ainslie, head of the CPS Special Crime Division, said: ‘The CPS has authorised criminal charges against Kevin Spacey, 62, for four counts of sexual assault against three men.

‘The CPS has also authorised one charge of causing a person to engage in penetrative sexual activity without consent. The authority to charge follows a review of the evidence gathered by the Metropolitan Police in its investigation.

‘The Crown Prosecution Service reminds all concerned that criminal proceedings against Mr Spacey are active and that he has the right to a fair trial.’

A spokesman said the CPS has authorised charges against Kevin Spacey, but he has not yet been charged by police.

Spacey is a two-time Oscar winner and known for starring roles in American Beauty, The Usual Suspects and House Of Cards.

He came out as gay in 2017.

UPND BENEFITED FROM FOREST 27…I’m alive to the fact some officials of ruling party are beneficiaries – Harrington

UPND BENEFITED FROM FOREST 27

…I’m alive to the fact some officials of
ruling party are beneficiaries – Harrington

By Edwin Mbulo in Livingstone

THE matter of Forest 27 is pregnant with irregularities, illegalities and procedural impropriety, says William Harrington.

And Harrington, a former environment and natural resources minister, says some UPND officials are beneficiaries of FR27 plots.

In an open letter responding to lands minister Elijah Muchima who challenged him to provide evidence to assist in resolving the FR27 matter, Harrington said former president Edgar Lungu signed three statutory instruments de-gazetting over 1,100 of the 1,700 hectares of the forest.

“Honourable minister, the whole matter of F27 is no doubt pregnant with irregularities, illegalities and procedural impropriety according to preliminary investigations conducted by my fellow concerned environmentalist Robert Chimambo and me, early 2021,” the letter reads in part. “I therefore welcome your decision to appoint a so-called technical committee, but insofar as it is to investigate possible corruption in the allocation of plots and issuance of title deeds process. In so saying however, the main bone of contention is the immoral de-gazetting of a major portion prior to the August 12, 2021 general election.”

He said Lungu de-gazetted the forest to give land to PF cadres and the judiciary, adding that: “I am however, also alive to the fact that some officials of the current ruling party are beneficiaries of FR27 residential plots.”

He also disputed Muchima’s revelation that the Ministry of Lands needed US $500,000 to carry out an environmental impact assessment (EIA) before a decision could be arrived at over Forest 27.

“Notwithstanding that the figure appears rather unrealistic, I am of the considered view that such an expenditure would be quite unnecessary given that studies have already been completed by the government,” Harrington said.

He informed Muchima that Forest 27 was gazetted as far back as 1940/50s, recognising that it was a strategic ecological zone, water catchment and recharge for Chalimbana and Chongwe river systems which should not be polluted and contaminated by human activity and developments.

Harrington said the UPND got a lot of votes from Chongwe partly because the party promised during the 2021 campaigns to demolish all illegal structures in Forest 27.

“Alas to date this has not happened and concerned citizens are tempted to ask ‘what happened?” he noted.

Harrington said in support of community demands on the matter, he was presenting Muchima with documentation.

‘’Groundwater Report for Lusaka and Selected catchment areas-technical report No 2 – the Chongwe catchment (ministry of energy and water/Water Resource Management Authority (WARMA)/German Cooperation/Federal Institute Geoscience and Natural Resources-BGR,” Harrington highlighted.

He also tendered in the hydrological map of “Zambia – Lusaka Province, Mwembeshi and Chongwe, improving the capacity of groundwater management and protection in Zambia brochure by BGR” as well as the petition/demand to “Edgar Lungu from Chalimbana River Headwater Conservation Trust for and on behalf of the local community”.

Harrington reminded Muchima that from the technical report and hydrological map, Chongwe district in which Forest 27 is situated is vulnerable to underground water pollution and contamination from any housing development and other human activity.

He added that Lusaka’s main ground water source was highly vulnerable to pollution due to groundwater tables and thin protective cover.

“The human development will no doubt result in contamination of people’s source to the detriment of their health and well-being of present and future generations, outbreaks of epidemics such as diarrhoea, dysentery and typhoid will be the order of the day. It is no wonder the Water Resource Management Authority (WARMA) declared in a letter to Chalimbana Resource Conservation Trust that it does not support the housing development of FR27. It is also clear that de-gazetting of FR27 is in gross breach and violation of the people’s rights as enshrined in the Constitution of Zambia,” said Harrington. “The Bill of Rights Part V (Social and Economic Rights) at Section 52 sub-section (1) (d) States that: ‘A person has a right to clean and safe water’. This basic human right enshrined in the supreme law of the land was not respected by the former regime… I hope and pray with the comprehensive and authoritative studies herewith presented, you will see your way clearer over the matter of FR27 and spare yourself the agony of sourcing $500,000 that you said you need to undertake the EIA, but which money you confirm you do not have.”

It shouldn’t take the wrath of UPND cadres to ‘protect’ Bally

The biggest lesson in the August 12 General Elections is that Zambians abhor lawlessness, violence and intimidation. In short, Zambians hate political chaos and hooliganism. They were just waiting for the moment to punish PF, even as the then ruling party thought they had put every Zambian in a corner.

No wonder Governance, Elections, Advocacy, Research Services (GEARS) Initiative executive director McDonald Chipenzi is warning UPND youths that there is no need to unleash violence on those perceived to be attacking President Hakainde Hichilema, adding that the law protects the Head of State from such.

Chipenzi expresses concern with the threats of violence against other citizens perceived to be attacking the President and against the judiciary by the UPND youth.

“We are concerned with the threats of violence against other citizens perceived to be attacking the President and also against the judiciary by the UPND youth. These threats are coming at a time when Zambia joins the rest of the continent of Africa celebrating and reflecting on Africa Day and promote continental freedom and independence from economic and political exploitation. This must be a day that a nation especially youth from the ruling party should preach love, peace, hope and freedom from oppression, suppression and intimidation, harassment than violence,” says Chipenzi. “There is no need to unleash violence on those perceived to be attacking the Republican President because the law, as it is now, does protect the President from such; and any attacks, in the physical, verbally or using cyber. The moment the UPND youth will start unleashing violence on their opponents in broad daylight in the name of protecting and defending the President and the presidency while the police watch on helplessly without making these youths accountable, then that will be a vote-of-no confidence in the operation of the law enforcement agencies such as the police. If the UPND youth feel aggrieved and decide to take the law into their hands, then as citizens, we would have failed our institutions and probably undermined their existence and operations like that of the Zambia Police Service. That will be a recipe for lawlessness of the highest order which Zambians rejected under the PF administration and continue to abhor even under this administration.”

McDonald is right.

We all understand where we are coming from as a country. We were exposed to the most brutal conditions by Edgar Lungu’s PF – we literally became a Banana Republic. It was a situation where Edgar himself enjoyed governing the country through terror. This is the more reason Zambians kicked out Edgar and his minions who are still refusing to be remorseful today.

It is therefore true that not only UPND members, but ordinary Zambians are also still angry with PF. In fact, most Zambians expected these PF criminals to be caged immediately they lost power. But reason has prevailed. So far, Hakainde has shown leadership by stopping his cadres from avenging themselves against their adversaries who persecuted, maimed and killed their people. On this one, we take our hats off to Bally for being resolute and affirmative. This is good leadership shown so far.

It is with this background that we also agree with McDonald in his advice to the UPND cadres. They should not threaten violence against anyone criticising Hakainde. Bally is now our President, so he is prone to checks and balances even if some of the criticism could be radical. Like McDonald has correctly said, this country has enough laws which can deal with the critics if they crossed the line. If anything Hakainde needs the criticism for him to govern properly. After all he is no saint – and none of us is pure. Any politician must be guided through critical criticism for them not go off tangent.

As such it should not take the wrath of UPND cadres to protect Bally. If we degenerate to such levels again, then UPND will be digging its own grave. They risk being kicked out the same way PF were kicked out. Two wrongs cannot make a right the old adage goes.

Archie Lee Moore warned that, “If we resort to lawlessness, the only thing we can hope for is civil war, untold bloodshed, and the end of our dreams.”

And speaking of revenge, Vidkun Quisling advised that, “Do not handicap yourself with the idea of revenge, for the trend of things will revenge your wrong not only upon the individuals responsible for your persecution, but on the society that has permitted this lawlessness.”

UPND loyalists must expend their energies to explain their government policies and programmes and not abusing their newly acquired political power.

They have more to lose should their flagship policies, programmes falter!

Killing MMD is synonymous to killing democracy – Nawa

Killing MMD is synonymous to killing democracy – Nawa

IT is immoral for Nevers Mumba to cling to the MMD presidency, says party member Sylvia Nawa.

In a statement, Nawa dispelled assertions that she had left the MMD for another party and that she was being funded by former Muchinga MMD member of parliament Howard Kunda.

Nawa, a former MMD chairperson for mobilisation and Mongu Central parliamentary candidate, said the allegations peddled by party vice-president Rueben Samboh were fictitious.

“Yesterday, the outgoing MMD vice-president Sambo issued out a poorly written statement where he, among other things, alleged that I had left the MMD to a named party and that I’m being funded by Hon Howard Kunda. Firstly, it is alarming that a senior clergy at the level of a bishop can manufacture lies and lie through his teeth a day before going to the altar to minister the word of God,’’ she said. ‘’I am MMD and a true blue and will always be one. How can Samboh today allege that I’m not MMD when I was among the 8 candidates who stood on the party ticket in the 156 constituencies?”

Nawa said apart from being the party’s previous chairperson for mobilisation, she was also the campaign manager for the MMD candidate during the Lukashya parliamentary by-election in 2019.

Nawa challenged Rev Samboh to disclose which ‘named party’ she had joined.

‘’Secondly, in his usual hallucinations he alleged that honourable Howard Kunda is my sponsor and had funded me just because I reminded Dr Mumba that his 10-year office tenure has come to an end. I have neither met nor spoken to Honourable Kunda nor do I have his number. I’m giving Samboh 48 hours to prove how honourable Kunda sponsored me, failure to which the nation and MMD members at large will label him,” Nawa said.

She claimed that Rev Samboh would never have kind words on her because she challenged him for the position of vice-president (political) at the party convention last year.

“Everyone in MMD knows this, as I beat him straight and square by 60 votes. Our reminder to the outgoing party president as his tenure comes to an end: Dr Mumba, you were elected on 25th May 2012. In 2015 you ran on MMD ticket as party presidential candidate during the presidential by-election,’’ Nawa said. ‘’In 2016 you had an alliance pact with the UPND as MMD president. According to you there was war going on but you never relinquished the presidency. It was business as usual. In August 2021 general elections you again filed in as MMD presidential candidate.”

Nawa recalled that she was the one who mobilised the required 100 numbers of supporters fro Mumba in Western Province, as required by the Electoral Commission of Zambia.

“So, the question we ask is: ‘Dr Mumba, at which point were you not a party president in your 10-year tenure?’ In 2012 when you became president of the party you inherited 55 members of parliament, over 40 mayors and chairpersons and over 759 councillors,’’ she said. ‘’Yet, in the last election only about 19 people, including myself, stood on the MMD ticket. These include 8 members of parliament, 1 mayoral candidate and 10 councillors, yourself as presidential candidate and Samboh as your running mate, making it a total of 21 people out of the over 2,000 elective positions.”

Nawa described as absurd the failure by the former ruling party to field very few candidates in the 2021 elections.

She said party members had resolved to call for an all-inclusive convention to save the MMD “from dying”.

‘’This is failure par excellence. A morally upright politician with integrity would have resigned after getting a petty 4,000 votes out of 3 million votes cast. Lastly but not the least, about a week ago Dr Mumba had a consultative meeting with some of the Lusaka-based National Executive Committee members where his vice-president Samboh told the gathering that MMD was like a ‘dead baby in your hands’. So, our concern is that, why are they fighting for a dead baby,” asked Nawa. “The right thing to do is, when you have reached a point of failure like where your administration is, step aside and let someone who has faith enough to resuscitate the baby back to life step in. Our resolve of calling for the party to have an all-inclusive convention which has the full backing of the constitution is to save the Movement for Multiparty Democracy party from dying. Killing MMD is synonymous to killing democracy.”

The Mast

Zambians should not miss PF’s misrule and tribalism

By Dr Tuesday Bwalya

There is no political party in Zambia’s history that perpetuated lawlessness, mismanagement, and tribalism than the Patriotic Front (PF).

The PF under the stewardship of Mr Edgar Chagwa Lungu worked very hard to sink the economy through corruption and looting of public financial resources. Misrule flourished during the seven (7) year rule of the PF government under Mr Lungu. According to the Corruption Perception Index (CPI), in 2020 and 2021, Zambia was ranked 117 in terms of being corrupt out of the 180 countries surveyed in the world. This is the highest ranking in the history of Zambia.

The PF and Mr Lungu showed no interest in fighting corruption and pretended not to have evidence. Corruption was nurtured at all levels of government and cost Zambia a lot of financial resources. For example, a huge amount of money (US $33 million) meant to build universities in Luapula and Northern Provinces has been reported missing. The PF former ministers and their surrogates have failed to explain where and how the $33 million was spent. Under Mr Lungu and the PF government, fire trucks made in 1996 were bought at $1 million each. This is another example of PF’s looting of public resources through procurement. Furthermore, procurement of various goods and services in public was characterised by over-pricing and total disregard of the procurement procedures.

Under the leadership of President Hakainde Hichilema (HH), the country has invigorated the fight against corruption and other vices. There is a clear and greater will to fight corruption and other schemes meant to loot public financial resources. Many cases of corruption and looting of public resources that are in the courts of law exemplify this. Other cases are being investigated. I acknowledge that there are some challenges in the fight against corruption and general pilfering of public resources emanating from the judiciary and the law enforcement agencies such as the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC). I trust this is being addressed and so the fight against corruption will begin to bear fruits.

On political violence, Zambians will remember the PF as being a brutal and violent party. The PF cadres were armed to the teeth to brutalise the opposition political party officials and cadres. Ordinary citizens also bear the brunt of the PF’s brutality. Many people were killed through political violence and the PF leadership did nothing to stop the senseless killings of our people. Further, under the full watch of Mr Lungu, PF cadres took up markets and bus stations. They ran around and collected money from bus stations and markets, thereby depriving the local authorities of the financial recourses needed to provide services.

Upon assuming power, HH has stopped political violence, which Mr Lungu and PF failed to stop. The Zambia Police Service has been freed to enforce the law in the country. Further, cadres have been told to stop collecting money from bus stations and markets. Local authorities are now in charge and are managing these facilities.

The PF’s incompetence crushed the Zambian economy. The economic growth plummeted to negative three per cent from the six per cent growth that the PF found. Further, inflation in July 2021 stood at 24 per cent. This was ridiculously high considering the poverty levels of our people who could afford essential goods and services. Further, the PF overborrowed and failed to meaningfully invest the money in ventures that could make it easy for the country to pay back the money. The negative economic growth coupled with huge debt stork, corruption, and generally poor management of the economy constrained the PF government from funding social sectors. In this regard, social sectors such as health, education and social safety net suffered.

In hospitals, the PF failed to provide medicines and qualified staff. As a result, many Zambians died due to PF negligence. In the education sector, grants were not sent to schools, colleges, and universities on time. This resulted in delays to pay salaries and compromised the quality of education. The PF government also reduced the number of scholarships to public universities; and without care about vulnerable students, they scrapped off the meal allowance for public university students. Further, the PF government failed to manage social programmes such as the social cash transfer. Beneficiaries of the Social Cash Transfer Scheme were going months and months without getting their money as the PF government had either misapplied the money or did not have the money to pay the people. Due to the PF’s mismanagement of the economy and financial resources, retirees suffered; they were not being paid on time, thus subjecting them to untold misery.

Within a few months of being in office, HH and his government have stabilised the economy. Inflation is now at 10.2 per cent and the government of Zambia has reached a staff-level agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), a step towards securing a bailout from the Fund. Further, the new dawn government is almost reaching an agreement with major lenders on how to restructure the debt so that some financial resources could be freed up to social sectors to spur economic growth. More importantly, investor confidence has been fostered and many organisations are showing interest in investing in the economy again. With the UPND in government, the medical supply in health facilities is improving and more workers are about to be hired. In the education sector, the new dawn government has been releasing grants to universities and colleges on time, hence, reducing delays in paying salaries in these institutions. The social cash transfer scheme has been improved and payouts have increased; with the lowest-paid beneficiary getting K400 per month, from the K200 which people used to get under the PF regime. Other categories of beneficiaries such as the disabled and visually impaired people are getting as high as K800 per month.

Zambians will also remember but not miss the PF for its tribalism achievements. The PF and Mr Lungu waged a vicious tribal campaign against groups and tribes from Southern, Western, and North-Western provinces. They sought to divide Zambians on tribal lines. To the PF and other hegemonists, only the Bemba-speaking people and their cousins from the Eastern Province should rule this country and occupy influential positions in government. This political hegemony and tribalism was reflected in the manner ministers and other senior government officials were being appointed. The level of tribalism presided over by Mr Lungu and the PF brought shame to well-meaning Zambians and this should never happen again in Zambia. Many people complained against tribalism but the PF and Mr Lungu looked elsewhere and continued to marginalise other tribes when it came to jobs in the public sector.

This tribal crusade was also extended to the political arena. During the run-up to the 2021 general elections, the PF and its propagandists heightened their tribal attacks on the United Party for National Development (UPND) leader, HH when he was in opposition. They paddled many tribal lies against HH in a bid to sway Zambians from voting for him and the UPND. Unfortunately, even some of our chiefs were recruited and became part of the choir to sing tribal songs against HH and the UPND.

Having highlighted a few autocracies committed by the PF in government, no well-meaning Zambian could miss the PF and Mr Lungu. There is nothing to miss in the PF government. Those few Zambians who claim that they miss the PF are those who profited from the lawlessness, corruption, and looting of national resources engineered and implemented by the PF government. There are many signs in the economy (stabilised exchange rate and reduced inflation), which are indicating that HH and the new dawn government are on the right track to repairing the economy. I am very optimistic that once Zambia receives the bailout package from the IMF, the economy will be on firm footing and Zambians will begin seeing a reduction in the prices of goods and services. As I conclude, I wish to encourage Zambians to exercise a bit more patience with the new dawn government as it resuscitates the economy.

Disclaimer: views expressed in this article do not represent the University of Zambia or the University of Zambia Lecturers and Researchers’ Union (UNZALARU), but are purely the author’s opinion. Send comment to: +260 974 352804

We’ve hope in new dawn, but they need to listen – Muyunda

By Ernest Chanda

THE Lower Lupande Hunting Block community has cried out to President Hakainde Hichilema to hear them regarding the cancelled safari hunting concession agreements.

Ministry of Tourism permanent secretary Evans Muhanga has cancelled concession agreements signed in 2020 for 19 hunting blocks across the country, against legal advice from the Attorney General.

Representing the Kakumbi Community Resource Board in the Eastern Province’s Lupande Game Management Area, Petros Muyunda said people were heavily affected because they had lost out on income.

“For us we are heavily affected because we get money from hunting activities. We depend much on hunting income. So, we lost jobs. We lost money because us we do not keep cattle in the valley here. We depend on meet that they give us from the hunting process,” he told The Mast. “There are a lot of things that have been heavily affected because we have serious loss of employment in this industry. Again, revenue for the CRBs (Community Resource Boards), for the community scouts to pay the people that work for the development projects for the communities… And operation of the CRB is now greatly affected.”

He urged the government to listen, adding that it was the reason people voted for them.

“The government should learn to listen to the people. We laboured a lot to bring in the new dawn government. We had the hope that they would listen to our problems because we used to face the same challenges with the PF. When we were singing about this, them they used to give us money, and at some point, they were listening,” Muyunda said. “Them, (UPND), they don’t want to dialogue with us. They don’t want to talk to us. Already we are having a meeting in Eastern Province and we have invited the [permanent secretary] PS to come, he has turned down the invitation. All the chiefs are around. We have about eight to 10 chiefs. We’re at Crystal Springs Hotel. But the PS is not there. He can’t even assign because when the PS is not there it means the PS is not alone. There is the director, there’s the deputy. There are so many people working around there. So, there’s somebody who can represent the PS to hear the problems of the people.”

Muyunda said since subordinates were not listening to communities, they had to appeal to President Hichilema.

He said people in the community were in problems because there was no more income for them.

“Us we are just appealing to the President that we people in the communities we have very big hope in them and we want them to listen to us. It is us who are sick. And it is us who can tell the doctor that we are sick. And the doctor can now prescribe the medicine that they can give to a sick person,” he said. “But if the sick person is saying the things that are paining… and then the doctor is not able to listen, how are they going to give the medicine to that person? It’s difficult. So, the new dawn government, we have a very big hope in them but let them listen to us. We are saying; like for hunting, we are not saying that everything was 100 per cent… We also agree that there was a problem, but there must be a better way of doing it. They would have even given [successful bidders] sometime to operate while they start doing their investigations and so on, rather than closing us out completely – making it a very big problem to the CRBs that are completely dependent on hunting.”

Muyunda said community members do not know where to get salaries from.

“That’s a problem now. We don’t know where to get the next salary, because we used to get a lot of money from the outfitters like community obligations…We can’t get that money now because there’s no agreement with them, and on which basis are they going to give us money?” he asked. “And when we go to the government to say ‘give us the money now so that we can pay some workers and so on’, they won’t. We are happy that they have given us the hunting funds for last year. But what about this coming season? So, our appeal to His Excellency the President is that they have to listen to us. They promised us that they’ll listen to us, that’s why as people in the community we went massively to vote for them. Especially where I’m coming from in my chiefdom, we gave the UPND 100 per cent votes. The CRBs voted out the PF because of the same arrogance. And now for them it is worse. But they should learn from their colleagues.”

Last month, Muhanga cancelled safari hunting concession agreements signed in 2020, against the advice of Attorney General Mulilo Kabesha, as the hunting season opened on May 1, 2022.

Instead, he ordered a readvertisement of the same in his memorandum to director of national parks and wildlife in the Ministry of Tourism Chuma Simukonda dated April 22, 2022.

On May 13, 2022, Muhanga terminated the contract for Dr Simukonda who is believed to have advised him against ignoring legal advice from the Attorney General.

According to the Attorney General’s advice in a letter dated January 5, 2022 addressed to President Hakainde Hichilema on tender No. MTA/SP/001/2020, there was nothing illegal about the tender and that cancelling it would attract law suits against the government.

“Your Excellency, I find it pertinent to make an appointment with you and explain the legal implications relating to the subject matter. Your Excellency, prior to meeting you [I] wish to bring it to your attention through this letter that I received a letter from the Ministry of Tourism and Arts reference No. MTA/54/14/2 dated 15th December, 2021 in which the Ministry was seeking a legal opinion on the cancellation of Hunting Concession Agreements (hereinafter referred to as ‘HCAs’,” Kabesha wrote. “The circumstances that engendered the opinion is attributed to your directive to the Minister and Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Tourism to the effect that the execution of the HCAs must be halted and that the negotiated HCAs must be cancelled.”

He cited formalities which prescribe a genuine hunting concession agreement and advised that once they are met then the tender remains legal.

Citing case law, Kabesha advised against cancelling the agreements as that would attract legal suits on government and subsequent loss of income through compensations to the affected parties.

“Your Excellency, once all these formalities are met, the contract or contracts come into being. According to the Procuring Entity all these procedures were met which resulted in the HCAs being approved,” explained Kabesha. “In the case of National Drug Company Limited and Zambia Privatisation Agency v Mary Katongo, the Supreme Court held that: ‘It is trite law that once the parties have voluntarily and freely entered into a legal contract, they become bound to abide by the terms of the contract and that the role of the court is to give efficacy to the contract when one party has breached it by respecting, upholding and enforcing the contract.’ In view of the cited case and in the absence of cogent evidence of infringement of section 69 (1), it becomes legally unsustainable to terminate the HCAs. Any attempt to effect will undoubtedly lead to law suits against Government which is striving to resuscitate the economy of the country and at the same time creating an enabling environment for investment and respect of the law. I humbly render my advice.”

Several stakeholders, including good governance activist Brebner Changala, Socialist Party president Fred M’membe, acting PF president Given Lubinda, and State Counsel Sakwiba Sikota, have advised Muhanga against the cancellation, warning that government would pay heavily when bidders sue.

And on May4, 2022, Muhanga wrote a letter officially informing all the bidders about the cancellation.

HH, Musokotwane, UPND and the IMF: propaganda and lies on full display- Azwell Banda

By Azwell Banda,

International Monetary Fund (IMF) director Kristalina Georgieva, President Hakainde Hichilema and finance minister Situmbeko Musokotwane know and understand that the majority of Zambians’ conditions of life were far worse than European and US conditions of plummeting standards of living today, well before the pandemic.


And yet the IMF Staff Level Agreement with Zambia was also premised on removal of fuel, electricity and food subsidies. Why? Because the IMF is also a White US racist organisation created to protect the wealth of the money rich scum bugs in the US and Europe, and the living standards of the people of those countries.


Will Hichilema and Musokotwane abandon the IMF, in the face of the IMF itself conceding that governments must make poor people a priority, and Zambia is a poor country? At the very least, will they revise the IMF agreement? I do not think so. They are convinced Zambians are used to suffering and they can easily be pacified by preaching peace and frightening them with images of war.


Any system of human domination, oppression, suppression and exploitation to succeed must manufacture lies, repeat them frequently and consistently, turn the lies into propaganda and inevitably convert propaganda into beliefs, false faith and way of life. Proof that the lies and propaganda have been converted into beliefs and a system of false faith is when the dominated, oppressed, suppressed and exploited begin not only to parrot the lies and propaganda, but actually defend and promote these lies and propaganda, and live accordingly. When this happens, the project of enslaving others is complete. The enslavers now have to demonise and destroy all those whose sanity they have failed to corrupt, to sustain their system! This is how any dominant ruling class sustains itself, as an oppressor class.


A great lie and propaganda of capitalism is that private greed for constantly accumulating money, profits, and wealth is the greatest good and source of happiness for the individual and all human society, and that this insatiable greed is actually freedom and democracy. Everything in a capitalist society is then subordinated to this one fundamental lie and piece of evil propaganda, including, sadly, faith in God. We are told that those whom God favours, He has made rich, and those whom he does not, he punishes with poverty, defeats in war and diseases. Prosperity Christianity flourishes where the masses are extremely poor, such as in Zambia. God is thus also reduced to a capitalist.


Our current leader of the Zambian capitalist class, President Hichilema and his chief disciple, finance minister Musokotwane, typical of capitalist liars and propagandists, have been consistently singing that because Zambia is extremely indebted, we cannot do without the IMF. We need to become further indebted by borrowing from the IMF in order for us to be able to ‘sustainably’ manage our debt. Note how the truth is perverted in this warped logic.


This is how lies are manufactured: a poor over indebted country needs to borrow more from a vicious financial organisation of the rich that will take away its right to manage its own finances and determine its own economic policies, all the while apparently miraculously causing the poor indebted country to resolve its debt crisis. Now, when Hichilema, Musokotwane and the IMF peddle this lie and propaganda, they are fully aware of whose interests they are championing: Zambia’s and foreign money rich scum bugs.


To buttress this obviously blatant lie that Zambia has no alternative to the IMF as Zambia’s poor people are punished with removal of subsidies from fuels, electricity and food, Hakainde, Musokotwane and the IMF then manufacture the lie that in order to have public funded lower education and for the government to employ a few of the badly needed teachers and health workers, Zambians must suffer higher fuel, electricity and food prices. Repeated countless times, by well dressed women and men who speak convincingly and look quite educated, millions of Zambians are co-opted to serve the interests of the money rich at their own expense!


Once in a while, even the most ardent disciples of capitalism slip up on the lies. And so, it has happened that Chibamba Kanyama, our overzealous preacher of “private investors” (read: blood suckers, looters and plunderers of our labour and natural resources!) expressed surprise that prices of most things Zambians’ needs are going up, but the government claims to be well on its way to reduce inflation to a single digit, very soon! Chibamba could not bring himself to utter the logical conclusion from his correct observation: if low inflation means rising cost of living and doing business for the majority, then we need to raise inflation!
The truth is, the IMF has demanded a certain inflation rate to be achieved by a certain time, so that foreign money in Zambia can be guaranteed certain levels of stable accumulation rates, even if such an inflation rate (whose basket of goods upon which it is calculated are favourable to foreign money) will mean killing some impoverished Zambians! Without achieving this band of inflation rate, Zambia may not get the IMF loans!


Well, in a reasonably sane world, Hakainde, Musokotwane and Chibamba would respect that if economies must serve people and not money, and higher inflation is what makes the cost of living and doing business low for the majority, then Zambia must have high inflation and the IMF should eat its low inflation statistics!


Just like before the First and Second World Wars, there is very visible growing restlessness, frustrations, rising anger and protests among the ordinary working people of the whole world over the rising costs of oil, gas, food, medicines, rent and many essentials for life, causing massive deterioration in standards of living. Instead of economic recovery from the pandemic, the working people of the world are being punished for having allowed their governments to protect the wealth of the supper rich while not saving millions of workers’ lives from the virus.


Globally, the cruel hybrid moronic economic war the US and its EU puppet colonies have unleashed on Russia is heating hardest US and EU working people as oil, gas and food prices rise and inflation bites. Africa will be hardest hit by the hybrid war the US is waging in Ukraine against Russia (another excellent example of how successful capitalist lies and propaganda can be: Hakainde’s government voted with the US against Russia, even as the economic bullets the US is firing are already wounding the Zambian economy, currently largely through high pump prices of fuels and rising imported fertilisers and food prices!)


The world supper rich are aware that the world peoples may turn violent against a system that, for example in the US, starves babies of milk while pumping billions of US dollars’ worth of arms in Ukraine. In the UK, oil companies have reaped record supper profits as oil and gas prices have risen beyond reach of ordinary household incomes. It is in this context that we must understand the strange shrill advice from all supper power finance ministers and managing directors of global financial institutions that governments must do something to alleviate especially the rising hunger situation in the whole world: the scum bugs are worried about a world revolution which may overthrow their carefully crafted world of economic enslavement of the majority of the peoples of the world.


Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the IMF, does not hide the reasons for her call on countries to make a priority of supporting poorer people: the IMF, World Bank, and all supper power banks are fully aware that the looming world hunger situation and the incredibly cruel mindless US war against Russia in Ukraine will trigger global protests against a world capitalist system that invests more in war than human lives. They are fully aware that their lies and propaganda to their own people in rich countries are fast failing to sustain the false reality they have constructed for the whole world. There is absolutely no sympathy or genuine empathy with the suffering the US hybrid war has unleashed on the peoples of the world. It is to act to save their rotten deadly capitalist system from being destroyed by a global revolution that they are acting.


Capitalism is more than a pathological craving and prioritising money above everything itself, including God. Like all slave societies, capitalism is lies and propaganda – the evil art of substituting reality with lies and falsehoods. Capitalism, therefore, is most successful when the poor, the true victims of capitalism, start to worship, defend, and practice it; voluntarily!


In order for the majority of Zambians to free themselves from the extreme poverty they suffer every second, Hakainde and all his disciples must be removed from power by the very poor Zambians whom they lied to, to assume office. To achieve this is the task of every Zambian not yet deceived by, or who manages to recover, from the cheap lies and propaganda of Zambia’s extremely backward capitalism.

Comments and all insults very welcome at: banda.azwell@gmail.com.

Putin ‘given three years to live’ and ‘is losing eyesight due to illness’ spy claims

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Russian president Vladimir Putin has been given just three years to live by doctors, it’s claimed.

A growing number of unconfirmed reports alledge the 69-year-old president has cancer and that his health is deteriorating quickly.

And now an FSB officer has claimed Putin “has no more than two to three years to stay alive”, adding the Russian president has “a severe form of rapidly progressing cancer”.

Messages said to be from the unidentified Russian spy to FSB defector Boris Karpichkov also say Putin is losing his sight and suffering from headaches.

“We are told he is suffering from headaches and when he appears on TV he needs pieces of paper with everything written in huge letters to read what he’s going to say,” the Russian officer told the Sunday Mirror.

“They are so big each page can only hold a couple of sentences. His eyesight is seriously worsening.”

The spy added that Putin’s limbs are “now also shaking uncontrollably”.

Previous footage from earlier this year appeared to show his hand shaking, while as he also appeared to grip a table for support during a meeting broadcast in April.

Whispers about his health appear to have originated with the hugely popular Russian Telegram channel General SVR.

It claimed Mr Putin’s doctors have warned him the surgery might incapacitate him for “a short time”, and that during this period the president will briefly hand over the reins of power to an aide.

Concerns for his health grew after former UK intelligence official Christopher Steele said the Russian leader left meetings for medical treatements.

“Meetings of the security council that are shown to supposedly last for a whole hour are actually broken up into several sections,” Mr Steele, who wrote a dossier on Donald Trump and Moscow’s alleged interference in the 2016 US election, told LBC radio.

“He’s constantly accompanied around the place by a team of doctors.”

And earlier this month an oligarch with close ties to Mr Putin was reportedly recorded saying he is “very ill with blood cancer”.

The unnamed Russian alleged in the recording that the president had surgery on his back shortly before ordering the invasion of Ukraine on 24 February, according to the US-based New Lines magazine.- The Independent

ESCAPE FROM MUKOBEKO – 5TH NOVEMBER, 1988 – PART FOUR [CHINDWIN HEIST]

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#ZOH #SNAPSHOT IN HISTORY : ESCAPE FROM MUKOBEKO – 5TH NOVEMBER, 1988 – PART FOUR [CHINDWIN HEIST]

By Eugene Makai

《*First posted on 26th March 2020》

With Tanzanian Muhammed Bin Tiz Mande gunned down and six feet under at the Kabwe Cemetery, ‘Operation Gooseneck’ turned its attention to the fugitive Zambian death row inmates.

Parallel with the manhunt, prison warders were held for questioning in what looked like an assisted prison break. Inmates of the Mukobeko Maximum Security Prison, believed to be the most secure facility in the country were also interrogated for leads that could help in the recapture of George Biemba, Simon Chalimika, Moses Kaonga, Stanley Kunda and Teddy Sinkala.

Without weapons, the fugitives figured that they would be sitting ducks for any police hot pursuit. As soon as they were out of confinement the seven men headed to nearby Chindwin military barracks. They overpowered an Army Sergeant and forced him to lead them to the Armoury. As luck would have it for them, the sentry on duty a private, was asleep, they promptly knocked him unconscious and broke the chain and lock that secured the firearms.

Their reward were four AK47 assault rifles, two full and two empty magazines and two pairs of military combat uniforms. Now, dangerously armed, they made for the Kabwe-Kapiri Mposhi road.

It was on the Kabwe-Kapiri Mposhi road that they encountered a police patrol and exchanged fire with it before disappearing into the bush under cover of darkness.

Muhammed Bin Tiz Mande then decided that he would make a break from here and try to get to Zaïre (DR Congo). His fate was sealed.

Fear continued to grip Kabwe and surrounding areas as rumour and innuendo filtered through the community. With news about the gunning down of Muhammed Bin Tiz Mande and a K500 bounty still out on the six other fugitives, Kabwe was tense.

Meanwhile, ‘Operation Gooseneck’ intensified with the taskforce team combing both the urban and rural confines of Kabwe district.

GEORGE BIEMBA – 36 years old, sentenced to death for murder by the Mongu High Court on 7th February, 1986. He had 7 previous convictions of office breaking, burglary and theft, store breaking and escape from lawful custody.

PART FIVE FOLLOWS…..

Rwanda says troops kidnapped as feud with DR Congo widens

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Rwanda on Saturday said two of its soldiers were being held captive by rebels in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and accused government authorities there of backing the group responsible.

It comes as a diplomatic feud between the two neighbours escalates, with both sides accusing each other of aiding armed militias in the volatile eastern DRC region that borders Rwanda.

On Saturday, RwandAir announced it was cancelling flights to DRC, after Congolese authorities suspended the carrier and summoned Kigali’s ambassador over what it alleges is Rwanda’s support for M23 rebels.

Rwanda Defence Force (RDF) later said two soldiers had been kidnapped on patrol and were being held by the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), another rebel group active in eastern DRC.

“We call upon authorities of the Democratic Republic of Congo that work closely with these genocidal armed groups to secure the release of the RDF soldiers,” the RDF said in a statement.

The two soldiers were named by the RDF as Corporal Nkundabagenzi Elysee and Private Ntwari Gad.

The abduction followed an attack earlier this week along the border by Congolese forces and FDLR rebels, the RDF added.

Kigali had already called for an “urgent investigation” into that incident, which it said involved Congolese forces shelling Rwandan territory and injuring civilians.

Rising tensions

Fighting between Congolese forces and M23 erupted on several fronts this week in North Kivu, a conflict-torn eastern province of DRC, which borders Rwanda.

The United Nations said on Friday the fresh clashes had displaced 72,000 people, and warned that those on the run faced constant violence and the looting of their homes.

DR Congo said M23 — a primarily Congolese Tutsi group — had received support from Rwanda.

Kigali has denied involvement, with a government spokeswoman saying Rwanda has no intention of being drawn into an internal matter of its neighbour.

Kinshasa said late Friday it would take “conservative measures” against Rwanda, which included summoning the ambassador and blocking flights from the national carrier.

The airline, RwandAir, responded on Saturday by cancelling “with immediate effect” all flights to Kinshasa, Lubumbashi and Goma.

DRC and Rwanda have had a strained relationship since the mass arrival in the republic of Rwandan Hutus accused of slaughtering Tutsis during the 1994 Rwanda genocide.

Kinshasa has regularly accused Rwanda of carrying out incursions into its territory, and of backing armed groups there.

More than 120 armed groups roam volatile eastern DRC, many of which are a legacy of regional wars more than two decades ago.

Relations had begun to thaw after DRC President Felix Tshisekedi took office in 2019, but the recent resurgence of M23 violence has reignited tensions.

The militia group briefly captured North Kivu’s provincial capital Goma in late 2012, before the army quelled the rebellion the following year.

But M23 resumed fighting this year, accusing the Congolese government of failing to respect a 2009 agreement under which its fighters were to be incorporated into the army.

Judicial Service Commission Has No Powers To Transfer Judges- Isaac Mwanza

By Isaac Mwanza

The Constitution of Zambia has created an “independent” Judiciary which is never free as inferior laws enacted by Parliament have compromised the independence and effectiveness of the Judiciary. I hold these truths to be self-evident that independence and freedom are never the same nor are they part of our country’s separation of powers.

From my reading of the Constitution, the framers of the Constitution did not expressly cloth the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) with power to transfer magistrates or judges. There is no such power in Article 220 of the Constitution of Zambia. In fact, the administration of the Judiciary has been placed under the Chief Justice by virtue of Article 136(2)(a).

Both the Judicial Service Commission and Judicial Complaints Commission fall under the Executive arm and not the Judicial arm of government. In some cases, these Commissions are presided by persons who have never been judges themselves nor magistrates. In other cases, they are presided by lawyers who are active in the practice of law or are retired but had represented clients who lost cases before these same judges and magistrates.

So where does the Judicial Service Commission draw power to transfer magistrates when the Constitution has not allocated it such power? In addition to the functions of the Commission provided under Article 220(2) of the Constitution, Section 6 of the Service Commission Act No. 10 of 2016 provide further functions.

The power to transfer Judicial officers lies in this inferior legislation and such a function is premised on Article 220(2)(d) of the Constitution which states:

“The Judicial Service Commission shall carry out a function provided for in this Constitution, or as prescribed (by an Act of Parliament, in this case Act. No. 10 of 2016).”

I must be quick to point out that Article 1.(1) of the Constitution itself states:

“This Constitution is the supreme law of the Republic of Zambia and any other written law, customary law and customary practice that is inconsistent with its provisions is void to the extent of the inconsistency.”

Reading Article 136(2)(a) of the Constitution which has expressly clothed the Chief Justice with the responsibility to administer the Judiciary, it means that, although Parliament can enact any law under Article 220(2)(d), such a law must never be ultravires the Constitution, in particular Article 136(2)(a), which confers the Chief Justice with a constitutional responsibility to administer the Judiciary.

How come then that we can have subsidiary legislation that grants the power to a Commission to transfer Judicial officers when the Constitution as a supreme vests the administration of the Judiciary in the Chief Justice? Such an inferior law can only be said to be void as it is inconsistent with the Constitution.

The provision of the inferior law and the action by the Commission to use such a law to effect changes in the administration of justice does not only breach Article 136(2)(a) but also breaches Article 122(1)(4) of the Constitution of Zambia which, in part, as reads:

“122.(1) In the exercise of the judicial authority, the Judiciary shall…not be subject to the control or direction of a person or an authority.”

“(4) A person and a person holding a public office shall protect the independence,… and effectiveness of the Judiciary.”

It is my submission that judicial officers and judges have illegally been placed under the control of the Judicial Service Commission and the effectiveness of the Judiciary continues to be breached by transfers of Judicial officers dealing seized with various cases. These Judicial officers are forced or left with no option but to abruptly hand over cases, which cases usually start afresh in some instances.

The Chief Justice has also failed to protect the effectiveness of the Judiciary by continuing to allow the unnecessary transfers of Judicial officers and judges handling cases. The administration of the Judiciary constitutionally lies on him.

“I have lost interest in my marriage because my wife made me pay money just so I could have s3x with her,” -Ndola man has told the local court

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“I have lost interest in my marriage because my wife made me pay money just so I could have sex with her,” a 32-year-old Ndola man has told the Kabushi local court.

Robert Mutale petitioned his wife Musonda Kalusha 28, for divorce after she made him pay for him to have sex.

Mutale has also told the court that his wife is believed to have used charms to stop him from having erections.

“We had a family meeting were she admitted to have done something to my manhood. She said her friend gave her nsuko to use. However, going for prayers, my manhood is back to normal,” he told court.

He narrated that after his manhood had gone back to normal, his wife still denied him sex, but that she only agreed after he started paying her.

Mutale told court that his wife stopped doing house chores and that he had been doing everything ever since she gave birth to their first child.

He told court that he has tried to involve the church pastor’s wife, but that the involvement ended in insults.

Mutale told court that his wife had a wrong group of friends and that he had also decided to divorce her because she used to borrow money aimlessly

“She is always borrowing money and has even gone to an extent of borrowing from my friends which is embarrassing. She has also started sleeping with other men and so because of all this, I have lost interest,” he said.

In her defence, Kulusha told the court that she borrowed money from people because her husband does not provide for the family.

“For the past five years, he has never bought me anything. Not even a bottle of lotion. Problems in our marriage started when his mother visited us and later she started accusing me of going out with church members,” she lamented.

In the courts judgement, divorce was granted and Mutale was told to compensate his wife K15,000.

The court further stated that the dissolution of marriage had been granted because it’s foundation was not stable as both parties had lost interest in each other.

(Mwebantu)

Mercy Changwe: a freedom fighter made by PF thugs

Mercy Changwe: a freedom fighter made by PF thugs

SHE is a mere roadside trader of onions, tomatoes and ordinary vegetables. Yet about 10 months ago, she was on the most wanted list for PF thugs.

They did not want her to supply them with her merchandise! But they wanted to find her, beat her up and, if possible, kill her.

Her crime? Supporting the then opposition UPND! That’s the heart-rending story of Mercy Changwe, aged 51 of Lusaka. She is a mother of three.

On several occasions, marauding PF cadres raided Changwe’s makeshift store where she used to sell from. Actually, she would go to her ‘office’ wearing UPND regalia and would even display UPND colours behind her makeshift stand.

And that’s at a time when anything red in colour was almost being equated to first-grade crime – something like murder.

According to the multiparty democracy which those in the PF had christened, those who supported other political parties, especially the UPND, needed to be hacked or mercilessly beaten up. Changwe was one such culprit!

Her roadside business was started in 2017.

When they felt like, PF thugs would go to Changwe’s stand, near Border View area, in Woodlands area, a few metres from Woodlands B Primary School, and loot everything, before beating her up, all they wanted.

Changwe would be soaked in her own blood oozing from the inflicted injuries.

No police officer would dare arrest the PF assailants and no PF official would speak against the conduct of their above-the-law thugs.

To this day, none of those thugs has ever been arrested!

Once attacked, Changwe would shout, in her native Icibemba, and emphasise her resolve to continue trading there and openly supporting the UPND.

At one point, after a brutal attack at the store, a bleeding Changwe declared that she was ready to be killed right at her open air ‘market’ and that the same point would be her burial site – like her Embassy Park.

Maybe before PF thugs could kill her with their pangas, clenched fists and boots, the self-styled pro-poor PF was kicked out of power by 2.8 million committed Zambians on August 12, 2021.

There is no way Changwe cannot be part of those 2.8 million voters of President Hakainde Hichilema.

Today, one can wear anything branded with PF colours and even greet the President! Obviously Changwe shivers seeing that kind of radical change in the current political atmosphere.

But, unlike those nefarious PF thugs and their depraved supervisors, at least she knows that Zambia belongs to every citizen, regardless of their political affiliation.

PF cadres had no mercy for Mercy Changwe but she refused to be frightened and stood up in support of her political choice – the UPND.

It is this kind of bravery that made Changwe to be recognised by President Hichilema on Africa Freedom Day, last Wednesday.

During the investiture ceremony at State House, Changwe was among the 10 people who were honoured by the President.

She was honoured with the President’s medal for gallantry, whereby she fearlessly stood up in defence of democracy, at the hands of a rogue PF regime.

In an interview, Changwe told #Kalemba that no individual should bully anyone into supporting what they are against.

She said the more she was attacked and had her business ransacked by PF thugs, the more she fought for democracy.

Changwe indicated that she knew she had to take care of her children and two grand-children but that she still chose not to support the PF.

She said PF ideals – whatever they are – are different from what she believes in.

“I was beaten several times; my stand was destroyed and my goods were confiscated because I did not support the PF,” Changwe recalled.

She is encouraging all women to always be brave and stand for what is right.

“Despite several threats to my life from PF thugs, I never wavered to stop my quest for freedom. I believed in democracy which I knew would be a reality with the coming into power of President Hakainde Hichilema,” she said.

Meanwhile, Changwe is grateful to President Hichilema for honouring her on Africa Freedom Day.

By Mwiche Nalwimba

Kalemba

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Chelsea confirm Todd Boehly takeover to signal end of Roman Abramovich reign

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Chelsea have confirmed the ‘final and definitive agreement’ has been reached for merican billionaire Todd Boehly to take over the club with the £4.25billion deal all set to be completed on Monday, May 30.

The announcement from Chelsea marks the official end to Roman Abramovich’s era and will see the Russian replaced as owner by Boehly and the Clearlake Capital group.

Chelsea confirm Todd Boehly takeover to signal end of Roman Abramovich reign

‘Chelsea Football Club can confirm that a final and definitive agreement was entered into last night to sell the Club to the Todd Boehly/Clearlake Capital consortium,’ Chelsea said in a statement.

‘It is expected that the transaction will be completed on Monday. The Club will update further at that time.’

Abramovich declared his pride at his successful tenure – signing off with a statement saying his ownership of Chelsea had been ‘an honour of a lifetime’.

‘It has been nearly three months since I announced my intention to sell Chelsea FC,’ he said. ‘During this time, the team have worked hard to find the right custodian for Chelsea FC that would be best positioned to successfully lead the Club into its next chapter.

‘The ownership of this Club comes with great responsibility. Since I came to Chelsea nearly twenty years ago, I have witnessed first-hand what this Club can achieve. My goal has been to ensure that the next owner has a mindset that will enable success for the Men’s and Women’s team, as well as the will and drive to continue developing other key aspects of the Club, such as the Academy and the vital work of Chelsea Foundation.

‘I am pleased this search has now come to a successful conclusion. As I hand over Chelsea to its new custodians, I would like to wish them the best of success, both on and off the pitch.

‘It has been an honour of a lifetime to be a part of this Club – I would like to thank all the Club’s past and current players, staff, and of course fans for these incredible years.

‘I am proud that as a result of our joint successes, millions of people will now benefit from the new charitable foundation which is being established. This is the legacy which we have created together. Thank you, Roman.’

The final hurdle in the takeover was cleared when the Portuguese government authorised Abramovich’s sale of the club earlier this week.

In a statement following Chelsea’s announcement, the club’s supporters’ trust said: ‘The Chelsea Supporters’ Trust would like to congratulate the consortium led by Todd Boehly on the takeover of Chelsea FC.

‘We wish you every success as the custodian of our club and look forward to a long, constructive and mutually beneficial relationship between you and Chelsea supporters.

‘The CST has been very encouraged by the interactions we have had with Mr Boehly and his team over recent months, but the hard work starts now.

‘It is now time to deliver both on and off the pitch in building a successful, inclusive and forward-thinking club with supporters at the forefront.’

Abramovich is selling the club in the wake of strict financial sanctions on him from the UK government, following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

LET’S KEEP DEATH PENALTY, SAYS HARRINGTON

LET’S KEEP DEATH PENALTY, SAYS HARRINGTON

WILLIAM Harrington says presidents should not impose their personal will and desire on the people on matters such as the death penalty when citizens have already expressed themselves through a constitution review commission.

On the eve of Africa Day, President Hakainde Hichilema said parliament should commence proceedings to amend the law so as to abolish the death penalty.

Reacting to the President’s statement, Harrington, an environmentalist, said any plan to abolish the death penalty would be going against the wishes of the majority of citizens as expressed through the Mung’omba Constitution Review Commission on the matter.

“The majority of petitioners who submitted to the commission wanted the death penalty to be upheld in the Constitution of Zambia as a deterrent to would-be offenders where cold-blooded murder is proved beyond all reasonable doubt,” he said in a statement. “With all due respect to our President Hakainde Hichilema, it is my considered view that a president now or in future should not impose his or her personal will and desire on the people on a matter such as the death penalty when the people have already expressed themselves through a costly constitution review commission. And the directive issued by President Hakainde Hichilema that parliament should commence proceedings to amend the law so as to abolish the death penalty would be an unnecessary academic exercise because a president in any case, can exercise his or her constitutional prerogative to commute the death penalty to life imprisonment on any prisoner who is on death row.”

And Harrington has urged Zambians to draw lessons from South Africa where the death penalty was abolished upon release of Nelson Mandela but re-introduced after murder cases escalated drastically.

“The Mung’omba Constitution Review Commission of 2001 which replaced the Mwanakatwe Constitution Review of 1996 has been described as the most progressive one produced since the search for constitution that will stand the test of time and not unnecessarily changed with change of presidency,” said Harrington. “Death penalty officially exists in Zambia but is not implemented. The last known executions were carried out in January 1997. And our courts must continue to pass and confirm the death penalty consistent with recommendations of the Mung’omba Constitution Review Commission. We should also draw some lessons from the South African experience where the death penalty was abolished upon release of Nelson Mandela but re-introduced after murder cases escalated drastically.”

The Mast

DIFFICULTY OF DOING BUSINESS IN ZAMBIA: “You have to contend with the theft,cheating, laziness”- Dr Lubinda Haabazoka

DIFFICULTY OF DOING BUSINESS IN ZAMBIA.
“You have to contend with the theft,cheating, laziness”

By Dr Lubinda Haabazoka

The difficulty of doing business in Zambia has been well documented. Some say it’s taxes and some say it’s corruption. But there is a lot more that draws Zambian businesses back and its high time we admitted it as a people so that we can change this mind set.

STEALING.


Ala we can steal! Yesterday I went to buy stuff from a hardware. When I reached the shop, the workers told me that if I waited outside, they would bring me the items I needed for half the price!!! I refused. Doing so would be loses to a business. How many businesses lose money in that way???

I gave a lift to some workers, when we arrived at site, the K10 I had laying on the car sit for weeks was gone. Cry my beloved country!!!

The plumber came to me and said the rubbers for some item were missing. Everyone refused to acknowledge who took them. They all put the blame on the hardware. This is despite the fact that we checked everything together with the plumber!

Now imagine what is happening in big companies???? Imagine what is happening in parastatals where all citizens feel entitled. At Zamefa in Luanshya, I used to object when I saw workers receiving a full body search!!! Now I know why???

TRUST ISSUES.


In Zambia you can’t do remote farming, build remotely or trust any property with anyone!!! There are a lot of stories of poor workmanship or when even trusted workers abandoning jobs half way but busy calling for full payments to be sent!!! There are a lot of stories when even relatives misuse money sent by their diaspora relatives to build houses, develop farms or any other businesses. Then we now ask, why don’t Zambians invest back at home!?? Because there is simply no one to trust. Unless money is sent to a Chinese or Indian company in Zambia, no one will do the work especially when they know that the owner is not there!!!

REMOTE FARMING.


This is almost impossible. Since most Zambians, use their salaries as capital, the best model is to farm remotely in the beginning. How many farms have been abandoned because chickens apparently regularly die of snake bites, caught by other flying birds or eaten by chi mumbwe??? How many Zambians have abandoned farming because during the week no irrigation is done, goats stolen, fertiliser not applied or cattle mysteriously dying??? How can we build trust? How can we build wealth if we can’t be entrusted with other people’s property??

BUILDING.


Building a house in Zambia is a BP inducing experience. Cement is stolen with impunity. House owners are forced to go to the plot to witness the mixing of cement. With blocks and timber, chances are that if you are not on site yourself, you will contribute to the construction of the whole neighbourhood!!! What puzzles everyone is how people accept to buy stolen material simply because it’s cheap!? When you pay builders an advance, you will never see them again!!! In most cases, property owners chase after builders especially if an advance was involved. To avoid this, we are now using Zimbabweans and Chinese! So let’s change ourselves as workers!!! You call an employee, the first thing they demand is transport money. How will you give a job to a person desperate for transport money??? The first question on site is food. We spend 4 hours cooking and three hours working. That’s also prominent in formal work places. People boiling beans at work. Then what time do you work??

POOR CREDIT CULTURE.


They say if you want to lose friendship in Zambia, just lend money to another person. Zambians simply can’t pay back loans!! Whilst reading this, just think of someone who borrowed from you and has never paid back??? Just think of someone you got money from and you never paid back in full or at all!? No wonder banks have to cut at source because very few can voluntarily take the check in a monthly basis to the bank. Because of this, banks can’t lend to us if we don’t have a job (source) to cut from.

NEGLIGENCE.


We simply have no care for other people’s property. Try to give a friend your car to drive. Try to give your friend your laptop to use. You will be lucky if it comes back without problems. Now imagine if it’s a company property or especially government vehicle. No total regard for such property!! Look at how we vandalise public property. How can we we move like this???

BLAMING AUTHORITIES.


We have overburdened our authorities with responsibilities. I drive around townships. Look at our outside premises! We can’t even cut the grass or water it to a certain stand. The beauty of a city is neatly cut green grass, freshly painted buildings among other things! All Wall fences should be plastered and painted!! Painted regularly after each rain season!! We are used to having grass cut for us during Kaunda’s regime!!! Now it’s our responsibility!!!

If we have to give jobs and contracts to ourselves, we have to also improve on service delivery. No one will just give you a job because you carry a Zambian NRC. It’s a hustle to deal with a Zambian company in most cases. You order blocks, you will be chasing for them for months!!!

Otherwise not it’s not all companies though. Some are very professional!!!

Let’s continue changing for the better!!

IAM FAR EDUCATED THAN YOU WILL EVER KNOW, SABOI TELLS UPND PRAISE SINGERS

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IAM FAR EDUCATED THAN YOU WILL EVER KNOW, SABOI TELLS UPND PRAISE SINGERS

To Praise Singers and some misdirected people: When I was a school girl, I was extremely good in class, sports and arts.

I was the best grade 9 girl at Arakan secondary school, beaten by only about 4 boys or so, but best grade 12 at the same school beating even the boys. Yet during sports you would find me running and variety shows I would be singing on stage. At the University of Zambia I graduated as the best student, no wonder UNZA gave me a job as a tutor.

I was also one of the best students in a new course called Human Development, that was introduced by the United Nations and that got me an internship at the UN and later a job when I completed university… I say this to you today, because you feel that you insult me when you tell me to leave politics and go back to music but you actually insult yourselves.

I’m very ok doing what I am passionate about at any given time of my life, I have always been like that. Doing politics as a Political Scientist is actually a down grade for me, but we have to help our country.

Thankfully, when you look at the parable of the talents in the Bible, Jesus told us about those people with different talents and what they did with them- don’t you learn from that? I consider myself to be one of those with the many talents and I will surely use them and enjoy them when I am still on earth.

I hate injustice and never keep quiet when I see something wrong, and that’s one reason why I’m in politics today. And for your information, Political Science is known to have some of the worst sadists at UNZA and so for me to get the grades I got says a lot about the kind of student I was.

As an artist, my achievements, awards, legacy, etc, speak for themselves and won’t waste time there. So come on social media and insult all u can and feel better with trying to say the worst you can about others, but when you sit back at home and check what you have as a human being, what exactly do you have????

I had a great music career, great academics, great political career so far because not many women can even be given a chance to lead parties in this country, and I have other things I do that I don’t discuss in public (I’m happy and proud of all of them). You cry for jobs while I deny job offers…

Don’t fool yourselves coming here to insult people that you should be learning from, because when we are alone in our homes, most of us have a lot of things to be grateful to God for, while you struggle with your rent and bundles because you spend all day on social media insulting people that you should be learning from.

S. I

WILL PF BOUNCE BACK? NO, IT WON’T

WILL PF BOUNCE BACK? NO, IT WON’T

The Candidates’ Comment

Sometimes it is better to be honest with oneself. Many times, people drown in self and false convictions premised on personal feelings. People, often than not, choose to believe in things away from reality and truth in preference to what their desires are, what their hearts and mind want to see. As such, many are misled.

We have spent some time interrogating the possibility of the former ruling party, the Patriotic Front (PF) of bouncing back in power.

From onset, we must say, the interrogation has been honest in quest to provide a clear and genuine analysis of where the PF stands. Of course, as we chun out this opinion, we know we may be injuring some people close to us within this former ruling party. Again, we are inevitably exciting our friends in the ruling United Party for National Development who have made it a point that PF will never bounce back into power come what may.

It’s both unfortunate and fortunate – depending on which side of the divide one is – that PF will not bounce back into power.

The reasons are basically outward and inward.

Today, we deal with an inwardly point of view.

The PF has lost its identify, as a pro poor political vehicle which once served the interest of the people.

While PF was in power, it gravitated into a billionaire club especially after Michael Sata died. A few individuals became extremely rich overnight while the majority people PF claimed it represented and served remained destitute.

There was a system in PF where a few bandits, corrupt were getting very rich in very unclear circumstances. These few crooks threw some crumbs to those who competed in worshipping them.

A system was created where, in order for one below the table to benefit anything, they had to outplay others in worshipping and bootlicking the few crooks in PF who held the cudgel of power and were calling the shots. Businesses had to be friends with the top leadership in order to win tenders. Contracts were being awarded to relatives and associates as well as bed mates of those who had power.

Those who mastered the art of bootlicking were somewhat given some form of crumbs, enough to feed them at a particular point but insufficient to sustain them, so as to keep them clapping and begging.

Look at the so-called arts empowerment nonsense. A few selected artists who worshiped PF and sung songs for them were given huge sums of monies in disguise of empowerment funds. When you think about it very well, empowerment is and should be given as a matter of priority to vulnerable people more than those doing fine.

What criteria did PF use to award Kayombo K800,000 as empowerment? What criteria did PF use to gift Macky2 the sum of K800,000?The only sensible explanation is that, these and indeed many of those who were given such kind of money by PF was because they were their booklickers and their cadres. We all know that Macky2 and Kayombo are sworn cadres of PF. This was the only qualification and criteria the PF used to give these two elements those huge monies even when there were many other vulnerable and disserving artists who could make use of such monies.

Those who had no touch whatsoever were presented with a picture of those who were somewhat eating corruption monies with PF. This system created fierce competition among supporters of PF and bred caderism in Zambia. The surge went as far as in markets. If you could not publicly display your allegiance to PF, you could not trade in peace in any markets and, often than not, you were a target of extortion by those bandits who were charging people illegally.

Clearly, there was no award or empowerment system which PF put in place for their members and the people in whole.

In order to remain in power, PF attempted to indocrinate every Zambian by making them believe that if you’re not showing any bootlicking tricks and allegiance to PF, then , you’re an outcast who must never be anywhere near the table of milk and honey.

That way, PF was able to build an army of cadres whose main preoccupation was brutality against anyone who appeared not to be part of them.

No doubt, this party diverted from it’s fundamental intent and became a Mafia organization.To sustain it’s Mafiatarian system of turning people into perpetual worshippers and cowards, the main characters with power were either deeping into public coffers or engaged into high level of corruption.

Since losing power, PF cannot anymore depend on the ideologies on which the party was founded on. In fact, many of those who claim to be leaders of PF hardly understand what their party stands for. In other words, what kept PF together was criminality.

Now that PF no longer has the power to plunder resources, they cannot sustain their bootlickers. This is why even elements like Macky2 have decided to distance themselves from PF. If PF had not lost that election, would Macky2 have stopped being their cadre? The answer is categorical no. Macky2 and all those cadres of PF in different spheres of life would still be bootlicking the former ruling party and mocking those who didn’t support this party.

Today, many people feel shy to align themselves to PF. Many people feel it’s unfashionable to be PF. There are no people in PF who believe in the ideologies of this party. All that unity we saw, after Michael Sata died, was due to the plunder they could do together.

Unless one is a fool, no sane person can expect such a party to ever bounce back in power. The few who are remaining in PF are either direct beneficiaries of the criminality that we witnessed or bedmets of the same bandits who held power. The truth cannot be far from that. We shall deal with an outward aspects of why PF will never bounce back in power, later.

Presidential, ministerial & top public officers salaries revealed

Holding public office comes with having ones affairs such as salaries and allowances being made public. This is for a simple reason that elected public officials are remunerated from tax payers funds and are responsible for implementing public policies.

Their role is therefore to serve the public and take decisions that are in the best interest of the majority of their electorates. These roles are not for getting super high salaries, but meant for citizens who are well accomplished and want to serve the country and contribute their vast knowledge and experience.

It is in this spirit that government issues Statutory Instruments (SI) to publicly state the emoluments of public workers. This also is meant to aid both the law enforcement agencies as well as members of the public with information that they can use were public officers are seeing to be living beyond their means.

The Zambian Business Times – ZBT below has been able to exclusively compile the salaries of top public officers from the President, Veep upto the level of constitutional office holders such as the speaker and various key legislature top officers.

According to SI no.14 of 2022 seen by ZBT, President Hakainde Hichilema is entitled to an annual salary of K553, 209 and a special annual allowance of K146, 755, which translates into an average monthly salary of K58,330. President Hichilema is also entitled to a special monthly allowance of K12, 229.58.

SI No.15 of 2022 seen by ZBT stipulates that Veep W.K Mutale Nalumango receives a basic salary of K334, 474 per annum, K84, 011 special allowance per annum and a utility allowance of K66, 145 per annum. This translates to an average monthly salary of K40,386.

The Speaker Nelly Mutti receives an annual basic salary of K319, 796, a special annual allowance of K74, 498 which gives an average monthly salary of K32,858 while the First Deputy speaker receives K253, 202 annual basic salary and K65, 408 special annual allowance, and the Second Deputy Speaker receives K246, 185 annual basic salary and K62, 589 special annual allowance.

Cabinet Ministers, the Chief Whip, and the Leader of the Opposition are at the same level of pay and receive K253, 202 annual basic salary and K65, 408 special annual allowance, this translates to a monthly salary of K26,550.

Deputy Chief Whip receives K246, 185 annual basic salary and K62, 589 special annual allowance, the Opposition Whip receives K241, 341 annual basic salary and K55, 051 special annual allowance and Private Members or simply members of parliament (MP’s) receive K236, 497 annual basic salary and K47, 515 special annual allowance.

The Vice President, Speaker, First Deputy Speaker, Second Deputy Speaker, Cabinet Minister, Chief Whip, Leader of the Opposition, Deputy Chief Whip, Opposition Whip and Private members are all entitled to an additional annual salary of K66, 145.

Constituency allowances for the Vice President, Speaker, First Deputy Speaker, Second Deputy Speaker, Cabinet Minister, Chief Whip, Leader of the Opposition, Deputy Chief Whip, Opposition Whip and Private members are K49, 608 for rural, K39, 688 for urban and K33, 072 for nominated.

Dear ZBT reader, are the above salaries in line the current economy? Why should ministers get salaries much lower than parastatals and government agency staff or heads who they supervise? With this level of emoluments, should government consider making these salaries competitive so that top public officers can concentrate on doing their jobs rather than scouting for external business opportunities? What is your take?- ZAMBIAN BUSINESS TIMES

DR Congo has summoned Rwanda’s ambassador and suspended RwandAir flights to Congo over Kigali’s alleged support for rebels

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KINSHASA, May 28 (Reuters) – Democratic Republic of Congo has summoned Rwanda’s ambassador and suspended RwandAir flights to Congo in response to what it says is Kigali’s support for M23 rebels carrying out a military offensive in its eastern borderlands.

Rwanda denies supporting the rebels, who advanced as close as 20 km (12 miles) this week to eastern Congo’s main city of Goma and briefly captured the army’s largest base in the area.

Congo and U.N. investigators had also accused Kigali of supporting the M23 during a 2012-2013 insurrection that took Goma before being forced back and chased into Uganda and Rwanda. Kigali denied doing so.

Congo’s government spokesman Patrick Muyaya announced the suspension of flights from Rwanda’s national carrier and the summoning of the ambassador late Friday night following a meeting of the national defence council.

He said the government had designated the M23 a terrorist group and would exclude it from negotiations being held in Kenya with militia groups active in eastern Congo.

“A warning was made to the Rwandans, whose attitude is likely to disrupt the peace process … where all the armed groups, except for the M23, are committed to the path to peace,” Muyaya said.

Rwanda’s government was not immediately available for comment on Saturday.

On its website, Rwanda’s army requested the release of two Rwandan soldiers it said were “kidnapped” along its border with Congo.

An image circulating on social media of two men in Rwandan military uniforms surrounded by Congolese soldiers has been cited by Congolese users as evidence of the Rwandan army’s presence inside Congo.

Congo’s government has not commented on the photo, but Muyaya presented video footage during his remarks showing munitions and a military uniform that he said belonged to Rwandan forces and were recovered by the Congolese army.

The M23 and Rwanda’s government have, in turn, accused Congo’s army of collaborating with the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), a militia founded by ethnic Hutus who fled Rwanda after participating in the 1994 genocide. Congo denies this.

Rwanda invaded Congo in 1996 to pursue the militiamen. Eastern Congo has experienced near constant conflict since then due to foreign invasions and insurgencies by rebel groups.- Reuters

Bishop Trevor Mwamba Honoured In Uk

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ARCHBISHOP MWAMBA HONOURED IN UK

Acceptance speech of the President of the United National Independence Party (UNIP) Bishop Musonda Trevor Selwyn Mwamba at the Extraordinary Council Ceremony Confering on him the Freedom of the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham Award, 27th May, 2022.

Let the records show that the stipulated time of 3 minutes for the acceptance speech has been duly complied with; however the salutations following are in extra time in accordance with Fifa by-laws!

The Deputy Lieutenant Mr Ian Pittaway, The Worshipful the Mayor of Barking and Dagenham, Councillor Faruk Choudhury, The Member of Parliament for Barking Dame Margaret Hodge, The Leader of the Council Councillor Darren Rodwell, The Deputy Leaders Councillors Saima Ashraf and Dominic Twomey, Councillors, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen.

William Clark’s book, “The Lives of the Great and the Good – Honorary Freeman of the City of London”, is about people who have been admitted as Honorary Freemen.

Splendid characters comprising the good, the rogues, and now me.

How I was awarded this rare prestigious Freedom of the Borough Award beats me! This Council has in my judicious opinion the wisest, visionary, innovative and progressive councillors in London, the ‘Bold and Beautiful’!

So reflecting on how I got it during my nine hour flight here 36,000 feet near heaven I could only attribute it to Barking madness and being a clergy, God, for divine negligence.

I am delightfully thrilled that you all had a moment of collective madness and God dropping the ball, to award me this Freedom of the Borough Award which is irrevocable.

I now join illustrious recipients such as Paul Ince a great footballer; Dora Challingsworth, a great social activist; Sandie Shaw a great singer; Claire Symonds she did a sterling job as acting Chief Executive of the Council during the pandemic.

Now, it can be proudly said the Bish is among the great and good and rogues!

Am immensely grateful to receive this Award from a Borough I love so dearly and was blessed to be Vicar of. A Borough incomparable over the centuries as a place where momentous historical political and religious events have taken place.

I dedicate this award to my younger brother Robert who died in New York a month ago.
Robert was a ‘guitarist extraordinaire’.

His debut album “Coastin’ featured three Grammy Award-Winning artists, and a Grammy nominee.

He performed many times at the two top Jazz Clubs in the World – “Blue Note” in New York City (NYC) and “Blues Alley” in Washington DC.

He was awarded the United States Congressional Award for Outstanding Service to the Community. Our purpose on earth is to love and serve humanity through the unique talents God has given each one of us.

The Freedom of the Borough Award honours this purpose to love and serve our community. It’s about passionately working for just and good causes in our community. We tried to do so through St Margaret’s Church; we tried to do so through the Barking and Dagenham Faith Forum; we tried to do so in partnership with the enlightened leadership of the Council led by the ‘old man’ councillor Darren Rodwell!

The Award to me is ours together for no person is an island entire on their own we are all part of the main. Together we have worked, together we work, together we shall work, to create One Borough; where every person is respected, loved, valued, treasured, and diversity is cherished, and every person can actualize their God given talents and gifts.

Mr. Mayor I thank you for the honour bestowed on me and my family I shall cherish it forever.

God bless the Borough.

GLENCORE STOLE BILLIONS

GLENCORE STOLE BILLIONS

By Brave Kachusha Mushikita

In 2008, the Zambian Revenue Authority(ZRA) engaged a Tax audit team consisting of Grant Thornton and EconPovry to audit Mopani Copper Mines, then owned by Glencore, covering the activities from 2006 to 2008, and examined the trial balances since 2003.

Major Findings;

  1. Mopani had increased the cost base without explanation of US$381.21m in 2007 than in 2005.
  2. Between 2003 & 2008 there was cumulative difference in revenues of about US$700m in copper revenues. Mopani was selling copper at less than 75% of LME price to its parent company Glencore in Switzerland. There was reason to believe that there were similar problems with cobalt sales but the figure was not determined.

It’s safe to say that Glencore hid more than US$1bn from ZRA between 2003 to 2008.

Unfortunately the govt of the day, the Bwezani Banda led MMD did not give ZRA political support to go after Glencore, giving the usual reason of not trying to upset the investors. Guess who was the Minister of Finance and political head of ZRA. It should also be noted that the CEO of Mopani at the time including the CFO were Zambians educated by Zambia taxes.

It was only after Michael Sata’s PF came into power that there was political will to pursue Glencore over the tax avoidance. Glencore played every trick in the legal book to avoid taking responsibility and paying for their banditry behaviour. They took the matter through all the stages of the Zambian courts until The Supreme Court delivered its judgement on 21 May 2020(11 years later) and fined Glencore US$13m only.

Did this judgement make the headlines? Yes it did but it was the PF govt which was painted in bad light as being anti foreign investment.

Today we are reading all over the media of the fining of Glencore of about US$1.1bn in the US court for their banditry behaviour. Just remember Zambia did it first.

Its unfortunate that today Zambia is sitting with Mopani Copper Mines needing about US$1.5bn to pay Glencore to own it when she has already paid twice over.

Let’s not forget what President Thabo Mbeki told us; Africa loses about US$50bn/yr in illicit financial flows, and in the last 50 years Africa has lost more than US$1trillion, this excludes capital flight!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Africa, as Africans this is what we should be discussing on African Day. Unfortunately like pets we preoccupy ourselves discussing if the crumbs had some cream or not.

What lessons can Zambia learn from Ghana´s AFRICOM experience?

What lessons can Zambia learn from Ghana´s AFRICOM experience?
…as the African nation regrets opening doors to it

28.05.22

Zambia must be prepared for some major security compromises following their decision to allow an a US AFRICOM presence on its soil says a prominent Ghanaian activist and politician Kwesi Pratt Jnr,

Pratt said, the Secretary General of the Socialist Movement of Ghana says his country went in ´hook line and sinker ‘in allowing the US African combatant wing on its soil, just like Zambia, to an extent where the country´s leadership is impotent its citizen’s under threat.

“I feel sad that Ghana is hosting one of these foreign military bases whose terms of agreement are shocking,” Pratt lamented.

In order to illustrate how Ghana has been “emasculated” by the US military through the AFRICOM presence exactly similar t the one Zambia´s President Hakainde Hichilema has entered without consulting Zambians, Pratt raised the following red flags saying:
• I f (Pratt) feel sad that in Ghana, our President cannot enter a military office or base of AFRICOM in his own country
• I feel sad that Ghanaian property under the agreement and terms can be damaged or destroyed by SU soldiers under AFRICOM and there´s no recourse to the court of law

• I feel sad that US soldiers can kill in cold blood, ordinary Ghanaian citizens and cannot be tried for the killings according to the agreement

• I feel sad that radio frequencies (worth millions of dollars) are given for free to US soldiers under the agreement, but Ghanaian must pay

• I fee sad that US soldiers can enter and exit Ghana without being searched by Ghana authorities
• I fee sad that even Ambassadors and other diplomats have less rights and privileges than US soldiers under AFRICOM because Ambassadors still have to produce passports to get in and out Ghana but American soldiers under AFRICOM don’t.

• I feel sad that the US can station a military presence in Ghana, and we cannot establish a battalion in Washington DC.

Pratt concluded by asking the million dollar question many Zambians are asking, “why do we allow them (AFRICOM) on our soil.”

Recently Anthony Bwalya, President Hichilema´s spokesman lamentably failed to yield to questions on Hot FM to publish the MoU his boss has entered with AFRICOM regarding their presence in Zambia that has been widely rejected.

Bwalya instead lamely quipped that AFRICOM is in Zambia to protect Zambia´s national security, a broadly rejected premise by many pundits, local and international.

Local voices against AFRICOM include Fred Mmembe, Ambassador Emmanuel Mwamba, Wynter Kabimba, Dr Nevers Mumba and Sean Tembo to mention but a few.

In the past, however, all President´s ahead of Hichilema rejected an AFRICOM presence in Zambia and chose to side with the African Union and SADC in order to avoid conflicts that could arise from the ´toxic relationship. ´
The question pundits are asking is whether Zambians want to jump in the same cesspool as Ghana finds itself in and can’t get out?

Professor Justice Margaret Munalula Is One Of The Reigning Stateswomen Of Our Time- Sean Tembo

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Sean E. Tembo
ABOUT THE TRUE ZAMBIAN HEROES: HOW TO IDENTIFY THEM

By Sean Tembo – PeP President

1. For a country that is so politically charged like Zambia, it is usually difficult to differentiate between those men and women who have integrity and a backbone to stand up to what they do not agree with, and those who are merely politicking. There are several people that stood up to the previous regime and challenged the atrocities that where then committed, and yet some of those people have suddenly gone quiet and are unable to stand up and challenge the atrocities being committed by the current administration. To me, anyone exhibiting such double standards is very far from a national hero. They are mere political puppets who challenged the previous regime, not out of principle, but so that they can help usher in the current regime, and eat with them.

2. For a country that is so short of true heroes, it is refreshing to identify those individuals and institutions that have maintained their firm stance towards the current regime with the same vigor and tenacity that they did with the previous regime. Among the individuals that l can point at as the real heroes of our time is Lady Justice Professor Munalula, State Counsel John Sangwa, Civil Rights Activist Dr. Sishuwa Sishuwa, the Catholic Church, Hot FM, and perhaps Transparency International. In my considered view, these are the true heroes of our nation, as they have demonstrated that they have the stomach to stand up for what they believe in, with the same vigor and energy regardless of whether they are dealing with the current regime led by Hakainde Hichilema or the previous regime led by Edgar Lungu. That is the definition of a true statesman or woman.

3. For instance, in the previous regime, Lady Justice Professor Munalula had the courage to depart from her colleagues and give a dissenting judgement in the case of Dan Pule etal Vs Attorney General, to the effect that that President Edgar Lungu was not eligible for a third term, at a time that it was not fashionable for the courts to issue a judgement against a sitting Republican President. Fast forward to 2022 under Hichilema’s regime, Lady Justice Professor Munalula again had the courage to depart from her colleagues and gave a dissenting judgement in the case of Sean Tembo Vs Attorney General, to the effect that President Hakainde Hichilema needed to be compelled to declare his assets, at a time when it is not fashionable for the judiciary to disagree with the sitting President. Now, you do not necessarily need to agree with her rulings, but the mere fact that she has an independent mind and is willing to exercise it, qualifies her as one of the reigning stateswomen of our time.

4. The same can be said about State Counsel John Sangwa, who was a constant pain in the behind of the previous regime. However, when the current regime was ushered into office, he did not hesitate to point out their wrongs, despite the fact that he assisted to sway public opinion which ushered them into office. Same applies to Sishuwa Sishuwa who is fearless and upstanding in identifying wrongs and pointing them out.

5. However, the same cannot be said for certain individuals and institutions in our country. For instance, when Dr. Denny Kalyalya was Governor of the Central Bank in the previous regime, his quarterly monetary policy media briefings were pointed and hard hitting. He did not spare or mince his words about the treasury’s poor fiscal management, which was undermining his job to manage monetary policy. I always used to marvel at his fearlessness in pointing out the failings of boss; the Minister of Finance. It was in fact the first time l heard a BOZ Governor admitting that the exchange rate was being supported through the off-loading of dollars on the market by the Central Bank, and that our foreign reserves where dwindling at a faster pace than we could sustain. I thought to myself that this man is extremely objective and independent minded. Suffice to mention that, just like most objective and independent minded officers in the previous regime, Dr. Denny Kalyalya was subsequently unceremoniously fired as BOZ Governor.

6. However, you fast forward to the current regime, President Hichilema decided to re-appoint Dr. Kalyalya as the Central Bank Governor. However, he appears to have returned not as the sharp, objective and independent minded BOZ Governor that we knew in the previous regime, but as a timid praise singer who sees nothing wrong with fiscal management of the current regime. He is even on record supporting the increment of fuel prices and removal of electricity subsidies. Which competent and sober-minded central bank governor across the entire world would support a 50 percent increment in a key production input such as fuel? This new turn of events seriously casts aspersions on whether he used to challenge the previous regime as a matter of principle, or whether he was merely playing politics and helping to usher in the then opposition UPND into office, and that his re-appointment was in fact a reward for a job well done.

7. Of course, Dr. Denny Kalyalya joins the ranks of several other individual activists and institutions whose stance on economic management, good governance and the rule of law only applied to the previous regime, but have now turned a blind eye to the incompetence and atrocities of the current regime. Political leaders are being reported to far flung districts by UPND cadres and Police bundle them like luggage and dump them there, yet none of these previously vocal activists have uttered a single word to condemn those gross violations of basic human rights. These include Laura Miti, Pilato, Chief Mukuni, Prime Television, Mast Newspapers etcetera. For these individuals and institutions, instead of focusing their energy on holding the current Government accountable to the people, they are possessed with fighting a dead PF. Clearly, from the word go, these appear to have been politicians disguised as professionals, traditional leaders, civil society activists and media houses. An objective and independent minded individual or institution will stand firm on their principles regardless of whether the President is Edgar Lungu, Hakainde Hichilema or indeed Sean Tembo.

/// END

SET 28.05.2022

Who is Mercy Changwe who was honored by the President on Africa Freedom Day?

By Chimwemwe Mwanza

It’s certainly easy for opposition leaders to criticise decisions and policies of a sitting government because their vantage enables them to serve as the bulwark to reigning in on excesses of the government of the day.

As the leader of the largest opposition party then, President Hakainde Hichilema executed this role with much perfection and humility. For more than a decade and a half, he consistently positioned himself as a voice of reason – often providing critical checks and balances to past governments. The tables have since turned and opposition sharks are consistently circling his cage baying for his blood. Surprisingly, it’s worth noting the ease with which his foes have exposed his vulnerability to criticism.
For somebody that promised to de-link partisan politics from government, a few of his decisions are baffling to independent moderates – except if you are a UPND faithful. This political summersault is an apt reminder to his faithful that the President is but a fallible mere mortal that is susceptible to error. Lest we forget, HH as the incumbent President is no longer a UPND but a national asset whose decisions should transcend beyond party zealotry. And not everyone critical of his decisions is after his job, for some, it’s more about patriotism than self-interests.

That said, why should he be complicit in activities that seek to appropriate significant national events to his party?
Case in point, Africa Freedom Day is meant to celebrate and honour pre and post-independence leaders that have helped to positively shape Zambia as well as the continent’s social and economic trajectory. Accepted, the President may also use this opportunity to reward and acknowledge ordinary citizens that have served the country well in their respective areas of speciality.

Of significance though, this day is meant to celebrate luminaries such as Nelson Mandela, Kwame Nkrumah, Kenneth Kaunda, Amilcar Cabral, Augustinho Neto, and Ben Bella, among others for their role in helping to free the continent from political bondage.

On the local political scene, it’s unthinkable to celebrate this day without remembering the role that the likes of Harry Nkumbula, Simon Kapwepwe, Munukayumbwa Sipalo, Mainza Chona, Grey Zulu, Alina Nyikosa, Nalumino Mundia, Mary Fulano and Chibesa Kankasa – just to mention a few struggle stalwarts that played a role towards liberating the country from colonial rule.
Presiding over the recent investiture ceremony at State House to mark Africa Freedom Day, the President honoured Mercy Changwe, commending her gallantry in defence of democracy and multipartyism. So, who is this Mercy Changwe that supposedly ranks high among a pantheon of African greats? What has she achieved thus far to deserve this prestigious award? A quick browse through Wikipedia or notable Zambian history books draws a blank to her name.
Then what criteria did State House use to accord her this honour? Ms Changwe – a vegetable hawker is supposedly a victim of PF brutality. She was allegedly assaulted several times by cadres from the former ruling party. Despite her ordeal she never renounced her membership of the UPND – this is according to State House.

Could this really have been a basis for conferring her with such a massive honour? Mind-boggling stuff, right? At another ceremony to mark Zambia’s independence day in October last year, the President bestowed the Order of the eagle of Zambia second division posthumously to the UPND’s Founder and President Anderson Mazoka for his immense contribution to Zambia’s plural politics and good governance.

Take nothing from Mazoka, he was a visionary that helped to elevate as well as transform Zambia’s railway transport sector but to deserve this award, ayikona man. The President further used the same ceremony to honour the UPND’s long time accountant, Backstone Mambo. As one of the founders of the UPND, Mambo was brutally assaulted by police when they raided the UPND offices – permanently damaging his spine.

Never mind the duo’s contribution to the UPND’s rise to power, the governing party seems to have thrown its ideals of meritocracy in determining such decisions to the wind. In the case of Changwe, there is no evidence whatsoever to prove or suggest that her non-renunciation of her UPND membership helped transform Zambia’s political landscape. Her decision to stick to her party despite living in perpetual torture had little to do with a national cause.

In addition, the President owes it to the entire Zambian citizenry across the political divide to make rational decisions. And the trouble with entrenching such questionable decisions is that future national investitures risk becoming a partisan affair. An alternative perhaps is for the UPND to start organising its own party sanctioned investitures. Just a thought.

About the author: He is an avid reader of political history and philosophy. The only thing he supports is Kabwe Warriors and Liverpool. Congratulations to Man City – deserving champs, it still hurts a little bit. For feedback, contact: Kwachaone@gmail.com

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Keith Mukata’s ex-wife wants the Court to allow her to go away with the matrimonial bed, a Land Rover Discovery car and trucks

MUKATA’S EX-WIFE WANTS THE BED

KEITH Mukata’s ex-wife Maricoh Roisin Hoare has proposed to the Court that she be given their matrimonial bed in a property settlement.

Ms Hoare has also proposed that Windsor premier Bakery property in Makeni and all equipment be sold and the proceeds shared equally or Mr Mukata buys out the property at the cost of K2 Million.

She also wants to get the private businesses which includes; Jumping castle (seven pieces), Slushie machine (two pieces) , Cotton machine (two pieces), Cartoon costumes (five pieces), Trampoline , 100 pieces of Palm tree plants in the Green house yard and two trucks in the warehouse backyard.

And that the Land Rover Discovery registration number AJE 1959 be given to her.

This is according to Ms Hoare’s affidavit in opposition to affidavit in support of summons for maintenance and property settlement filed in the Lusaka High Court.

In this matter, the Lusaka High Court on February 4, 2022, granted the duo divorce following a petition by Ms Hoare that the marriage to the former Chilanga Member of Parliament had irretrievably broken down.

Judge Dorcas Malama referred the issue of property settlement to the Registrar if they two did not reach an agreement.

In an affidavit in support of summons for maintenance and property settlement, Mr Mukata stated that all negotiations with his former wife to agree on property settlement had proved futile.

He proposed that the matrimonial property which was acquired with his former wife, Maricoh Roisin Hoare, be sold with 33.3 percent of proceeds of sale channelled to the children’s University education.

Mr Mukata has also proposed that he and the ex-wife should contribute 50 percent each to the monthly maintenance of the three children of the family, which expenses are in a total of K79, 000.00 inclusive of school fees and transport.

But Ms Hoare has submitted that the matrimonial property should not be sold but shared equally as she has sentimental attachment to it because all the children were born from there.

She has however proposed that the 1.3 acres of Subdivion A of farm no.691 situate at Kasupe in Lusaka West and the 20 acres in Kafue which is bare land be given to the ex-husband.

She said Mr Mukata be awarded the property known as NK7A Nakatindi resettlement area in Livingstone while the two hectares of farm 4141 in Kitwe’s Meanwood Park be shared equally.

Ms Hoare submitted that she be awarded the five acres plot subdivision B of farm no.691 situate at Kasupe which was formerly owned by Mr and Mrs Ngulube and the contract of sale signed at Legal Aid Clinic for Women.

The petitioner also wants the 70 acre plot of subdivision A of plot 9431/M at Lusaka’s Mwembeshi Farm ,which comprises two bedroomed semi-detached house , two boreholes, 150 goats, 200 ducks and 200 village chickens .

And that she should be awarded the shop in Makeni because she is the sole beneficiary and also the five acres land in Nkosi Airport side.

“That the two trucks registration number GK13 KGG and HY10 and HY10 VYT should be sold and the proceeds shared 50/50. That the mini bus quantum (grey) registration number ALZ 8333 be sold and the proceeds shared 50/50,” she submitted.
(Daily Nation Zambia)

Dam It!

Dam It!

By Dickson Jere

At his invitation, I had a tête-à-tête with the President of Zambia Mr Hakainde Hichilema. Outside the main topic of our meeting, he digressed and discussed his development plans for the country – Province by Province – which mainly is anchored on the increased Constituency Development Fund (CDF).

He spoke passionately about water and sanitation, education and agriculture development. He stressed that “unity” in the country was his priority in order to achieve his plan.
He talked the talk.

I was interested to hear more about the Eastern Province – my homeland where I have also invested in farmland. I talked about my desire – for a longtime now to do cattle ranching – but for my laziness! Lawyering is taking up much of my time.

“Each time I fly over the Eastern Province, I see water everywhere. There is plenty of water in that Province,” the President said.

“But the water is going to waste. We need to build dams to capture that water for irrigation,” he observed, adding that he had asked his team to look into that project as matter of priority for the East.

As an agriculture dependent area, the Eastern Province needs to be producing crops throughout the year as opposed to rain-fed crops. Villagers in the Eastern Province are not very scattered but concentrated, which makes it easier to take development.

“I want to dam the Eastern Province,” he said, thrice, as way of emphasizing his point.

I agreed with his thinking and plan for the Eastern Province and the need to invest in irrigation system to supplement on seasonal rains. The famous Lunkwakwa stream of Chipata – which never dries – passes right inside my farm and yet non of us have damed it except the Gonda Barracks.

“But I hope the technocrats will not let you down on that. The project can be game changer for the province,” I said, while emphasizing that he should put up a team to spearhead it within his government.

Most projects fail to take off due to bureaucratic nature of our governance system.
“Even the current CDF disbursement system need more flexibility especially for rural areas,” I said, which he agreed and indicated that he was observing keenly on how it will play-out for now with the hope of tying the knots in the next round.

You see, Eastern Province does not have many big commercial farmers like Southern and Central Province but yet it produces a lot of cash crops through small-scale farmers.

Tobacco is one of the cash crop that has changed lives in Eastern Province and yet grown by villagers. We also have huge production of maize, soybeans, and sunflower in the Eastern Province.

Cotton used to be huge but production has gone down despite investors putting up ginnery in the province.
And, off course, the famous Chalimbana groundnuts!

I note that the President has somewhat renamed the “Farmer Input Support Programme (FISP) to Agriculture Support Programme (ASP) in order to expand its scope beyond just giving input. Initially, it started as Fertilizer Support Programme under the MMD government but President Rupiah Banda changed its name and scope in 2009 to FISP in order to incorporate seed to go with fertilizer. We are yet to see what else will incorporated in the new scope of the program, which is subsidy driven initiative to support small scale farmers.

I hope the proposed project of damming the East will be a reality!

Putin ready to help overcome food crisis if West lifts sanctions

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Moscow is ready to make a “significant contribution” to averting a looming food crisis if the West lifts sanctions over Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin told Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi on Thursday.

Russia was slapped with unprecedented sanctions after Putin ordered troops into neighbouring Ukraine on February 24.

The sanctions and military action have disrupted supplies of fertiliser, wheat and other commodities from both Russia and Ukraine. The two countries produce 30 percent of the global wheat supply.

“Putin emphasises that the Russian Federation is ready to make a significant contribution to overcoming the food crisis through the export of grain and fertiliser, subject to the lifting of politically motivated restrictions by the West,” the Kremlin said in a statement following the call.

It added that Putin also spoke about the “steps taken to ensure safety of navigation, including the daily opening of humanitarian corridors for the exit of civilian ships from the ports of the Azov and Black Sea, which is impeded by the Ukrainian side”.

Putin also described as “unfounded” accusations that Russia was to blame for the problems with food supplies on the global market.

The United States scoffed at Putin’s offer.

“Now they’re using economic tools, as weapons. They’re weaponizing food. They’re weaponizing economic assistance. I guess we shouldn’t be surprised by that, since they’ve weaponized everything else, including lies and information,” Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said.

“The administration is in discussions with our international partners and allies about how best to address this,” he said.

Draghi told a press conference that “the purpose of this telephone call was to ask if something could be done to unblock the wheat that is now in the depots in Ukraine”.

He suggested “collaboration between Russia and Ukraine on the unblocking of the Black Sea ports” where the wheat, which is at risk of rotting, is located — “on the one hand to clear these ports and on the other hand to ensure that there are no clashes during the clearing”.

Draghi said there was “a readiness to continue in this direction” on the Russian side, and that he would call Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky “to see if there is a similar readiness”.

But “when asked if I have seen any glimmer of hope for peace, the answer is no,” the Italian prime minister said.