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Methodical, UPND have missed the plot – Lifuka

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By Kombe Mataka

THE fight against corruption will turn into a charade if UPND does not put its house in order, says Reuben Lifuka.

Speaking when he featured on Diamond TV’s COSTA programme on Sunday night, Lifuka said those that have been investigated or arrested on suspicion of corruption were calling it bluff because of the manner in which the cases were being handled.

“I have always said that accountability should not be Jettisoned on account of building unity. We can still build unity while holding our leaders accountable. Integrity should not be sacrificed simply because you want to create that unity,” Lifuka, a former Transparency International Zambia president, said. “Therefore, if any of our former leaders, any of the former leaders including the former president (Edgar) Lungu are found wanting, we shouldn’t turn a blind eye to the fact that they have been found wanting all in the name of trying to build unity. I think it will be extremely wrong for the UPND to do that because then, the confidence in the anti-corruption fight will be totally eroded. I think it will turn into a charade if the UPND does not put its house in order. And partly the reason why we have seen what I think is impunity for those that have been alleged to have been in corruption is because of the time it has taken for the UPND to get its act together.”

Lifuka said the long time it was taking for the joint investigative wings to investigate and take cases to court was giving latitude to the suspects to call the whole process a bluff.

“The long time the ACC and joint investigation teams was taking to bring cases to court is just making those that may have done something wrong to become very bold and speak out,” he noted. “I mean let’s face it, I have been in this business for 20 years. The corrupt fight back. The corrupt will not take everything lying low. In this ideal of being methodical they are providing the latitude for those that have genuinely done something wrong to the country to become bold and they bluff. And this is where they (UPND) need to recalibrate their fight against corruption. Rethink their strategy, their strategies.”

Lifuka said the corruption fight must not only be based on the past but present cases also.

“We should also be talking about the corruption that is happening now. If I go back to the (Levy) Mwanawasa administration from 2001 up until 2008, one of the criticisms that president Mwanawasa faced was the fact that the fight against corruption was historical in nature. It was backward, it was not forward looking. The UPND have adopted a similar approach dealing with all the historical cases,” he observed.

“They should be looking at building the right systems in the public service which are allowing for loopholes for corruption including among serving ministers. In this quest to be methodical, I think the UPND have missed the plot.”

Lifuka warned that the UPND were taking long to settle after winning the elections.

“I remember at the first public (Phoenix) Radio interview, the President [Hakainde Hichilema] had, he was asked a question whether by being methodical and the time it was taking to put things in place by the UPND had allowed for paper trail to go missing or to grow cold. The President said ‘yes it is possible we will lose some evidence because people may just destroy evidence’. But I think this was taken lightly. This is where the problem lies,” he said.

“Again I go back to the fact that it is a democratic transition. You have new people coming in. It is not a continuation. You are coming in as new people to take over from the system that has systemic corruption. Let us face it, the government of PF had become entrenched in corruption and that is why you can hear what is coming from PAC (Public Accounts Committee). Now you come in as a new government, you haven’t taken time to understand what was happening. Your transition is much longer than six, seven months. Then people who are in the system and know what was happening and would probably be caught up with any investigations, will not wait, sit back and wait for you to come and find the trail which will point a smoking gun at them. They will do something about the evidence.”

Lifuka observed that it seemed the UPND was more prepared to win the August 2021 elections, than the governance of the country.

“What they must understand is if it takes them one year to transition (from being in the opposition to the ruling party), they will only have three years in government. In the fifth year parliament will be dissolved by May, so they really don’t have enough time,” he warned.

And Lifuka said the UPND needs a comprehensive strategy for the fight against corruption.

He said in one breath the UPND was stating that it would investigate and prosecute cases of corruption while in another, it was calling for those that have looted state coffers or done harm to the country to surrender and apologise.

And Lifuka said former president Lungu was entitled to make statements.

“Former president Lungu is entitled to make a statement like any other person. I think we shouldn’t crucify him for coming out and speaking out. It is his constitutional right. But when we delve into what he said when he talked about hypocrisy, I think the hypocrisy starts with himself. The calls for fighting corruption have not started today. He himself when he was president came out openly and said quite a number of his ministers were receiving cash deposits in their accounts which they could not explain and that there was corruption,” recalled Lifuka.

“Later on, he changed and when people pushed him to take action on his ministers beyond firing [Chishimba] Kambwili, he never came to the party but instead he said ‘give me evidence’. So if you want to talk hypocrisy, that was hypocrisy.”

Boris Becker, Tennis Legend, Reveals Shock And Embarassment Over Bankruptcy

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BORIS BECKER, TENNIS LEGEND, REVEALS SHOCK AND EMBARASSMENT OVER BANKRUPTCY

Ex-tennis star Boris Becker has spoken of his shock and embarrassment at being declared bankrupt, as a trial into his alleged failure to declare assets continues.

The six-time Grand Slam champion told Southwark Crown Court the bad publicity damaged “brand Becker” and reduced his earnings.

Mr Becker was declared bankrupt in 2017 and is accused of failing to hand over assets including trophies and medals.

He denies 24 charges against him.

The court heard the bankruptcy decision came days before that year’s two-week Wimbledon tournament, where he was working for the BBC as well as Australian and Japanese television.

Becker said he felt “very embarrassed”, adding: “Because it was all over world news, and I walked through the gate of Wimbledon and everyone knew. I was embarrassed because I was bankrupt.”

He told jurors the bankruptcy was also in the midst of a “stressful time” with his then wife Sharlely “Lilly” Becker, while they were living in “separate quarters” at a £22,000-a-month rented house in Wimbledon, south-west London.

Becker, who arrived at court hand in hand with his partner Lilian de Carvalho Monteiro, sat at the witness box on Monday to give evidence, as the jury was told he has injuries to his ankle and knees.

His barrister, Jonathan Laidlaw QC, took him through his career after he was catapulted to stardom when he became the youngest player to win the Wimbledon men’s singles titles, aged 17, in 1985.

The court heard the former world number one earned a “vast amount” of money, winning about $50 million (£38m) in prize money and sponsorship deals.

He said he helped his parents build a house in his native Germany and paid cash for a family home in Munich, a property in Miami, Florida, and an estate in Mallorca, which was worth about €50 million (£42m) at the height of the property market.

‘Expensive divorce’

But Becker, who went on to coach current world number one tennis player Novak Djokovic, work as a BBC commentator and act as a brand ambassador for firms including Puma, said his earnings “reduced dramatically” following his retirement in 1999.

He said he was involved in an “expensive divorce” from ex-wife Barbara Becker in 2001, involving high maintenance payments to their two sons, and had to support his daughter Anna Ermakova and her mother, in a deal which included a £2.5m Chelsea flat.

German national Becker, who was resident in Monte Carlo and Switzerland before moving to the UK in 2012, said he had “expensive lifestyle commitments”, including millions owed to Swiss authorities as well as in Germany.

He said the bankruptcy had restricted his ability to earn money, explaining: “[It is] very difficult when you are bankrupt and in the headlines every week for it. [It is] very difficult to make a lot of money with my name.”

The 24 charges Mr Becker has been accused of include:

Nine counts of failing to deliver up trophies and other awards
Seven counts of concealing property totalling more than €1.5m
Five counts of failing to disclose estate, including the properties in Germany and London, shares and a bank account
Two of removal of property amounting to almost €500,000
One of concealing €825,000 of debt.

The trial, which is expected to last up to three weeks, continues.

BBC

Chris Rock ‘hasn’t spoken’ to Will Smith after getting slapped at the Oscars as it is claimed the comedian didn’t know Jada Pinkett Smith has alopecia

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Chris Rock is yet to speak to Will Smith after he got slapped by the actor live onstage at the Oscars on Sunday night, March 27.

Their mutual friend, rapper Diddy had earlier claimed that the pair had sorted out their differences, saying: ‘It’s all love. they’re brothers’ but insiders now say that is not the case.

It has also been claimed that Rock was not aware that Jada Pinkett Smith suffers with alopecia, after he made a joke about her bald head looking like ‘G.I. Jane.’

TMZ reports that Rock and Smith have yet to settle anything privately, and there has been no communication between the two men.

A close friend of Rock informed that outlet the comedian went straight back to his dressing room after the incident and left the building, which was always his plan for the evening.

The insider added that Chris did not know Jada suffers with alopecia and that he ‘doesn’t have a mean bone in his body.’

Rock is said to have been left ‘shaken and bewildered’ by Smith’s smack but dusted himself off to attend Madonna’s manager Guy Oseary’s famous Oscars After Party in LA.

According to PageSix Rock appeared ‘unfazed’ at the party, though people were said to be rallied around him.

‘You wouldn’t really know anything had happened,’ an insider told the publication, adding: ‘He was talking about it, just saying it was crazy, but it didn’t seem to be bothering him at all.’

The report claims that some of Rock’s friends kept a close eye on the door, however, to check if Smith was going to turn up.

Meanwhile, on Monday the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences launched a formal review into the incident and says it ‘condemns the actions of Mr. Smith at last night’s show.’

The organization released the statement Monday afternoon, after facing backlash over not naming Smith when initially addressing the incident.

‘The Academy condemns the actions of Mr. Smith at last night’s show,’ a spokesperson for the organization said.

‘We have officially started a formal review around the incident and will explore further action and consequences in accordance with our Bylaws, Standards of Conduct, and California law.’

Will Smith’s home is visited by sheriffs after the actor hits Chris Rock

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Will Smith’s residence was visited by Los Angeles sheriffs on Tuesday, two days after the actor slapped Chris Rock on stage during the 2022 Oscars.

At 2:40 p.m., officers were seen driving into the Smiths Calabasas estate in a marked patrol cruiser. As they grabbed images of the police cruiser on Tuesday, Splash News reported.

Officers arrived to the Smith residence around 2:40 p.m.

Deputy Lizette Salcon, a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, told Page Six that officers were dispatched when someone reported a drone flying in the posh neighborhood, but she couldn’t say whether the Smiths or another nearby resident filed the complaint.

“We basically sent that unit over there to try to locate the drone to see if there was a paparazzi or whatever,” Salcon explained, “but when the deputies got there, they couldn’t find the drone.” It had already exited the vicinity.”

While Rock, 57, has decided not to press charges, many have questioned if Smith, 53, would face legal consequences for physically assaulting the comic over a G.I. Jane joke directed at Smith’s wife, actress Jada Pinkett Smith, who suffers from alopecia.

“The [Los Angeles] city attorney may file charges based on the facts without necessarily relying on the victim,” Steve Cooley, the district attorney for Los Angeles County from 2000 to 2012, told The Washington Post on Tuesday.

“The victim has no say in whether or not a prosecutor files charges,” Cooley added, “but charges can and should be made since the crime was committed against the state of California.” In a criminal case, it’s not Chris Rock vs. Will Smith. The LAPD and the city attorney should not dismiss what appears to be a clear criminal offense that is easily proven.”

Will apologized to Rock via Instagram Monday evening, sharing, “Jokes at my expense are a part of the job, but a joke about Jada’s medical condition was too much for me to bear and I reacted emotionally.

“I would like to publicly apologize to you, Chris. I was out of line and I was wrong. I am embarrassed and my actions were not indicative of the man I want to be. There is no place for violence in a world of love and kindness.”

Jada was brief in her public reaction to the incident, simply sharing, “This is a season for healing and I’m here for it,” via Instagram.

Rock has yet to respond to the hoopla surrounding the evening, while The Academy has expressed its disappointment in the “Hitch” star and will be moving forward with an investigation.

“The Academy condemns the actions of Mr. Smith at last night’s show,” the organization wrote in a statement shared via social media on Monday.

“We have officially started a formal review around the incident and will explore further action and consequences in accordance with our Bylaws, Standards of Conduct and California law.”

The ‘circus’ Surrounding Operations At Ministry Of Health Is Created Confusion – Kampyongo

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THE ‘CIRCUS’ SURROUNDING OPERATIONS AT MINISTRY OF HEALTH IS CREATED CONFUSION – KAMPYONGO.

…Because of too many promises, technocrats are not being respected and given room to work.

Wednesday, 30 March, 2022 (Smart Eagles).

Patriotic Front (PF) Shiwang’andu Member of Parliament Hon. Stephen Kampyongo says the ‘Circus’ surrounding operations at the Ministry of Health is a created Confusion.

Speaking when he featured on Diamond Live, Hon Kampyongo said the alleged organised confusion might be that the Ministry is headed by a Minister who has been misplaced and is not respecting the technocrats.

He said it is therefore shocking to hear statements from the Health Minister Sylvia Masebo that the Ministry’s work is being frustrated by alleged PF members in the civil service.

Hon Masebo’s statement raised echoes from some members of the Ruling party with some suggesting that the alleged PF aligned Civil servants be uprooted.

But Hon Kampyongo said the UPND Government should understand that the civil service moves in terms of policy implementation depending on what they are given.

“Most of the directors you see are well educated. Technocrats can be useful or useless depending on how you treat them. You can change the top notch, Permanent Secretaries but the cling of the civil service can adapt to any changes,” he said.

He said the civil service is not for people to play partisan politics but should be respected for the development of the nation.

“UPND are in Government today, they are not going to be in Government forever. So if you are saying that the civil service must be going with political parties as they come what type of a country are you going to have. The Civil Service is a system that can work and give you desired results if you pay attention to them,” he said.

Hon Kampyongo has also refuted assertion that the alleged disorganisation in the Ministry of Health was inherited from the previous regime.

“If the Ministry was disorganised as it is now how would we have managed to contain the pandemic.? We are ranked highly in Africa as one of the countries that have performed well in the pandemic fight,” he said.

With regards to the recruitment of Health Workers, Hon Kampyongo has observed that the Minister rushed to give numbers in the recruitment of 11,276 health workers from a position that is not informed.

He said there are some Health Facilities which were recently constructed but are yet to have an establishment to ascertain the number of health professionals needed.

Hon Kampyongo said it is for this reason that the Minister should have taken time and allowed the technocrats to do their work.

“Government has got establishments in all the sectors, be it Education, Agriculture or Health. When you are saying you need to recruit you need to understand the demand before you can recruit.

“You cannot just come up with numbers, which are not informed by the establishment . We rushed to give numbers…… Give the technocrats space to work. We are having these problems because maybe someone is Pilling pressure on these technocrats. Because of too many promises, politicians in Government have the temptation of wanting to see that which was promised to be done quickly. However, it is important to listen and get advice from technocrats,” he said.

Aaron Milner insulted the President after being fired

FUN FACT

DID you know that veteran politician, Aaron Milner, used vulgar language against Dr Kenneth Kaunda when he fired him as home affairs minister in 1978?

(Dr Kaunda had earlier invited Aaron Milner to play golf with him at State House from 10:00 hours in the morning up to 18:00 hours before firing him around 20:00 hours).

For details, follow the excerpt below from

(Conversations with Memorable Personalities)

Amos Malupenga:

Home affairs was your last appointment, which year was this?

Aaron Milner:

Home affairs was my last posting in 1978. That’s when Kaunda fired me.

Amos Malupenga:

Why were you fired?

Aaron Milner:

It was the most heart-breaking incident. I used to be roving chairman of the interstate security of neigbouring countries. I used to go out with my officers like the Army commander, ZAF commander or Inspector General of Police, moving from one country to the other in the region. We used to meet as ministers to look at problems caused by South African and Zimbabwean and Angolan issues.

So there was a conference then and I was chairing the conference of ministers with their officials from these countries. Kenneth Kaunda telephoned me saying ‘young man, you have been working very hard. Can you come to State House, let’s play golf. Since your visitors are leaving, let the minister of state and your permanent secretary see them off. Let’s play golf’.

So I went to State House at 10 AM. President Kaunda and myself played golf from 10 until 4PM when we were joined by then Chief Justice Annel Silungwe and Grey Zulu. We played from 4PM to 6PM.

At 6PM as usual, we had lined up according to seniority to bid farewell to President Kenneth Kaunda who said to me, ‘you are not going’. This was usual, so I stayed on in the lounge as he went up to his room.

I sat there waiting, which was normal. I waited for one hour but President Kaunda was not coming back. I went to the private secretary and said, ‘mune [you], has the President forgotten about me?’ He said, ‘I will phone him,’ and he phoned Kaunda upstairs.

The next thing, Kenneth Kaunda comes down into the lounge with a folder under his armpit. I stood up, as usual, and said ‘Mr. President have you forgotten about me?’ He said ‘Aaron this is the saddest part of my life’. I said ‘why?’

He opened a folder and pulled out a letter to me. He said ‘sit down and read’. I couldn’t believe it. I have the letter, of course. It will feature in my memoirs.

The letter stated simply that ‘I am dismissing you as Minister of Home Affairs and thank you for the services you have rendered to this country. You have not lived up to the leadership code’.

I ‘said why’, remembering then I was not being paid a salary. As you know there was a Leadership Code. If you were running a farm, you could not be paid by the state. Your income was from farming activities. The house, the car, yes you would be given but the rest is for yourself to fend, and I was doing that.

Kaunda said ‘I understand that you have a flat in London?’ I was very vulgar to tell you the truth. I used a language that was unheard of. I was mad and I couldn’t believe this. Here is a man I have lived with all my life, thank God we have restored our long life friendship. We lived together in Chingola and throughout, we knew each other. Our families were like one family, and they still are.

I said, ‘this is nonsense, me having a flat in London? Mr. President, last month you sent my wife on a small plane to Bulawayo because my mother was ill and I couldn’t go to Bulawayo. You were very kind to have sent my wife with my little daughter to see my mother. And when my daughter came back, she said to me, ‘dad how can you keep grandma in a matchbox?’ I was so appalled because my daughter was only four years of age and she was so appalled at the living conditions of my mother in that African township.

I said ‘Kenneth I told you what my daughter had said and you allowed me later on to send a few pennies to enable my mother buy a little house, how could you say that I could buy myself a flat in London?’ He said ‘Aaron, there is a mistake, give me the letter’. I said no.

I went to Makeni and telephoned my friends, John Mwanakatwe, Alexander, Changufu and others, they all came home. They couldn’t believe it. There were tears in the house. It was like a funeral. So a delegation was sent to State House to find out what Kaunda had done. And President Kaunda said ‘that young man was planning a coup and all of you are on the list to be gotten rid of’. When they came back from State House, they were appalled at what I had [allegedly] planned to do.

I said there was no way I could do such a thing. That’s how I was thrown out. How hard and how difficult it was! A month later, he sent for me at State House. He said ‘young man, Scotland Yard, SITET and the security systems were investigating your so called property abroad and so far there is a blank’. I said but I reported to you when somebody offered me US $8 million to seal a contract…

At this point, Milner narrated in detail how he was linked to the 1980 Shamwana coup. …

An excerpt from

(Conversations with Memorable Personalities)

Picture below:

Aaron Milner (left) with Valentine Musakanya, the former Secretary to Cabinet as well as former Bank of Zambia Governor.

Who Is Justice Prisca Mutimbwa Nyambe (RTD) A Newly Appointed Member Of Judicial Complaints Commission

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WHO IS JUSTICE PRISCA MUTIMBWA NYAMBE (RTD) A NEWLY APPOINTED MEMBER OF JUDICIAL COMPLAINTS COMMISSION*

Education and Professional Qualifications

1982 Admitted as an Advocate of the High Court and Supreme Court of Zimbabwe

1978 Admitted as an Advocate of the High Court and Supreme Court of Zambia

1975 L.L.B. Degree with honours, University of Zambia

1) Judge of the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals (“Mechanism”)

2) Judge of the High Court of Zambia since 2006

Professional Experience:

2011 Elected Judge of the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals

2006 judge of the High Court of Zambia

2005 Elected Judge ad litem of the ICTY

2002 – 2006 General Counsel to International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (“ICTR”)

2000 – 2002 Chief of Section, General Legal Services Section, ICTR1

996 – 2000 Senior Legal Officer, Chief Court Management Section, ICTR

1992 – 1996 Private Law Practice

1984 –1992 Legal Counsel to the Central Bank of Zambia

1980 – 1984 Senior Magistrate, Harare and Gwelo, Zimbabwe

1978 – 1980 Resident Magistrate, Kabwe, Zambia

Special assignments other work experience:

2004 Chairperson of a Study Group constituted by the Acting Chief Justice of Zambia on the Establishment of Divisions of the High Court of Zambia

2009 Project Leader: Initiative by the Zambia Judiciary to extend jurisdiction on Serious Economic Crimes and Corruption Cases from the Magistrates’ Court to the High Court

2008 Collaborator on a Direct Contact Mission to the Republic of Ethiopia on behalf of the International Labour Organization (“ILO”), Geneva

2007 Undertook a Mission for the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights, Geneva, to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (“DRC”): “Justice for Victims of Sexual Violence in Congo”, special focus on Bunia, Ituri District

1995 Human Rights Expert/International Observer, under the International Commission of Jurists to the Trial of Former President of Malawi Dr. Hastings Kamuzu Banda and two others on Trial for Human Rights Violations

1994 Human Rights Expert/International Observer, under the International Commission of Jurists to the Multi-Party, Presidential and Parliamentary Elections, Malawi

1993 Human Rights Expert/International Observer under the International Commission of Jurists, and Coordinator of the United Nations Observer Mission to Malawi during the National Referendum on the Future Political System for Malawi

Appointments

1994 Member of the Board of Directors of Cavemont Merchant Bank, (Z) Ltd

1994 Board Member of the Zambia Revenue Authority, Vice-Chairperson

1993 Member of a Study Group appointed by the Minister of Finance of the Republic of Zambia to review and reform the Financial System in Zambia

1992 Appointed Commissioner, Elections Commission of Zambia, by the President of the Republic of Zambia

1991 Founder and Board Member of the Zambia Elections Independent Monitoring Team (“ZIMT”)

1989 Member of Parliamentary Fact-finding Committee of Legal Experts – Appointed by the Prime Minister of the Republic of Zambia, to investigate and report on any discriminatory Laws against women in Government and State owned Enterprises

2016 Founding & Board Member Amref Health, Africa, Zambia

Elective Positions

1982 – 1994 Elected Council Member, Law Association of Zambia

1992 Elected Patron, University of Zambia Law Association

1994 – 1996 Elected Vice-Chair Person of Law Association of Zambia

Others

24 February 2014

Judges’ Symposium by the Zambia Law Development Commission: “Re­thinking Zambia’s Criminal Justice System“

24 – 26 May 2002

(Arusha, Tanzania)
Participant at a seminar on African Dialogue: “Promoting Justice and Reconciliation in Africa challenges for Human Rights and Development”, organized by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights

16 – 20 June 1997
(Geneva, Switzerland)
Ecumenical Centre, Bossy, Canton of Geneva, Switzerland Participant to a Working Group on “Developing Joint Procedures and Standards for the ICTR/ICTY, Witness Protection Programs”, organized by the Coordination of Women’s Advocacy

6 – 8 April 1998 (Geneva, Switzerland)
International Labour Office, Geneva, Switzerland Participant in “Women, War and Justice Symposium”

April – May 1994 (Malawi, countrywide)
Conducted a series of workshops/seminars for NGOs, Political Parties on their role in observing and monitoring elections in a Multiparty Environment, Civic Education Seminars/Workshops throughout Malawi, on the role of Law Enforcement Officers during and after multiparty elections

6 – 8 July 1994 (Windhoek, Namibia)
Participant in a seminar on “Promoting Democracy Human Rights and Development” by the Commonwealth Secretariat

May 1993 (Malawi, Countrywide)
Conducted a series of workshops/seminars for church leaders, NGOS, and the public on the “The Secrecy of the Ballot and Universal Suffrage”

December 1993 (Bonn, Germany)
Participant to the Seminar “Promoting Human Rights and Participation in Africa”, by the German Foundation for International Cooperation

November 1993 (Zambia, Countrywide)
Conducted a series of lectures/TV interviews for Police/Prison Officers on the Role of the Judiciary, Police, Prison Officers and the Press in a Democracy, under the auspices of the Law Association of Zambia

October 1993 (Nanyuki, Kenya)
Participant at a seminar on “Promoting Greater Political Participation” by the National Democratic Institute (“NDIUSA”) and the Kenya Education Centre for Women

February 1993 (Stockholm, Sweden)
Participant at a seminar on “Development Cooperation for Human Rights and Democracy” by the Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Department for International Development Cooperation and Human Rights

February 1993 (Maseru, Lesotho) Resource person at a workshop on the “Role of Women in Preparing Monitoring and Observing Elections”

1992 As Patron of the University of Zambia Law Association held a Seminar on the theme: “Women and Children ‘s Rights in Zambia, the Future “

September 1987 (Nairobi, Kenya)
Represented LAZ at the Regional Meeting of the Federation of Women Lawyers, Africa and the Middle East held in Nairobi, Kenya

September 1987 (Nairobi, Kenya)
Represented LAZ at the Regional Meeting of the Federation of Women Lawyers, Africa and the Middle East held in Nairobi, Kenya from 7 – 10 September 1987 on the theme: “Law and Shelter”

November 1986 (Lusaka, Zambia)
As Council Member of LAZ, organized a Joint Seminar between the African Bar Association and the International Commission of Jurists (“ICJ”) on the theme: “The Independence of the Judiciary and the Legal Profession”, held in Lusaka from 10 – 14 November 1986

August 1985 (Lusaka, Zambia)
As Council Member of Law Association of Zambia, organized “The African Bar Association Fifth Biennial Conference in Lusaka from 12 – 19
August 1985“

June 1981 (Harare, Zimbabwe)
Resource Person at a Women’s Conference on “Advancement of Women in the Judiciary” organized by the Ministry of Justice of the Republic of Zimbabwe

Professional Memberships

Magistrates & Judges Commonwealth Association, International Association of Women Judges

Bowman Lusambo to explore other avenues in politics

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By Charles Tembo

IT’S only me who will decide who to take over as Kabushi member of parliament, says Bowman Lusambo.

Lusambo, who is battling for his seat in the Constitutional Courts, told The Mast that he doesn’t want to overdo things hence exploring other avenues in politics.

In an interview in Ndola after conducting a walk within Kabushi Constituency on Saturday, Lusambo announced plans not to contest in 2026.

He said after his term comes to an end in 2026, he would hand over the seat to a person of his choice.

“I will just give Kabushi to a person I would want to continue from where I will end. I can assure you that come 2026, definitely, we are going to introduce another candidate for Kabushi. For me, I will not stand in 2026 because I want to pursue other avenues in politics. I have been a supporter, a political youth movement leader. I have been a minister and a member of parliament for two terms. I do not want to overdo things. I want other young men and women who would want to serve the people of Kabushi to take it up from me. I will be the one introducing the candidates to the people of Kabushi,” Lusambo said. “Go and tell them that Kabushi is for the bulldozer. Other political parties aspiring to take over my seat will be wasting their resources and money because I have invested heavily in the people of Kabushi.”

He wondered why people have started campaigns in Kabushi when his election nullification case is before courts of law.

“What’s the rush? The issue of Kabushi is in court and we need to respect the courts. I want to tell those politicians aspiring to stand in Kabushi that this is a no go area. We have invested trust in our people and the bond between them and us is very strong in the sense that there is no politician who can just come and stand,” Lusambo said. “We are aware some politicians are doing some manoeuvres in Kabushi. But they will not dislodge PF.”

Earlier, Lusambo visited Masala market, clinics and Kapalala market where he thanked the people of Kabushi for standing with him amidst his court battles.

“We are here on invitation from Lubuto United Church of Zambia for the ordination service. So we decided to also check on projects in the constituency. Remember we have a big project running. The construction of the new Kapalala market. I wanted to see the project and report to the residents that in the next two months, the project will be handed over to them. I also came to greet people. A lot has happened,” he said.

Lusambo said he was disappointed with the shortage of drugs in most clinics in Kabushi Constituency.

“We have discovered that there is a shortage of drugs. This issue is urgent and must be addressed as an emergency so that we serve our people. I want to report to the constituency that the shortage of medicines in clinics is real and I want to appeal to the government to procure the medicines,” said Lusambo.

But Copperbelt UPND information secretary William Sitali advised Lusambo to stop inciting the people of Kabushi with bad messages.

“As UPND we are very disappointed with the way Bowman Lusambo is taking politics. We are just coming from elections and we are in working mood so we advise Mr Lusambo to stop politicking,” he said. “We are also aware of Mr Lusambo’s innuendos of accusing the UPND of campaigning in Kabushi Constituency when it’s actually him who has been going round campaigning.”

Sitali said Lusambo should learn to exercise politics of civility and not of causing anarchy in Kabushi.

“The reconciliation process the party and the President Hakainde Hichilema has taken must be respected. It doesn’t mean that we are weak when we accommodate the opposition more specifically the PF which was oppressive to other opposition parties while they were in power,” said Sitali.

ALLIANCE FOR COMMUNITY ACTION FINDS OFFICE OF ‘FILER’

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ALLIANCE FOR COMMUNITY ACTION FINDS OFFICE OF ‘FILER’

It writes:
We have found “the Office of the Filer” and we looked at the files!

The current “Office of The Filer” is the Registrar of the Supreme Court, who is appointed by the Chief Justice in accordance with Section 11(2) of the Parliamentary and Ministerial Code of Conduct Act.

Background 🔍🔎
Following the public interest in the “Office of The Filer” video extract, shared by the ACA which was circulated widely on social media regarding government ministers’ declarations of assets, interests, liabilities, and incomes, the ACA decided to search for and find who exactly was the said “Filer.”

Process 🔃
To find “The Filer,” the ACA Fact-checking Unit looked at the Parliamentary and Ministerial Code of Conduct, Cap 16 of the Laws of Zambia which provides for the conduct of Ministers and Members of Parliament.

Findings 🔎
According to the Parliamentary and Ministerial Code of Conduct Act, all Members of Parliament, Cabinet and Speaker of the National Assembly must make annual declarations of their interests, assets, liabilities, and incomes 30 days after their first date of appointment or election and 30 days after every anniversary.
The Act states interalia that:
10 (2) An officer shall- (a) within thirty days after his appointment; and (b) within thirty days after each anniversary of his appointment to the office concerned; submit to the Chief Justice an annual declaration of assets, liabilities, and income in accordance with this section.

  1. (1) On receiving a declaration of interest under section six or a declaration of assets and income under section ten, the Chief Justice shall cause the particulars of the declaration to be entered in a register. Registration of declarations of interest and of assets (2) The register shall be kept in such form as the Chief Justice approves and shall be made available for inspection by members of the public at all reasonable times.

Conclusion
The declarations are submitted to the Chief Justice who then selects the form and who keeps them. In this instance, the current “Filer” is the Registrar of the Supreme Court.

NEXT, look out for our fact-checking story on whether ALL Cabinet ministers have filed their declarations tomorrow Wednesday 30th March 2022 as claimed by Director & Spokesperson, Ministry of Information Mr. Thabo Kawana in response to a question arising from a press statement made by Chapter One Foundation.

The ACA Fact-checking Unit is part of the European Union in Zambia funded ‘Ask Project’

Yaya Toure claims Pep Guardiola has ignored his attempts to apologise for stating his former manager had “issues with Africans.”

Ivorian football legend, Yaya Toure has revealed he still hasn’t heard from his former boss Pep Guardiola since he tendered an apology for comments he made about his ability to work with Africans four years ago.

Toure had two spells working under Guardiola during his trophy-laden career, winning the Champions League together at Barcelona before reuniting at Manchester City in the Premier League.

Toure’s last season at the Etihad ended in a terrible way as he made just one start in the final home game of the season.

Ivory Coast legend, Yaya Toure reveals Pep Guardiola has ignored his attempts to apologise for claiming his old boss has

Speaking to France Football after leaving City, he questioned his former boss’s attitude towards Africans and stated in the interview: ‘It got to the point I asked myself if it was because of my colour. I am not the first. Other Barcelona players asked the question.’

Toure, who is preparing to go into management, wrote to Guardiola to apologise for his public comments. However, he has revealed that his attempts to build bridges have never been acknowledged.

‘I put that in the past and put it down to the pandemic situation,’ he told The Times in an interview when asked about the lack of communication from the City head coach.

‘I wish to see him. I will be delighted. I need to talk to people who have a passion for football. I haven’t been in touch with him because I don’t have his number.’

Toure also said he would have no problems in congratulating Liverpool and their head coach should they hunt down his former club in this season’s incredible title race.

‘I hope City will win it because I am City fan, but it’s so unpredictable and Liverpool are so, so strong,’ he said.

‘Klopp, when he wins games, I text him and he is delighted and he always invites me [to meet him] and texts me back. Does this guy rest? I don’t think so, he loves football. He’s a top, top, guy.’

Russian President Vladimir Putin and his highest ranking commanders reportedly operating from secret bunkers

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A new ‘evidence’ has emerged that Vladimir Putin and his highest-ranking commanders are operating the Ukraine war from top-secret nuclear bunkers.

Movements of planes used by top Kremlin officials show Putin may be in a hideaway near Surgut in western Siberia, it is claimed.

His defence minister Sergei Shoigu, is believed to be in a bunker near Ufa in the Urals, 725 miles east of Moscow, according to investigative journalist Christo Grozev.

This theory is backed by his daughter Ksenia Shoigu, 31, who visited Ufa, where she was pictured for an estimated three days from March 22, as speculation was rife that the defence minister had suffered heart problems.

She also abruptly barred public access to her Instagram where she had posed with her baby in the blue and yellow colours of Ukraine.

The use of the high-security bunkers – if confirmed – is alarming as it suggests Putin may be preparing to deploy nuclear weapons, a move that would lead to inevitable reprisal.

Grozev – who has links to British investigative outlet Bellingcat – said: ‘I am absolutely sure that Shoigu is in a bunker.

‘Tracking the movement of his plane, we see very frequent flights to Ufa.

‘Knowing that there are also protected bunkers in this region, this gives an obvious answer about his place of residence.’

In an interview with Ukraine-24 channel, he told TV anchor Yevgeny Kiselyov: ‘This is our very justified version.

‘I believe in it, and I consider it to be a purely analytical conclusion. There can’t be any other conclusion.

‘If the Kremlin’s war strategy assumes a nuclear strike – and it does – as [Dmitry] Peskov [Putin’s spokesman] himself said on CNN a couple of days ago, then there cannot be any other version.

‘If there is a decision of a potential nuclear strike, they can’t hide the military leadership afterwards.

‘They have to be hidden beforehand.

‘I am absolutely certain he is in a so-called bunker, and by trailing the plane he usually flies, we see very frequent, almost daily flights to Ufa.

‘Knowing this region has those very protected bunkers this leads us to the obvious conclusion. ‘

He believes Putin has another bunker elsewhere.

‘Most likely he is elsewhere, because we are seeing other flights, and they are more classified than the flight that goes to Ufa.

‘These are state planes, and they switch off their transponders somewhere around Surgut.’

This is Russia’s oil capital and is some 1,800 miles northeast of Moscow.

‘It looks like the final phase is quite secretive, and most likely there is a more elite bunker there, with the elite of the government.’

Previously there have been claims Putin had moved his close relatives to a bunker in the Altai Mountains, some 1,100 miles southeast of Surgut and 2,360 miles east of Moscow.

Grozev also suggested that Russia’s Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces, Valery Gerasimov, is operating from a bunker.

Coincidentally, the defence minister’s daughter Ksenia Shoigu seems to have been in Ufa between March 22 and 25.

‘Today we are in Ufa, on a working visit,’ she posted on her Telegram channel on March 22.

Local newspapers reported that the financier was visiting ‘at the personal invitation of the head of region on March 24 and 25’.

Lubinda used his govt influence to acquire communal land, insists Kamwala Ward councillor

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By Mwaka Ndawa

KAMWALA Ward councilor Mainda Simata says PF acting vice-president Given Lubinda used his influence as Kabwata member of parliament and as a minister to illegally acquire land where his charity foundation is erected.

Simata said the property belonged to the community and Lubinda deprived the members of its communal use.

This is in a matter where Given Lubinda Foundation Limited has sued Simata for threatening to evict it from Stand Number 14726/917/REM in Kamwala South on reasons that the land was illegally acquired.

The Foundation is seeking an order of the Lusaka High Court, restraining Simata from interfering with its peaceful and quiet enjoyment of the land.

Given Lubinda Foundation wants an order of injunction prohibiting Simata from interfering with the land in question.

It also wants damages for inconvenience, punitive and exemplary damages and interest.

In an affidavit in opposition to ex-parte summons for an order of interlocutory injunction, Simata said the Foundation had not shown how he had interfered with its peaceful and quiet enjoyment of the land, but it had instead copied clause 3 of the lease agreement between itself and the Lusaka City Council.

“The defendant does not deny appearing on various media platforms and still maintains that the plaintiff has illegally occupied the land in question,” Simata said. “The defendant in his position as councillor for Kamwala Ward was speaking on behalf of the people that have lodged a complaint that Hon. Lubinda used his influence as area member of parliament and minister to illegally acquire this property that belonged to the community, depriving them of its communal use, but instead is in private hands through Given Lubinda Foundation Limited, a thing which has now angered the community who want the property restored for communal use.”

He said it was not true that the Foundation would suffer irreparable damages because it supported the under privileged through projects, scholarships, campaign for children and women’s rights, skills training and development.

“The reason the plaintiff should not be granted this relief is that the plaintiff has not complied with the rules of the court which require that a letter of demand is served on the defendant,” said Simata.

‘’The plaintiff has failed in its affidavit to demonstrate or provide any tangible evidence to show any misconduct by the defendant that would warrant the maintenance of the status quo of the plaintiff. Further, there is no evidence by the plaintiff to show any irreparable damages that the plaintiff has suffered.”

He prayed that the application by the Foundation be dismissed with costs.

Katumbi Leads Tshisekedi By 14 Points In Opinion Poll 18 Months Before DRC Polls

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Katumbi Leads Tshisekedi By 14 Points In Opinion Poll 18 Months Before DRC Polls

An opinion poll ahead of the 2023 Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) elections gives opposition leader Moise Katumbi a 14 point lead ahead of the country’s leader President Felix Tshisekedi.

Katumbi’s favorability is measured at 43% while Tshisekedi is at 29%.

The poll was conducted by by Berci, the Congo Study Group (GEC) and Ebuteli. Two other political heavyweights in the DRC, Jean-Pierre Bemba and Martin Fayulu, also polled better than the incumbent.

Bemba, a former vice-president, represented a favorability rating at 39.68% while Fayulu posted 34.28%.

According to Le Congo Lebere, Katumbi’s popularity rating shows a drop of 16 points from the previous survey. The former Katanga governor a few months ago posted 59% favorability while the incumbent who dropped 25 points had 54%.

Experts have attributed the recent poll outcome to various factors. The poll was concentrated in the capital Kinshasa where Tshisekedi enjoys favorable support.

The drop in this poll of Katumbi is also probably the result of his current political position which is not appreciated by public opinion.

“The fact that Moïse Katumbi is both in the opposition and in the Sacred Union creates trouble among some of his supporters who have a very negative image of the head of state,” explains a political science professor attached at a Belgian university.

“We must [also] not overlook the fact that Mr. Katumbi has not to date announced his candidacy for the presidential election, unlike Mr. Tshisekedi. This plays negatively on his popularity rating and makes him lose points.”

Some, among the supporters of Moïse Katumbi, still doubt he will be a candidate in the presidential election next year.

There are suggestions that Katumbi will instead back Tshisekedi’s candidature next year.

Supporters of the former governor of Katanga are still delighted with the outcome of the poll because it was concentrated outside the opposition leader’s swahili speaking strongholds in the East, Southern and Central DRC where majority of the country’s voting population is located.

Critics who failed to run the country now telling us what to do – Undi-Phiri

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By Christopher Miti

EASTERN Province deputy permanent secretary Beauty Undi-Phiri says President Hakainde Hichilema has an agenda of changing the narrative of the country into a better one.

Officiating at a two-day Chipata Business Summit which ended on Friday, Undi-Phiri noted that people who failed to manage the country were now telling Zambians that the UPND government should manage and change the country in five to six months.

“We have heard some critics saying that in a few months’ time, President Hakainde Hichilema should bring development. Here you can see that you have a President in the State House who is very keen and has the agenda to guide and change the narrative of this country into a better country,” she said.

“Today, the critics who failed to manage this country are telling us that we should manage and change this country in five to six months. Let me remind you that Zambia has a President who really thinks about the welfare of the people. It is up to us as Zambians to ensure that we grab the opportunities that have been given by His Excellency.”

Undi-Phiri said the government had given a conducive environment where people were free to conduct business regardless of where they came from.

“It doesn’t matter who you are. As long as you are a Zambian, His Excellency is saying he is going to support you. This is the main reason why Constituency Development Fund has come back to the various communities, it is for you to be supported by this government,” she said.

“Today, you don’t need to know anyone in government for you to do business. For you to be connected and for you to do anything, you don’t need to know anyone. President Hichilema is saying as long as you are Zambian, as long as you have an idea to bring something to the economy, he says he shall support you through cooperatives and various business ventures that will come into being. He shall support you.”

Undi-Phiri said the government would not look at how many were criticising it but to concentrate on working for the people.
She said the Chipata business summit and exhibition provided a rare opportunity for people to improve the outlook of the province which has a lot of business potential.

“Let’s not look at how many people are criticising us but what we have done in the short period of time that we have been in power. It clearly shows that in a short period of time, even when others are saying we did not create jobs… Did they create jobs themselves?” asked Undi-Phiri.

“If it’s 70 jobs that have been given to a province, at least we are creating jobs. Today, I remind Zambians that if indeed we need development, let’s rally behind His Excellency President Hakainde Hichilema.”

Chipata Chamber of Commerce and Industry chairperson Richard Kumwenda said the expo provided a rare opportunity for the business community to see how it could tap into the business potential that existed in the region.
He said the responsibility that the business community and government had was huge and needed a lot of commitment.

COURT DISMISSES CASE AGAINST NAWAKWI

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By CHARLES MUSONDA

THE Lusaka Magistrates’ Court has dismissed a complaint of intermeddling against Forum for Democracy and Development (FDD) president Edith Nawakwi, because the appointment of the administrator was contested in a related matter before the High Court.

Magistrate Felix Kaoma yesterday dismissed the complaint filed by Mulundu Hambulo, son of Ms. Nawakwi’s late husband Geoffrey Hambulo.

In dismissing the complaint, Mr. Kaoma said any person can lay a complaint under Section 90 of the Criminal Procedure Code (CPC) and that the complaint before him touched on interference with the Mr. Hambulo’s estate.

He said one of the essential elements for the case to stand is that there must be an administrator appointed according to the law but since Mulundu’s appointment has been contested in a related matter before the High Court, which has subsequently restrained him from administering the estate by way of an injunction, the complaint against Ms. Nawakwi was premature before court and accordingly dismissed it.

Mr. Kaoma’s dismissal of the complaint followed an application by the defence lawyer State Counsel Chifumu Banda who argued that there is an application pending under cause number 2021/HPF/P002 before High Court Judge Dorcas Malama where Mulundu’s appointment has been questioned.

The Constitution as read with the High Court Act Cap 27 of the Laws of Zambia, the High Court has supervisory jurisdiction over the lower court and that in terms of the Subordinate Act, every magistrate is subject to direction of the High Court.

He submitted that since Mulundu’s appointment as administrator is being questioned and the High Court is yet to determine his fate, it was incompetent for the Magistrates’ Court to administer plea to Ms. Nawakwi.

This was after Mr. Kaoma had directed the prosecution to retract changes made to the amended indictment before Ms. Nawakwi could take fresh plea following reallocation of the case to Mr. Kaoma after Magistrate Nthandose Chabala recused herself from handling the case for undisclosed reasons last Monday.

He had earlier noted that the new indictment had a lot of defects as it did not indicate the district where the alleged offence happened and that there were a number of independent allegations in one count, thereby making it defective as it did not conform to Sections 134 and 135 of the CPC.

In response to an argument by the prosecution, Mr. Banda said the Administrator General is now in charge of the administration of Mr. Hambulo’s estate until a decision of the High Court is made.

Ms. Nawakwi is at loggerheads with her step children who claimed she was not legally married to their father which compelled her to produce a marriage certificate to court which showed that she and the late husband, Geoffrey Hambulo, were married at St Ignatius Parish Catholic Church on December 22, 2014.

While the matter is in the High Court, the children took her to the magistrate court claiming that she was intermeddling with property.

Mulundu filed the complaint against Ms. Nawakwi on grounds that she was interfering with his estate by allegedly removing agriculture equipment from the farm, refusing to hand over keys to properties forming part of the estate, and ignoring administrators’ letters of appointment.

Mr. Banda said on February 25, 2022, Ms. Justice Malama granted an order of injunction removing Mulundu from being administrator until determination of the case.

He said the standing on which Mulundu may have had at the time of filing the complaint against Ms. Nawakwi has been removed and as a result he has no legs to stand on.

Thomas Sankara’s Murder Trial Opens Fresh Wounds in Painful Quest for the Truth

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On 15 October, 1987, the world was coldly greeted with the sudden and horrendous news of Thomas Sankara’s gruesome assassination in another ‘expected’ West African military coup.

Given the political isolation he was subjected to in the months preceding his death – perhaps, and rightly so, a counter-revolution – Sankara’s murder shocked the civil comfort bubbles of nascent African democracy and ‘governance’.

The charismatic revolutionary leader – affectionately and reverently referred to as ‘Africa’s Che Guevara’ – was mercilessly sprayed with several bullets during his National Revolutionary Council meeting in Burkina Faso’s capital Ouagadougou. A dozen others who were with Sankara were also killed. Sankara’s grisly murder marked the grinding halt of a promising chapter in Africa’s pursuit for holistic liberation.

What ensued after this tragedy – Blaise Compaoré’s autocratic and pro-Western regime – ostensibly goes down as one of the most repressive decades not only for Burkina Faso’s history but Africa’s at large.

Brother Turned Enemy

When Compaore immediately assumed power after Sankara’s death, he asserted that the departed leftist leader had put Burkina Faso’s relations with France at grave risk. He subjugated his country to the whims and caprices of France, the World Bank, and the IMF – effectively negating all progressively people-centred values that Sankara had earnestly sought to bring to fruition.

The dreadful, cowardly assassination of Sankara, who had ushered in an emancipatory revolution four years earlier, dimmed the torch of such a revolution just when it presented the potential to take off towards a holistic and solidaristic trajectory. One can only wonder what it could have portended not only for West Africa and the Sahel but the whole continent.

35 years have lapsed since Sankara’s demise, but his incitive revolutionary seeds – a point he once made (that you may kill the revolutionary but you cannot kill the ideas) – haunt the nation with an urgent but patient quest for answers.

A Trial Dedicated to Truth-Finding

This delicate exercise, worsened by the key defendant in this matter, Blaise Compaoré, being tried in absentia, has opened fresh wounds of lies, deception, cover-ups, treacherous betrayal, counter-revolution, and collective trauma.

In this web the progressive masses of Burkina Faso – who are growing weary with extremist insurgency in West Africa – hold their breath in the spirited hope that the answers to Sankara’s assassination will come to light.

More crucially, Sankara’s family and fellow revolutionaries caught in the storm of the 1987 coup by Compaoré equally demand the truth for long-awaited closure.

For radicals, the intelligentsia and even liberals in Africa and across the world, the trial is expected to bring respite to a subject that was once taboo in Burkina Faso – the legacy of Thomas Sankara and what he had started in the impoverished nation; the revolutionary action in putting a defensive stand against imperialism and neocolonialism for the greater good of Burkina Faso’s masses.

In October 2021 the murder trial of Thomas Sankara began in Ouagadougou and it is being heard in a military court. Blaise Compaoré and thirteen other defendants are facing charges relating to the murder of Sankara in October 1987.

Although a wave of political instability rocked the West African nation following a military coup (which resulted in the temporary suspension of trial proceedings), the trial has resumed. The ever-elusive search for the truth goes on with Compaoré being labelled the main orchestrator of Sankara’s assassinations. Claims of external influence – notably the role of France – equally demand their attention as the trial goes on.

In February, military prosecutors advanced their request for Compaore to be put behind bars for 30 years. They asked the court to convict the Ivorian-based political exile in absentia, the charges being an “attack on state security”, “concealment of a corpse” and “complicity in a murder”.

The state also requested 30 years imprisonment for Hyacinth Kafando, the commander of Compaoré’s guard. It is suspected that it was Kafando who was at the forefront of the hit squad that ended the lives of Sankara and his aides.

Prosecution further asked the court to hand a 20-year prison sentence for the former head of security Gen Gilbert Diendéré. The former general is the main defendant at the trial since he is already serving another 20-year sentence for involvement in a 2015 coup attempt.

The Flimsy Legal Defence of an Unrepentant Autocrat

When the trial commenced, Compaoré’s French legal defence argued that it was a sham and borderline a nullity because as a former head of state, Compaoré is entitled to immunity. His Paris-based lawyer, Pierre-Olivier Sur, with the typical arrogance of capitalist legal practitioners, stated that his client had refused to participate in the trial because it lacked “international recognition” – adding that the trial is a “parody.” (When Compaoré was ousted from power in 2014 through a mass popular uprising, he was assisted by France when he fled to Ivory Coast.)

Given the pressing need that grips Sankara’s family, Burkinabes, and all other global citizens to find closure following the murky demise of Sankara, the military prosecution has fervently proceeded with the case – in a bold attempt to set a precedence that impunity has no place in the terrain of African political dynamics and all its contradictions.

The Fight for Sankara’s Justice – A Statement Against Impunity

Mariam Sankara (Thomas Sankara’s widow) has relentlessly championed the fight for justice these past 35 years – without hesitating to confront this haunting question, “Who killed Thomas Sankara?” And even though most of the defendants are in self-imposed political exile or dead, Burkina Faso’s uncompromising resolve to send a clear statement to imperial predators and elites should be rightly lauded. It is also a statement addressed to the local comprador and petit bourgeoisie who selfishly abet the greedy, sinister plots of foreign private capital.

The Sankara murder trial is an attestation of positive political permutations; a stern warning to incumbent African leaders that one day they will have to answer for their atrocities in the full glare of the world – the genuine pursuit of truth, accountability, and justice.

For the first time, witnesses have an emboldened will to come forward. The trial is not characterized by a crude desire for vengeance, but the genuine search for the truth.

The Fragile Nature of the Murder Trial

Such uncompromising political and moral positions, expressed through legal proceedings in which the contradictions of international law – inherently rooted in unequal power relations between the global north and south, do not mean the case is a walk in the park. Rather, this trial is a thorny journey. Even if the court will impose a jail sentence, it is likely that Compaoré and other defendants will not spend the remainder of their lives in prison cells. Most importantly, the elusive nature of evidence directly linking France to the assassination poses critical challenges.

In 2013, a French Communist lawmaker, André Chassaigne, made his intention clear in relation to the 1987 murders – he announced plans to press the French National Assembly to set up a commission of inquiry in order to get to the truth about Sankara’s murder. His was an incendiary demand, “France, to an as-yet unknown extent, is responsible for this assassination…I believe that France, which today claims to behave differently towards Africa under what I personally would call a virtuous circle, must tell the truth…We cannot leave the people of Burkina Faso, and more broadly speaking, the peoples of Africa in the dark about what really happened.”

In 2016, an investigating judge from Burkina Faso requested France to avail declassified military documents about Sankara’s assassination. The real truth as to what actually took place is frustratingly sketchy. Sankara’s death certificate declared that he had died of “natural causes”. Yet, Alouna Traoré, the only survivor from October 15, 1987, recounted the gunfire but new forensic evidence puts it that Sankara was shot seven times, that rained on the revolutionary comrades that day: “It [gunfire] sounded like a tornado on a tin roof.”

He further recalled how, shortly before Sankara was “riddled with bullets”, he resignedly remarked, “It’s me they want.” That marked the end of the 1983 revolution that had lifted Burkina Faso from the lowly status of perpetual subservience into an African nation state that was boldly marching on the trajectory of self-sufficiency, national cultural pride, and inimitable national solidarity.

Why Sankara Was Assassinated – An Undying Revolution Nonetheless

Sankara’s assassination came at a time of a frenetic Cold War in which Western liberal capitalism was getting confident in the global ubiquity of its hegemonic domination – and vociferously spread the “religion of anti-communism”. Western imperial forces have always quashed progressive people’s movements throughout history: Guatemala, Cuba, Iran, Venezuela, Democratic Republic of Congo, Vietnam; the list is endless.

Given this context, France’s role should be unearthed at the trial – but the former colonial power impedes this by obstinately refusing to furnish Burkina Faso with declassified intelligence and military files.

Sankara always railed against the menace of imperialism, neo-colonialism, foreign debt, dependency, unwavering support of liberation movements, and endless foreign intervention in sovereign nations.

France’s then president, François Mitterand, passed a coarse remark when he met Sankara in 1986: “This is a somewhat troublesome man, President Sankara. He goes further than necessary.” With fierce loyalty to Pan-African unity, Sankara was a thorn in the flesh for Western imperialism.

An inference from these circumstances, heightened by Cold War animosities, is that France played a significant role in eliminating Sankara. In 2017, Emmanuel Macron, France’s president, “pledged” to proffer Burkina Faso all declassified intelligence files, but till now, only three batches have been sent, making the judicial work of prosecution a cumbersome exercise. American intelligence files showed that when Sankara first took power, France sought to remove him from power.

Thomas Sankara – the Immortal and Incorruptible Revolutionary

Although Compaoré actively sought to delete Sankara’s memory and legacy from Burkina Faso’s collective national psyche, his enduring influence has surged exponentially – a revolution in the after-life.

With the crises afflicting Burkina Faso, notably extremist insurgency in the Sahel, Sankara’s revolution left an indelible imprint in the world. A military leader who had been inspired by Karl Marx, Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, Muammar Gaddafi, and other leftist luminaries, Sankara was acutely aware that the task at hand was not easy but he dared to dream; he dared to act.

Thomas Sankara remains the enduring incorruptible figure – an opponent of corruption, a passionate advocate of women emancipation, and attached to the struggles of the Third World with compassionate, revolutionary love rooted in progressive action (praxis). He was a devoted Communist with a holistic internationalist outlook for he believed in the empowerment of all humanity.

Within four years, Sankara had radically transformed Burkina Faso despite the monstrosity of contradictions in his way – he vastly improved the country’s literacy rate, fostered solidarity and change with rural peasants, and thoroughly eschewed the concept of foreign debt under the World Bank’s and the IMF’s dictates of structural adjustment programs.

His was a Marxian-inspired revolution that professed itself as a genuine democratic and popular revolution. From 1983 to 1987, the country’s citizens developed a newfound, emancipatory cultural pride in their African roots – Sankara changed the country’s name from the colonial ‘Upper Volta’ to ‘Burkina Faso’, the latter which means “land of the upright people.”

He ensured that the government provided rural farmers with extensive agricultural inputs, increased access to education, and improved healthcare in which by 1986, about 2 million children had been vaccinated against the biggest childhood killer diseases. Social solidarity, general public welfare, social services for all, and communal work were the core principles in the nation’s determination to achieve self-sufficiency in the brutal world of exploitative and extractive capitalist markets.

A Murder Trial and a Revolution in the After-life

With the current murder trial, in which the search for the truth trumps all other ideals, the hope is that Sankara’s legacy will eternally live on. It is hoped that with such truth, his family, his nation, and the world at large find much-needed closure.

This is a statement to autocratic leaders; that one day they have to be accountable for their atrocities in the bigger picture of achieving reconciliation for global human solidarity.

Even to the unacquainted, they will not be surprised being told that the uprising that ousted Compaoré in 2014 drew massive inspiration from Sankara’s immortal ideals.

CHRIS ROCK’S TEAM SHOOTS DOWN RUMOR HE APOLOGIZED TO WILL SMITH & JADA PINKETT

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CHRIS ROCK’S TEAM SHOOTS DOWN RUMOR HE APOLOGIZED TO WILL SMITH & JADA PINKETT

by Kyle Eustice

The 94th Academy Awards has been a trending Twitter for the past 24 hours after Will Smith casually walked up to Chris Rock and smacked him across the face on live television. The seasoned actor/MC sprung into action after the comedian made a G.I. Jane joke about Smith’s wife Jada Pinkett, which apparently sent him over the edge.

On Monday (March 28), the former Fresh Prince of Bel-Air star issued an official apology to Rock and took full accountability for the very public assault. Around the same time, a purported apology from Chris Rock to Pinkett, Smith and the rest of their family started making the rounds. However, Rock’s team has officially shut that down.

According to The Hollywood Reporter‘s Senior Film Editor Rebecca Keegan, “Chris Rock has not yet issued a statement. There is a statement going around purporting to be from Rock that is not from him, per his team. It’s the one that starts, ‘As a comedian it can be difficult to understand…’”

While Chris Rock’s apology is reportedly fake, Smith’s is not only real but seemingly genuine.

“Violence in all of its forms is poisonous and destructive,” Smith wrote in an Instagram post. “My behavior at last night’s Academy Awards was unacceptable and inexcusable. Jokes at my expense are a part of the job, but a joke about Jada’s medical condition was too much for me to bear and I reacted emotionally.

“I would like to publicly apologize to you, Chris. I was out of line and I was wrong. I am embarrassed and my actions were not indicative of the man I want to be. There is no place for violence in a world of love and kindness.”

Rock declined to press charges against Will Smith, which the Los Angeles Police Department acknowledged in a statement.

“LAPD investigative entities are aware of an incident between two individuals during the Academy Awards program,” the statement read. “The incident involved one individual slapping another.

The individual involved has declined to file a police report. If the involved party desires a police report at a later date, LAPD will be available to complete an investigative report

Chinese man has lived in an airport for 14 years to avoid family

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Chinese man has lived in an airport for 14 years to avoid family

Living with family can be overbearing sometimes, and many may feel annoyed and trapped by constant pestering.

For Wei Jianguo, a Chinese man who is in his 60s, the solution has been to move to Beijing Capital International Airport, where he is understood to have been living for 14 years now, so that he can smoke and drink as much as he likes.

Mirroring Tom Hanks’ Viktor Navorsk in the 2004 movie The Terminal – where a tourist is forced to live at JFK airport – Mr Wei has a set up of his food, belongings, and sleeping bag in a waiting area.

He said he won’t return home because then, he’ll be forced to quit drinking and smoking – a habit he supplies with his monthly government allowance.

In 2018 he told China Daily: ‘I can’t go back home because I have no freedom there.

‘My family told me if I wanted to stay, I had to quit smoking and drinking.

If I couldn’t do that, I had to give them all my monthly government allowance of 1,000 yuan. But then how would I buy my cigarettes and alcohol?’

Mr Wei’s home is in Wangjing, around 12 miles away from the airport. He moved in 2008, and had settled at Terminal 2, which is ‘the warmest’ but has previously told Pear Video that he sometimes visits Terminal 3.

He began sleeping at railway stations and the airport after falling out with his family.

The man said that he’d given up looking for work, and was let go from a job where he worked at an internal combustion engine factory in his 40s for being ‘too old’.

While he goes out if he needs to do any shopping, he doesn’t like to leave the airport because he ‘won’t get cold’ that way’, Mr Wei told Pear Video.

The outlet also talked to staff at the airport, who said Mr Wei is harmless, albeit being a loud drunk.

One worker said that Mr Wei had been encouraged to leave a few times, but ‘every time we mentioned it he was drunk and lost his temper’.

He added that the airport dweller doesn’t bother other passengers and – with the terminals being warm – doesn’t ‘freeze’ in the Shunyi Disctrict’s cold winters, in which temperatures can plunge as low as -13C(8.6F).

According to China Daily, Mr Wei is not the airport’s only resident, and in 2018 as many as six people were thought to be living like him – with one man ‘notorious’ for blasting Chinese opera music from his radio.

Credit: Daily Mail UK

After Will Smith smacked Chris Rock at the Oscars, insiders tell what you didn’t witness

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Until Rock shouted out loud, “Will Smith just smacked the s–t out of me,” no one at the Dolby Theatre thought Will Smith meant to hit Chris Rock for making a joke about his wife at the Oscars.

Though the sound was cut when Smith ran on stage, the crowd could plainly hear Smith shouting, “Keep my wife’s name out of your f—ing mouth!” as he returned to his seat.

“We thought it was a tad,” one Hollywood insider explained. “Then we heard Will yelling,” says the narrator. It was so loud in the cinema that you couldn’t hear it.”

Another Hollywood insider described how she sat in the green room and saw the pandemonium unfold. “Everyone suddenly froze, and the entire place was like, ‘What the f—k happened?’”

The insider told how Smith’s longtime publicist Meredith O’Sullivan Wasson, Academy CEO Dawn Hudson, Oscars producer Will Packer and Academy president David Rubin then walked into a private room “very quickly…with great seriousness.”

“There was a feeling that something wasn’t right with Will,” the insider claimed. “I overheard Chris Weinberg, Chris’ manager, say, ‘I’ve got to deal with the LAPD right now.’ ‘I have to figure out what’s going on,’ he said as he walked away.

“Everyone was saying, ‘Holy s—t,’” says the narrator. Even the bartenders are on board. No one was oblivious to the gravity of the situation. ‘Oh, my god, poor Chris,’ some people exclaimed. People were debating whether Chris’s face was red because he was flushed or because he had been struck.”

A source who knows Rock said the comedian walked to the front of the stage after Smith had retreated and tried to keep the peace.

Following the slap display, photos were taken. Rock appeared on stage, talking to a seated Smith as if trying to make amends, but a source close to the comic said he wasn’t trying to make amends. “Whoa, whoa, OK, I hear you,” he said instead. “I’m just here to present the Oscar,” said the source.

“Does that come across as an apology?” Added the source. “He was the one who was physically abused in real time. The fact that he remained so cool after the assault is worthy of an Oscar.”

After hearing Rock’s joke about her baldness, Jada Pinkett Smith rolled her eyes. She has suffered from alopecia since 2018.

Rock was “shaken” as he walked off stage to meet with producers and members of the LAPD, the source continued.

“When he got off stage, he was a bit shaken. He was taken into a side room and talked to producers and LAPD. Then he went to the writers’ room and spoke to his guys and left. I mean, these are guys he has worked with for years. No one thought there were any issues with the jokes.

“If anything, Regina Hall’s joke about Will and Jada earlier in the evening (which hinted at their open marriage) was in way worse taste,” the source said, while adding that Rock did not have a mark on his face from the slap.

During this awards season, Smith, 53, and his 50-year-old wife have repeatedly been the butt of jokes about their marital status, and some have speculated that Rock’s barb — “Jada, ‘GI Jane 2,’ I can’t wait to see it,” referring to her bald head — might have been the last straw. Filmmaker Judd Apatow surmised, in a now-deleted Twitter post that Smith “could have killed [Rock]. That’s pure out of control rage and violence. [Jada and Will have] heard a million jokes about them in the last three decades. They’re not freshmen in the world of Hollywood and comedy. He lost his mind.”

The Wall Street Journal reported that Rock’s joke wasn’t on the teleprompter nor was it practiced in rehearsal. Meanwhile, Rock reportedly did not know that Pinkett Smith suffers from alopecia, which causes hair loss.

After the slap, LAPD officers asked Rock if he wanted to press charges against Smith. “Chris said no and left soon after. He was stunned and shook,” said the source.

Back in the theater, it was Smith’s great mentor — and now fellow Oscar winner Denzel Washington — who came over to his table first to offer words of wisdom. As Smith later revealed in his acceptance speech for Best Actor later that evening: “Denzel said to me a few moments ago, he said, ‘At your highest moment, be careful, that’s when the devil comes for you’.”

During the commercial breaks, movie mogul Tyler Perry and actor Bradley Cooper also tried to calm Smith down. Fellow nominee Nicole Kidman was seen giving Smith a hug.

“He was wiping his eyes of tears, he knew it was not good,” said Hollywood Reporter awards columnist Scott Feinberg on his podcast, “The Town,” about Smith in the aftermath.

Meanwhile, it was clear that Smith would not be leaving the ceremony. “Everybody started to realize ‘Oh my God, he’s going to get back up there,’ they did not escort him out,” said Matt Belloni, the former editor of the Hollywood Reporter on the podcast.

Music magnate Diddy attempted to smooth things over on stage as he appeared to introduce a 50th anniversary tribute of “The Godfather.”

“OK, Will and Chris, we’re going to solve that like family at the Gold Party, OK?” referring to the Oscars afterparty hosted by Jay-Z and Beyoncé. “But right now we are moving on with love. Everybody make some noise!”

The backstage industry source said: “Diddy was minutes from getting on stage when the slap happened. He was trying to stay in the moment and rehearse his script.

“He wanted to thank Will Packer and Shayla Cowan for an incredible show, as the first-time black producers, and to thank the hosts. But he wanted to lift up the room, show Will and Chris they are family and bring them back together. He went up to Chris backstage and gave him a hug, they had a private conversation and went to Will in his seat and hugged him too.”

“How and if they resolved it is up to them — to him, his intention was to bring love to them and say a few words of encouragement and be a part of that.”

Smith’s rep O’Sullivan Wasson was also seen during every commercial break at her client’s side talking to him quietly until the Best Actor category was announced about 40 minutes after the slap. It’s believed she helped Smith rewrite his acceptance speech, in which he apologized to the Academy but not to Rock personally for his moment of rage.

As expected, Smith won his first Oscar for playing Richard Williams, the father of tennis legends Serena and Venus, in the movie “King Richard.” He kissed his wife and bounded up on stage.

Despite his act of violence, the crowd gave him a standing ovation, although Belloni said that some people in his row refused to clap.

Instead of going to the press room after his win, as is the norm, Smith returned to his seat, where he held hands with his wife. Meanwhile, his “King Richard” co-star Aunjanue Ellis sat next to him and placed her hand on his arm, as all three watched “CODA” win Best Picture.

Smith, who is also a musician born in West Philadelphia, was later seen with his entire family, including kids Trey, 29, Jaden, 23, and Willow, 21, at the swanky Vanity Fair party, dancing to his own hits including “Gettin Jiggy With It.” Before the show, he and Baltimore-born Jada had posted a picture of themselves to Instagram looking tough. After the show, Smith added a comment: “You can’t invite people from Philly or Baltimore nowhere.”

Meanwhile, Rock, 57, headed over to the annual Oscars party hosted by his pal, multi-millionaire manager Guy Oseary.

“He’s OK, he went to be with his best friend,” said the source who knows Rock. “Bottom line — you don’t hit people, it was a joke.”

True to his character, the Los Angeles Times reported that Rock also made a joke about the slap. Backstage, the comic said, he “just got punched in the face by Muhammad Ali and didn’t get a scratch.”

By Monday afternoon, Smith had finally apologized to Rock on Instagram. “I would like to publicly apologize to you, Chris,” he wrote. “I was out of line and I was wrong. I am embarrassed and my actions were not indicative of the man I want to be. There is no place for violence in a world of love and kindness.”

‘We’re not going to take that Oscar from Will Smith’- Academy Governor Whoopi Goldberg insists

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Whoopi Goldberg has insisted that Will Smith won’t have his Oscar taken away from him after he broke the Academy’s code of conduct by slapping Chris Rock.

Will, 53, has since apologised for assaulting Chris, 57, at Sunday night’s Oscars ceremony, saying his behavior was ‘unacceptable and inexcusable’ and left him ’embarrassed’.

The group that hands out the Oscars condemned Will’s actions on Monday and said it had started a formal review of the incident, yet Academy Governor Whoopi has insisted that the fallout won’t be as dramatic as stripping Will of the honour.

Speaking on the US talk show The View, Goldberg, who is a serving Governor for the Academy’s Actors branch, went on to defend Will’s actions, reasoning: ‘sometimes you behave badly’.

Will had slapped Chris in front of the world on live television after the comedian made a joke about his wife Jada Pinkett Smith’s hair.

Whoopi said on Monday’s show: ‘I think it was a lot of stuff probably built up.

‘I think he overreacted… I think he had one of those moments where it was like [God damn] it, just stop. I get it, not everybody acts the way we would like them to act under pressure. And he snapped…

‘Sometimes you get to a point when you behave badly. I myself have behaved badly on occasion.’

Whoopi’s co-host Sunny Hostin said that she was ‘surprised [Will] wasn’t escorted out’, and questioned if there was the possibility of Will’s Oscar being taken away.

Whoopi replied: ‘We’re not going to take that Oscar from him.

‘There will be consequences I’m sure, but I don’t think that’s what they’re going to do, particularly because Chris said ‘Listen, I’m not pressing any charges.’

Despite Whoopi’s comments, there have been calls for the Academy to strip Will of his Best Actor Oscar.

The Academy, in its code of conduct, is known to take a very a dim view of violence of any kind.

After the award ceremony was over it tweeted: ‘The Academy does not condone violence of any form. Tonight we are delighted to celebrate our 94th Academy Awards winners, who deserve this moment of recognition from their peers and movie lovers around the world.’

The Academy reestablished its Code of Conduct in 2017 during the Me Too Movement.

‘Academy membership is a privilege offered to only a select few within the global community of filmmakers,’ AMPAS CEO Dawn Hudson wrote to members following various scandals in the industry.-Daily Mail

This is how Hichilema is undermining democracy in Zambia- Sishuwa Sishuwa

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hen Hakainde Hichilema defeated incumbent president Edgar Lungu in Zambia’s August 2021 elections, many people hoped that the assault on democracy and human rights that had characterised his predecessor’s time in office would end. This prospect was reinforced by Hichilema’s presentation of himself as a reform-minded politician determined to restore the rule of law, launch an anti-corruption campaign, strengthen democratic institutions and protect human rights. 

Nearly seven months into his five-year term, Hichilema is turning out to be a major disappointment on all these issues; a pattern of worrying political developments suggest that democracy is not returning to Zambia, as many people seem to believe. 

Lack of institutional reform 

A new government’s commitment to democratic and institutional reform is usually demonstrated in the first few months in office — sometimes in the first 100 days — when it lays out its legislative agenda. Hichilema’s administration has been in office for more than six months, but has shown little appetite to change the laws that weaken democracy, undermine human rights, and enabled the authoritarian tendencies of his predecessor. 

These include:

  • The law on defamation of the president, which makes it an offence punishable by up to three years of imprisonment to publish “any defamatory or insulting matter, whether by writing, print, word of mouth or in any other manner … with intent to bring the president into hatred, ridicule, or contempt”. The provision does not define the terms “defamatory” and “insulting”. This has opened the law to wide interpretation and application that has deterred legitimate criticism of the president. It has also undermined media freedom, led to the arrest of critical voices and, especially under Hichilema’s predecessor, a climate of fear and culture of self-censorship. 
  • The Cyber Security and Cyber Crimes Act, which subjects cyberspace to appropriation by the state and imposes unjustifiable limitations on free speech, including through policing the use of social media. This law, hurriedly enacted by the Lungu administration on the eve of last year’s election, also violates the right to privacy by allowing the authorities to tap ICT devices, effectively turning everyone into a suspect, and to confiscate electronic gadgets without proper procedural safeguards. 
  • The Public Order Act, a colonial-era piece of legislation that regulates public gatherings and that requires any person who intends to convene a public meeting or demonstration to “give police at least seven days’ notice”, specifying the date, place, and duration for the assembly. In practice, this law has been used by successive administrations to restrict the rights to public assembly and free speech since people meet to talk or express themselves. Meetings of opposition parties and civic demonstrations against the government were, especially under Lungu, repeatedly curtailed on unspecified security concerns or expedient inability by the police to supervise the event. Violations attract a six-year prison sentence. 

In opposition, Hichilema repeatedly vowed to repeal the first two statutes immediately after assuming office. However, in power, he has shown a studied disinterest in fulfilling these campaign promises. Under Zambian law, a motion to repeal an Act of parliament can be moved any time and its success requires a simple majority. Given that his governing United Party for National Development (UPND) holds a majority 99 seats in the 164-member national assembly, the president has no excuse. 

The UPND also pledged to reform the problematic Public Order Act. Tellingly, it is not among the proposed bills that the governing party has taken to parliament for enactments into law in the current legislative session. 

Emasculating the independent press and abusing the public media

A free press is the lifeblood of any functioning democracy. Under Hichilema’s predecessor, critical media outlets that served as key platforms for opposition parties and civil society were shut down. The Post, Zambia’s leading independent newspaper since the reintroduction of multiparty democracy in 1991, was forcibly closed in June 2016, less than two months before a key general election, using the pretext of failure to settle a disputed tax bill. The publication was subsequently placed into liquidation. (Recently, the supreme court annulled the liquidation of the paper and ordered a retrial of the matter in the high court). Prime TV, the country’s leading private television station since 2013, was forcibly closed in April 2020 in the “public interest”, although no specific charges were laid against the channel. 

Although Hichilema’s administration is yet to close any media station, it has overseen four developments that undermine media freedom. 

  • First, the government has introduced 16% VAT on newspaper sales for both print and electronic copies; a move that is widely seen as targeted at the three private daily newspapers, because state-owned publications face no consequences for failure to meet their tax obligations. In a country in which the economy continues to perform poorly and newspapers are already struggling to cope with the advent of social media and meeting already existing tax liabilities, the move threatens to raise the price of newspapers (already out of reach for many Zambians), collapse the industry and, ultimately, affect the public’s right to be informed. 
  • Second, the government has continued with the Lungu-era harassment of the private media. In January, a private TV station, KBN, published a leaked audio of a telephone conversation between Hichilema’s political aide, Levy Ngoma, and permanent secretary in the ministry of home affairs, Josephs Akafumba, in which the duo was heard plotting to use state institutions to undermine the operations of the opposition Democratic Party ahead of a key parliamentary by-election. In addition to the officials’ (ab)use of state resources to promote the partisan interests of the UPND, what outraged many was the revelation by the presidential aide that the scheme was sanctioned by Hichilema and Vice-President Mutale Nalumango.

When initial attempts to quell the ensuing public backlash by discrediting the audio as fake failed, the authorities accused journalists of having tapped the pair’s telephone conversation. And instead of interrogating the presidential aide and permanent secretary, the police arrest the journalists who had publicised the scheme. Meanwhile, in what is emerging as his signature response to serious governance concerns, Hichilema, who no longer holds press conferences and has adopted Lungu’s unwanted legacy of addressing the country through press aides and on airport tarmacs, spoke through deafening silence. 

  • Third, the authorities have employed threats to intimidate independent media. Last month, a lawmaker from the governing party, Kankonyo MP Heartson Mabeta, threatened News Diggers, arguably the most influential and popular private newspaper, with closure after the publication ran a story quoting the UPND secretary general saying the party, which was elected on a campaign of job creation, did not sign a contract with anyone to guarantee them employment. In a country reeling with record unemployment, especially among youths, the public backlash that followed was huge, especially after the paper published the audio recording of the interview. Mabeta accused the newspaper of malice and warned that it risks meeting the same fate as that of The Post – forced closure and liquidation – if it did not change course. Tellingly, no one from the government or the UPND distanced themselves from the MP’s threats, suggesting that his views had the backing of the senior leadership. 
  • Fourth, the UPND have emulated the Patriotic Front’s (PF) unwanted legacy of denying coverage to opposition parties on the state-run Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation (ZNBC) television and radio stations and in the Zambia Daily Mail and Times of Zambia newspapers. So extensive is the coverage extended to government officials, UPND figures, and supporters of the party in power by the state TV, radio, and newspapers that one might be forgiven for thinking that Zambia has reverted to a one-party state. In opposition, Hichilema pledged to stop this culture by transforming the state media into genuine public platforms, establishing legal safeguards for their editorial independence, and reviewing legislation that both undermine their governance structures and leave them highly vulnerable to political interference. In power, it is business as usual: his administration has blacked out opposition voices from ZNBC TV, radio and the two newspapers much in the same way that the PF did when in power. What was previously condemned is now praised. 

Assaulting free speech 

The assault on free speech under Lungu’s presidency was aided by the earlier cited law on defamation of the president, which, in the absence of what constitutes an insult, effectively criminalises any criticism of the president. Any expectations that things would be different under Hichilema have been dashed in the last few months. Three examples illustrate this point. 

  1. In December 2021, police in Lusaka arrested opposition PF official Raphael Nakacinda on a charge of insulting the president after he advised the frequently travelling Hichilema to “put your buttocks down” and address the prevailing high cost of living. 
  2. In January, police arrested Morris Lungu, a 42-year-old taxi driver in Livingstone, on a charge of defamation of the president for saying that “if there is a president who is a fool, it is the one who is there”
  3. Last month, a 24-year-old Saliya Laisha was arrested in Lusaka on a charge of defamation of the president following allegations that she accused Hichilema of having sacrificed, for ritual purposes, six youths who died in unclear circumstances while on a boat cruise on Lake Kariba “so that he can work well as has failed to do so”. 

These arrests and court cases on charges of defamation have a demonstrative and chilling effect on even those who are not caught up in them, as they show the costs of criticising elected public officials in ways that are deemed inappropriate by the government. Instead of having their lives upended and spending months or even years in protracted legal cases, many seek to avoid such outcomes by gradually resorting to self-censorship. 

The casualty is free speech and poor citizen participation in governance processes. In arresting suspects, police are not acting outside the law since the legislation on defamation of the president remains on the statutes. This shows the urgent need to repeal the enabling law – although Hichilema can in the meantime also request the police not to arrest any critic in his official name. The Minister of Justice Mulambo Haimbe has indicated, without providing any timeframe, that both the POA and defamation of the president laws will be reviewed soon. 

Dismantling opposition parties 

Given how activities of opposition parties were continuously obstructed by Lungu and the PF, it was expected that Hichilema and the UPND would behave in a different manner. Not so far. Two examples are sufficient or useful here. 

  1. On 15 March 2022, the deputy speaker of the National Assembly, Malungo Chisangano, who, like the speaker Nelly Mutti, is generally seen as aligned to the governing party, issued a 30-day ban from parliament on 30 lawmakers from the opposition PF for holding a peaceful protest in the House

The facts of the matter are that on 30 November 2021, when starting debate on the 2022 budget, the affected MPs noted an anomaly where the minister of finance had presented the Yellow Book using references to 1996 constitutional provisions that no longer exist, following the repeal of the earlier law in 2016. The leader of the opposition in parliament, Brian Mundubile, asked the deputy speaker to direct the minister of finance to correct the error before debate could commence and avoid breaching the Constitution, which members had sworn to protect. 

When the request was not honoured, the PF MPs converged in front of the speaker’s mace in protest. This resulted in the suspension of business for about 20 minutes. On resumption, the minister of finance presented a corrected version of the Yellow Book and debate proceeded peacefully. Two MPs from the governing party then asked the speaker if it was acceptable for the opposition MPs to remain in parliament when they had “intentionally disrespected it” by protesting in the manner they did. Gary Nkombo and Mulambo Haimbe, who are also cabinet ministers, claimed without evidence that “the only permissible means for members to express displeasure was by walking out of the House.” After ruling on the matter was reserved to a later date, it was finally delivered on 15 March. 

The PF is Zambia’s leading parliamentary opposition party with 51 MPs. Suspending 30 of its lawmakers, especially since nine others are already outside parliament after the speaker had earlier in December 2021 ordered them to stay away until their election petitions are disposed of in the courts of law, suggests an organised effort to weaken the party. It also means that there is effectively no opposition party in the National Assembly, except a handful of independents

Protests are a commonplace tactic practised in many functional multiparty democracies around the world. The form of expression that such protests take is hardly prescribed anywhere. To treat the action by the PF MPs as a major offence only serves to highlight Zambia’s new slant towards repression, where any attitude towards those in power except craven support becomes prohibited.

Moreover, the deputy speaker’s decision is problematic for two reasons. First, Chisangano failed to establish how the protest by the PF MPs amounted to contempt of parliament and does not fall under the legitimate expression of their democratic freedom. Second, she failed to explain how she arrived at the conclusion that their conduct of merely standing in front of her seat deserved the maximum punishment. Under the law, the National Assembly’s presiding officer has the option to severely reprimand MPs for any misconduct. Yet Chisangano chose to ban them from parliament and suspend their salaries and allowances for a month, despite acknowledging that they were first-time offenders.

The deputy speaker may have reasoned that if the affected MPs were to challenge their suspension in court, the matter is unlikely to be decided before the expiry of the ban, thanks to the slow pace at which even urgent legal matters are decided by the courts in Zambia. 

For instance, three months later, the Constitutional Court is yet to determine the matter in which nine other PF MPs had filed an urgent legal challenge to the speaker’s decision to suspend them from parliament on 7 December 2021. Here, we see a possible motivation of the latest suspension: to dismantle or intimidate the opposition into submission and curtail criticism of executive actions. 

The decision to suspend the PF MPs also appears to be motivated by a desire for revenge by the UPND. In June 2017, the then PF-aligned speaker of the National Assembly suspended 48 UPND lawmakers for boycotting then-president Lungu’s state of the nation address to the National Assembly. At the time, Hichilema and the UPND condemned the move as draconian and a brazen assault on parliamentary democracy. 

Yesterday’s victims are today’s culprits. The only thing that has changed is the silence of those who previously criticised Lungu and the PF for similar conduct. 

In other words, the mass suspension of PF MPs should not be seen in isolation; it is as part of a wider pattern of an emerging assault on democratic institutions and human rights in Zambia under the Hichilema administration. This new onslaught has not attracted much outrage because broad sections of civil society and international, mainly Western, actors who condemned brazen attacks on democracy and human rights under Lungu’s rule now either support the new government, think it is too early to criticise the actions of the officials, or simply consider the PF as undeserving of sympathy, given their terrible record on similar issues when in power. 

It is no wonder that when Shebby Chilekwa, a PF member and suspect in a murder investigation, recently complained that he had been severely tortured by the police while in detention and even displayed graphic evidence in form of whip-induced scars on his back, not even major human rights bodies expressed outrage. 

  1. The other example of how the governing party is out to undermine the opposition occurred in January this year. Days before the Kabwata parliamentary by-election in the capital Lusaka, a candidate from a small opposition party, the United Progressive Party (UPP), published a letter announcing his “withdrawal” from the 20 January race under highly dubious circumstances. Some speculate that the UPND had induced the move for two reasons. 

The first would have been to facilitate a new election date when Hichilema, who had a tight itinerary abroad in January, would be available to campaign for the party’s candidate. If there is substance to this allegation, then the consideration was not without foundation. In October 2021, Hichilema’s penchant for travel and failure to dedicate adequate time to the campaigns had cost the ruling party a key parliamentary seat in a previous by-election, won by the opposition PF. 

The second reason would have been to enable the ruling party to change its relatively unpopular candidate, Andrew Tayengwa, following internal party resistance to his adoption. During the nearly month-long campaigns heading into the 20 January vote, some disgruntled UPND members, voters, and the opposition in Kabwata alleged that Tayengwa was a foreigner from Zimbabwe who only obtained Zambian identity on the eve of the nominations in December 2021. 

Whatever the case, it is highly unlikely that the UPP or any opposition force would have been behind the withdrawal, as there is no obvious way they would benefit. Zambia’s Constitution requires the cancellation of an election if any adopted candidate resigns from his or her party after the close of nominations, the filing of fresh nominations by eligible candidates, and the holding of a new election within 30 days. 

Much to the delight of the other opposition parties contesting the poll, the Electoral Commission of Zambia (ECZ) refused to call off the by-election, explaining that the candidate had merely withdrawn from the contest rather than resigned from his party, whose leadership complained that they had failed to reach him to establish the authenticity of the withdrawal letter as he had gone into hiding and switched off all his phones. 

A few days later, the electoral body claimed to have received a second letter from the fugitive candidate in which he categorically stated his “resignation” from the UPP but chose not to avail the same document to the public. Curiously, the said letter was addressed to the ECZ, not the UPP, the candidate’s party, whose leader insisted that they had neither heard nor received anything from their member. 

Notwithstanding the uncertainty surrounding the purported resignation, the ECZ postponed the poll to 3 February. The UPP was unable to field a candidate in the rearranged election, explaining that they had emptied their resources in supporting the nomination and earlier campaigns of the fugitive candidate. 

Meanwhile, the UPND, when it became too obvious that the public would see through the scheme, re-adopted Tayengwa. Freed from travel, Hichilema, alongside several cabinet ministers, literally camped in Kabwata constituency and even flouted the campaign schedule that the electoral body had allocated to the competing parties, helping Tayengwa to a narrow victory over the PF candidate. 

This episode suggests that in addition to pressuring supposedly impartial state institutions to directly get involved in an internal party matter, the ruling party is instigating divisions within opposition parties and over-stretching their meagre resources in the same way that the PF did while in government. Opposition parties with little power are potentially being used to manipulate electoral law to suit Hichilema’s party. Again, the UPND is using the same tactics as the PF to rule, but without the consequences of criticism from civil society and international actors. 

Weakening the power of civil society 

Over the years, Zambia’s democracy has benefited greatly from the presence of a robust and effective non-state sector capable of checking the power of the government. Almost by default, such actors assumed principled positions that appeared to be in tandem with those adopted by the UPND when in opposition. The election of Hichilema has consequently affected the effectiveness of civil society in two main ways. 

The first is that many of the critical voices from academia, civil society and the church who spoke truth to power under Lungu have failed to remain impartial after Hichilema’s election. The demobilisation of progressive forces has seen previously neutral and influential voices become part of the choir of praise or lulled into silence after the opposition they were sympathetic to won. 

Others have been co-opted into government through appointments to parastatal boards, public bodies such as human rights commissions, or presidential advisory entities, while one or two have applied for professional ranks that can only be conferred by the president and are therefore unlikely to speak out on Hichilema’s worrying tendencies unless their bids fail. Some remain in the long queue for appointments to public office, including diplomatic service. 

The second is that previously effective civil society organisations such as the Law Association of Zambia, which were generally seen as having aligned themselves to the PF under Lungu, now lack legitimacy to critique the actions of Hichilema and the UPND. The result is a weakening civil society and a situation where the PF, the same party that almost collapsed the country’s democratic institutions and economy, ironically find itself thrust into a position where it is slowly becoming the new defender of public interest and leading opposition voice. 

The passage of time is slowly presenting Hichilema as someone who is out of his depth on many key issues, lacks meaningful responses to Zambia’s crises and only appears good in contrast to the disastrous record of his predecessor. After memories of the PF’s terrible record in office have faded, this developing reality may dawn on many. 

If the public become disenchanted with the UPND, and with the possible fallout from the adverse effects of the soon-to-be implemented IMF programme, voters are more likely to see the PF differently, especially if the former governing party manages to resolve its leadership question well and comes out of its elective conference united. If he fails to deliver on the economy, and with his political position threatened, Hichilema may resort to bribery or repression, or both, to retain support. Unless civil society wakes up sooner than later or new progressive voices emerge, Zambia’s democracy may soon be back to the same position in which it was under Lungu. 

Nurturing corruption 

Hichilema has demonstrated a genuine lack of commitment to fighting corruption in three main ways. 

  1. The first is the lack of example. Elected on a platform of anti-corruption, accountability and transparency, Hichilema has so far failed, in typical Donald Trump fashion, to release his assets value – the first major-party presidential nominee and Zambian president, alongside Lungu, in more than 30 years not to disclose his net worth. 

Zambian presidents have generally used state power to accumulate. For instance, in less than sixteen months in power, Lungu’s net worth grew from K10.9-million when he first ran for election in 2015 to K23.7-million in 2016 when he ran for re-election. Since the president’s salary is gazetted and he had no known businesses, angry Zambians demanded to know the source of this exponential growth of his earnings. Lungu’s failure to explain fuelled accusations that he had acquired the wealth corruptly. 

The former president’s assets value may have increased considerably since 2016, which could explain why he did not release his net worth last year out of fear that the public’s knowledge of his opulence would increase calls for the removal of his immunity if he lost the election. 

Although there is no evidence yet to suggest that Hichilema has started stealing public funds or using public office to promote his private interests, the president’s reluctance to publish his net worth is most concerning, given his extensive business interests. Zambians interested in knowing the difference in his assets value between 2021 when he assumed office and, say, 2026, when he will be filing his nomination papers for a second term, will be left frustrated.

  1. The second is that over six months in office, his government’s anti-corruption strategy is chaotic at best and non-existent at worst. The grand corruption of the Lungu era is well known. To date, not a single member of Lungu’s regime has been taken to court on serious corruption charges. The arrests and prosecutions that have been initiated so far have little to do with corruption. With a tone of vengeance around them, they mainly relate to political offences committed against the UPND or its members by PF officials, such as Emmanuel Chilekwa or Mumbi Phiri, when in power. 

Although Hichilema continues to brand PF leaders as having presided over a corrupt administration, he appears to do so to delegitimise the opposition party’s standing in the eyes of the electorate not because he harbours any serious plans to act against senior officials of the Lungu administration who looted public funds. Moreover, members of the kleptocratic networks that were deeply involved in high-level corruption under Lungu have since transitioned and cultivated new allies in the governing party. 

  1. The third is that Hichilema has turned a blind eye to serious accusations of the corruption in his government. For instance, when opposition parties presented evidence showing executive involvement in inflated procurement of fertiliser in a contract that was awarded to the president’s business associate, Hichilema kept quiet. 

Moreover, Hichilema’s lacklustre attitude towards fighting corruption has been shown by his backtracking from a key pre-election commitment to delink the presidency from chairing the board of the parastatal mother body, the Industrial Development Corporation, as part of curbing corruption in government and enhancing corporate governance. 

In opposition, Hichilema repeatedly condemned Lungu and, earlier, Michael Sata for failure to amend the IDC Act, which provides for the anomaly where the president is the chairperson of the board of the parastatal. In power, Hichilema no longer sees anything wrong in doing the same thing that he condemned when done by his predecessors. 

Given that the president’s chairmanship of the holding company of all parastatal bodies in the country provides him with immense patronage influence to determine appointment of boards and key personnel (often party cadres and sympathisers), Hichilema’s hypocritical turnaround is not accidental; it is the substance of realpolitik. 

Failure to tackle political violence 

Under Hichilema’s predecessor, political violence, particularly clashes between supporters of the then-governing PF and the UPND during elections, was a staple. The perpetrators were usually the PF while the UPND were the victims. The police hardly arrested PF cadres but were quick to unleash brutality on opposition members, occasionally culminating in fatalities. 

Again, Hichilema pledged to end this culture of political violence. If the two parliamentary by-elections that have occurred since his election are any indicator, then very little has changed. Both the Kaumbwe parliamentary by-election in the Eastern Province and the recent one in Lusaka’s Kabwata constituency featured a series of violent activities that saw the beating of opposition supporters by suspected UPND cadres. 

As was the case under the PF, none of the culprits have been arrested to date even when the victims have identified the perpetrators and formally lodged reports to the police. The political violence in Kabwata, for instance, was even preceded by clear threats of violence from senior UPND members, none of whom has been arrested or reprimanded by the party’s leadership. 

 The narrative of a democratic resurgence in Zambia is false

Although it has slightly improved under Hichilema, Zambia’s democratic trajectory remains most concerning. Based on the early track record, the Hichilema administration has shown a lack of willingness to make structural changes that strengthen accountable, democratic governance. As a result, the political imperatives are likely to leave Zambian institutions as susceptible to manipulation as they were under Lungu. 

The recent narrative of a democratic resurgence in Zambia does not adhere to the reality, one that has seen the intimidation of independent media, the arrest of critics for insulting the president, the use of state institutions to undermine the opposition, the weakening of civil society, and the continued corruption in government. Contrary to what many are saying, Zambia is not returning to democracy. Not yet. 

CREDIT: http://mg.co.za/africa/2022-03-28-this-is-how-hichilema-is-undermining-democracy-in-zambia/

UPND’s 7 months in power a disaster- Kambwili

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By Walusungu Lundu

WHILE adding his voice to the growing debate of drug shortages in hospitals, Chishimba Kambwili has described the last seven months of the UPND government in power as a disaster.

The PF presidential hopeful said there is need for the new dawn administration to be sincere over the issue of drug shortages and accept failure.

Kambwili bemoaned that uncoordinated statements on the matter from the Ministry of Health, government spokesperson and State House.

“It is said that extraordinary circumstances call for extraordinary decisions and efforts. I have been following the issue of drug supply to our hospitals and all health facilities. And I must say, I think we need to be told the truth about the procurement of drugs. What we have been treated to as Zambians is what I can call comedy of errors,” he said. “I mean when you look at statements coming from chief government spokesperson [Chushi Kasanda], the Ministry [of Health] and State House, are all uncoordinated.”

Kambwili said the statement from Kasanda that the government had funded hospitals enough to buy medicine implies that the procurement policy has changed.

“We were told by Hon Chushi Kasanda, Minister of Information and Media, that government had funded hospitals enough for them to procure drugs. Meaning therefore, that the policy has shifted or the policy has changed because the policy that I know and that we left is that government procures drugs through ZAMMSA (Zambia Medicines and Medical Supply Agency). And ZAMMSA distributes these drugs to hospitals. But for the minister to say that we have funded hospitals…it was enough money for them to procure drugs implies that the policy has changed. But nobody has ever told us that the policy has changed,” he said. “And if the policy has changed to that direction, I can outright say that it is the beginning of failure to run health institutions in as far as drugs are concerned. Buying of drugs is one of the biggest expenditure that this government undertakes. And I don’t think individual hospitals will manage to procure drugs. Four days later after the minister issued the statement, we saw the President [Hakainde Hichilema] going to ZAMMSA and issued a statement and directives that the shortage of drugs must come to an end. We don’t need the President for heaven’s sake to visit ZAMMSA. The President can give directives right from State House. For me, the President going to ZAMMSA to put up an appearance is cheap politicking which we don’t want. Zambians rejected cheap politicking in the last general elections and I don’t think we should be treated to another cheap kind of politicking.”

Last Thursday, President Hichilema made a spontaneous visit to the Ministry of Health, and not ZAMMSA, to discuss the recruitment of health staff and the issue of drug shortages.

He said described drug shortages as a legacy issue.

“They are legacy issues. We all know that the country was not run well. We know that. Instead of fighting this fact, we must accept and start from there. So they are legacy issues of maybe amounts owed to suppliers…there are legacy issues in the fuel [sector], you know that, of unpaid debt. What we are doing is unblocking these legacy issues. But at the same time making sure that going forward, we don’t create new inefficiencies in the way we run sectors, health being one. But also we make sure that we stop being wasteful. We must save money. We must be prudent. And when drugs are bought, they must reach the intended user. It’s a myriad of things that the ministry has been working on. And we as a country, as a new administration, these are issues that we must work together as teams on different ministries, in different locations across the country. The good news is that talking to provincial medical officers, they all confirmed that the flow of funds to hospitals is working well than ever before,” said President Hichilema.

“I think that they confirmed that there’s consistency and that we will be able to combine central supply of drugs plus on-the-spot purchases when those purchases are needed to close the gap, when a particular drug is not available from the floor, at the centre. You know we have a new leadership at ZAMMSA, the former Medical Stores. We are reorganizing. I’m very pleased with the interaction with the new leadership at ZAMMSA. I’m pleased that change is coming there, in line with our objective to clean up the system to make sure that we are efficient – drugs are available…But the stop gap measure is that the funding that was not available in the past is now available. But the utilisation, the consumption, of these drugs at the centre – the clinic, the hospital, must match with the buying processes. In the past it wasn’t matching.”

And Kambwili charged that the shortage of drugs being experienced in currently is unprecedented.

He added that it was unprecedented that six months of the new government in office, no drugs had been procured for the hospitals “and there is a critical shortage of drugs including Panadol in almost all health facilities across Zambia.”

Kambwili said parading of the media “to start and take pictures of shelves at ZAMMSA will not bring medicines to the hospitals”.

“Hon Minister of Health, Hon [Sylvia] Masebo also issued a statement to the fact that they procured drugs and that the shortages will now be a thing of the past. One of the reasons Zambians voted for UPND was that they were going to end the shortages of drugs. Alas, the last seven months has been a disaster and we should accept failure,” he said.

“He he who does not know that he knows not and knows not that he knows not is a fool forever. If you cannot notice your own mistakes, if you cannot see your own mistakes, it simply means that you will not change for the better. But when you accept…’country men and women, we are sorry for this shortage, the reason why there was a shortage is A B C’, the people will take you seriously. But to try and create an impression that all is well by going to parade cameras at ZAMMSA will not help anybody. I want to urge the new government that we don’t want you to fail. We are asking you to be serious over this issue of procurement of drugs. And we want a concrete statement stating where there have been shortages of drugs in hospitals so that we can end these speculations.”

Kambwili said people have seen statements without action.

He said there was need for people to be shown the flagging off of medicines in hospitals as it has always been done in the past.

“All we were shown was medicine being offloaded from one truck being taken on the shelves at medical stores (ZAMMSA) and say that the issue of shortage of drugs has come to an end. I have checked, through our operatives, through our party functionaries, in almost all the provinces, not even one institution has received drugs as alluded to by minister and the President,” said Kambwili.

“Country men and women, this issue of drugs is serious and it must be sorted out like yesterday. We want to see trucks delivering medicine to the provincial hubs and also to the individual hospitals. Let us not pretend that all is well. We don’t want this government to fail because if you fail in the delivery of medicines, a lot of people are going to lose their lives.

Therefore, I personally, and I think the PF, we don’t wish for this government to fail. We would want this government to succeed and our role is to play checks and balances. I have been quite on a number of national issues but I think this issue of drugs is getting out of hand and it must be sorted out.”

Local Govt Service Commission Commences Staff & Qualifications Audit For Councils

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LOCAL GOVERNMENT SERVICE COMMISSION COMMENCES STAFF & QUALIFICATIONS AUDIT FOR COUNCILS

…move aimed at uprooting cadres from councils; LGSC says doesn’t want to rely on rumours, innuendos

Local Government Service Commission-LGSC-has embarked on its first-ever Human Resource Audit of all local authorities across the country aimed at establishing whether the staff occupying council offices have the right qualifications or not.

Addressing the Press at Lusaka City Council-LCC-chambers this afternoon, LGSC, Ackson Sejani says the numerous social media rumours, innuendos, speculations and mere perceptions that a lot of mischief characterised the local authorities in the country has necessitated the audit, whose time flame he said was yet to be determined.

Mr Sejani charged that the strong rumour that most local authority staff were cadres, employed in large numbers and not qualified to hold the positions they were holding was too strong to be ignored, adding that getting the right people to occupy public office was key in ensuring effective service delivery for the expectant, masses.

He stressed that it was only proper and prudent that the newly-established Commission established whether the right people with the prerequisite qualifications were occupying local authorities’ offices, or, to determine whether the “strong” rumour that most of those positions have been occupied by political party cadres were either false or in the affirmative.

He was among a number of commissioners from the LGSC among them his deputy, Brian Ndumba and Grace Chibwa.

Sejani charges that the finding at the Zambia’s major local Authority, LCC, will determine how and whether the Commission proceeds with conducting similar audits at the remaining 115 councils across the country.

And, asked on whether there will be punitive measures against council workers who will shy away from unveiling themselves for questioning before the Commission, Mr Sejani charged that “only ghosts who are not council employees will shun away from the on-going staff and qualifications audit”.

He emphasized that the findings at the largest local authority will form the basis for the interrogations of what was obtaining in the 116 local authorities across the country.

He said if it was established that a lot of staff were wanting in the local authorities as far as decentralisation policy was concerned, the Commission would ensure that it established the Human Resources Management Committee that would be empowered with the power to recruiting personnel in the local authorities.

UPND MEDIA TEAM

Witness tells Fast Track Economic and financial crimes court how ZAMPOST misappropriated Funds

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An Accountant in the office of the Accountant General has told the Ndola Magistrate Court how ZamPost misappropriated the Social Cash Transfer funds by instructing the bank to first deposit the funds in a fixed deposit account.

Elijah Kapotwe, 53 of Lusaka, a principal accountant at the Ministry of Finance said that it is only the controlling officer who is responsible for the identification for investment of funds appropriated under the Ministry of Community Development.

In this matter, McPherson Chanda, Best Mwaichi and Isaac Kamwimba appeared before the fast track Economic and financial crimes court under Magistrate Kaunda Sakwanda.

In December 2021 the Drug Enforcement Commission and the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) arrested former Postmaster General, Macpherson Chanda and two directors for corrupt practices involving over K300 million.

The trio, in their capacities as Postmaster General, Director of Finance and Director of Operations, respectively, were said to have unlawfully diverted social cash transfer funds amounting to K335,108,834.00 without lawful authority.

ZANIS reports that in all the counts, Chanda and Mwaichi are charged with theft by public servant contrary to Section 265 as read with section 277 of the penal code.

Chanda, Mwaichi and Kamwimba all pleaded not guilty to the charges respectively.

When the matter came up for continued trial, Kapotwe told the court that funds for social cash transfer are appropriated by

Parliament to be disbursed to social beneficiaries by following the social protection guidelines.

“The social cash transfer funds are appropriated by parliament to be disbursed to social benefits to beneficiaries identified through the social protection guidelines and were not appropriated as investment funds.

“And therefore, where the controlling officer under the ministry of community development needed to apply the funds as investment funds, she was required that the Secretary to the treasury take such investment,” said Kapotwe.

He said he reviewed the status of the investment of the funds which were generated by ZAMPOST and some irregularities existed and that the social cash transfer was appropriated to the Ministry’s edge of revenue and expenditure.

Kapotwe said the person mandated to oversee the execution of such funds was the Permanent Secretary as the only officer mandated to request for the investment of funds appropriated.

Kapotwe said the first irregularity is that the letters were generated by ZAMPOST and not the controlling officer and second being that of misapplication of the interest earned.

He added that the arrangement between ZAMPOST and the ministry of community development, was that ZAMPOST was an agent to disburse the social cash transfer funds to beneficiaries and was to be paid commission

And a former assistant manager operations at ZAMPOST Moses Musonda said he was a signatory based on instructions.

Musonda testified that the authority came from Postmaster General, Director Finance and Director of Operations.

Magistrate Sakwanda then adjourned the matter to March 29, 2022 for continuation of trial.

The former ZAMPOST postmaster General and his co- accused are charged with 13 counts of theft by public servant.

Masebo Should Use The Office Of The Auditor General- Amb. Emmanuel Mwamba

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MASEBO SHOULD USE THE OFFICE OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL

“Use of external auditors without recourse to the Office of the Auditor General, is illegal”

By Amb. Emmanuel Mwamba

The statement by the Minister of Health, Hon Silvia Masebo to call for external auditors to supervise the recruitment of 11,200 health workers, the Ministry’s payroll and to audit health facilities, is shocking.

While there could be need for audit and consulting services to audit health facilities, reconcile and clean-up the payroll and ensure that the recruitment of health workers is done above board, such functions are constitutional and procedures are laid out on how they should be done.

It is for this reason that the Office of the Auditor General exists.

The Office of the Auditor General is the only supreme audit institution in Zambia mandated to audit all government institutions, parastatal organizations, statutory boards, donor funded agencies and any other institute in which public resources have been invested.

It is in extreme rare circumstances that external entities are sub-contracted or out-sourced.

Further, if Ms. Masebo suspects corruption in the recruitment process, she can also involve the Anti-Corruption Commission or similar law enforcement agencies in the process.

Unfortunately, the use of external auditors without recourse to the constitutional Office of the Auditor General or following set procurement processes, has increased under President Hakainde Hichilema’s government.

Recently, an unknown company, MVC Consultants and a Mr Lovemore Mbita Chifunda, were illegally hired by the Permanent Secretary at Ministry of Agriculture to audit the Farmers Input Support Programme (FISP)- the Government’s agriculture input subsidy programme.

There are other government entities where private audit firms are being hired to do the work and services which fall directly under the ambit of the Office of the Auditor General.

President Hakainde Hichilema, having come from a private audit and consulting firm, may easily be accused of illegally facilitating the procurement of audit and consulting services from his previous professional networks, in clear breach of the Republican Constitution.

And Masebo’s disclosure of names of purported ghost facilities under the Ministry of Health, is questionable as a quick verification will expose her statement as based on lies again.

Speaking shortly after a briefing, Ms. Masebo revealed that following the verification of nine out of 10 provinces, Nangoma Mission Hospital, Macha Hospital, Monze Hospital, and Kalabo Rural Health Center are some of the non-existent facilities detected.

She further disclosed that her Ministry has since written to Cabinet Office to seek authority to engage an external auditor to audit health facilities including the on-going recruitment of 11,276 workers.

For starters,we know that Nangoma Mission Hospital exists.

And Ms Masebo, despite having served in Government as Cabinet Minister in the last twenty years, appears not to know her boundaries and by her own numerous pronouncements is exposed as overreaching in matters of administration, technical, procurement and controlling, which functions fall under the controlling officer, the Permanent Secretary.

WHY AM I AT WAR WITH BARBRA MUSAMBA CHAMA

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WHY AM I AT WAR WITH BARBRA MUSAMBA CHAMA

By: Maxwell Nsama
Monday || March 28th, 2022.

It’s a long story but I will cut it short… Barbra Musamba Chama has been against my political stance to support and defend Amb. Emmanuel Mwamba for PF President.

She came to my inbox trying to tell me all sort of foolish lies – illusions against Amb. Emmanuel Mwamba killed Chiluba and Sata but I asked her to prove evidence as well as to where Pres. Chiluba was when died? What killed, who was with him?… She failed to provide the answers.

When I didn’t agree with her… She began accusing me of being frustrated-insane and many UPND think that I am insane and after she pist me off… I told her off that UPND will mess up big time and then we blocked each other… But she felt defeated and was hurting and due to her failed mission to convince me that Amb. Emmanuel Mwamba is a what she paint him to be like she always says… She went on to contact a certain Defence Chief (ZNS) of whom I happen to be in contact with on the quest to turn him against me and when that General came out so unwise to complain to why I posted his pic in uniform on fb page as if I am the first and only one to ever post a pic of him when there are tons of his pics posted on social media.

When I told that General that energy (influence) was coming from Barbra Musamba Chama, he felt embarrassed-ashamed and him and Barbra began to contact my relatives to try and stop me from criticizing the UPND and participating in Political & Governance issues… These two have been threatening my relatives hence causing confusion among relatives but that does not bother me because I am not a dependent to be manipulated by my relatives.

They have since been cooking up foolish stories against me but that wont work on me because I am not moved by foolishness especially if the foolishness were to shut me up because I only get worse. Barbra Musamba Chama is liar, manipulator, gossiper/slanderer, accuser and bully who will do and say anything to satisfy herself and enjoys to pick up fights with people but picking a fight with me was a terrible mistake because she will wish she never knew me. You can’t use my relatives to get to me because that doesn’t work on me.

DID you know that President Hichilema was in a hurry to marry?

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Ati HH was in a hurry to marry

The HARD FACTS have raised a lot of dust and debate in the past few days so the author is back to FUN FACTS in trying to calm the storm.

Enjoy !!! 😉😉

FUN FACT

DID you know that President Hakainde Hichilema was in a hurry to marry?

For details, follow the excerpt below from

(Conversations with Memorable Personalities)

Amos Malupenga:

Before we proceed to talk about the politics, tell me about your family. Who is your wife and children?

Hakainde Hichilema:

Amos, thank you for asking the family question. I am a family man. I have more or less broken the family rule. I come from a large extended family but I am married to a dear lady, a lady I love so much called Mutinta Hichilema. We married in 1988, two years after I graduated from UNZA. I was in a hurry. Like I said to you, I have sort of done things fairly quickly. A lot of my age group would be doing different things but I will try and move on.

Amos Malupenga:

Why were you in a hurry to marry?

Hakainde Hichilema:

It’s my nature. I wanted to settle down quickly and settle down on the job. So I thought family was a stabilising factor. As I travelled a lot, I needed a family to come back home to. And I am very fortunate to have found this lady.

We have lived happily ever since and we have three children – a daughter called Miyanda… We have a son, Habwela… and we have another son, Chikonka. The girl and the boy are out in boarding school.

Amos Malupenga:

Did you meet your wife at the university?

Hakainde Hichilema:

Not at all! I met her in Lusaka. Incidentally, she used to work for Barclays Bank. We met during one of these travels in Lusaka and I started tracking her down until she agreed to my proposal.

Amos Malupenga:

What’s her profession?

Hakainde Hichilema:

She is an office manager.

Amos Malupenga:

Is it by design that you only have one wife despite the fact that you are Tonga or there is still time for…?

Hakainde Hichilema:

No, Amos, one of the things that my wife and I are pleased about is that we have decided that one husband and one wife is enough for either of us. As I said, we come from a polygamous family life situation. We look after each other but I think it is important to stick to one partner. You cannot love two people the same way. I am a strong believer in that. So Mutinta is sufficient for me and I don’t have to have another. I actually advise others to keep to one partner.

Amos Malupenga:

Aren’t you breaking the Tonga tradition?

Hakainde Hichilema:

Slowly, it will break down and I would like to take leadership in that. You are aware of the HIV situation. But even without HIV situation, Amos, you can’t look after more than one wife equally. That’s where inequities start in society.

(An excerpt from Conversations with Memorable Personalities)

Source: Conversations with memorable personalities

Chelsea owner Abramovich ‘went blind for hours and his skin peeled off’ after suspected poisoning at Ukraine peace talks

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Chelsea owner, Roman Abramovich reportedly suffered suspected poisoning along with Ukraine peace negotiators.

The Russian Billionaire held talks with Ukraine president Vlodymyr Zelensky and Russian leader Vladimir Putin in a mediator role earlier this month.

And now, according to Wall Street Journal’s Max Colchester, Abramovich was showing symptoms of poisoning after a meeting in Kyiv earlier in the month.

Abramovich and at least two senior members of the Ukrainian team developed symptoms including red eyes, constant and painful tearing, and peeling skin on their faces and hands after a meeting in Kyiv earlier this month.

Their conditions have improved and their lives aren’t in danger and it is unclear as to what caused the symptons.

The WSJ continues to report that they blamed the suspected attack on hard-liners in Moscow who they said wanted to sabotage talks to end the war. A person close to Mr. Abramovich said it wasn’t clear who had targeted the group.

The report continues to state that western experts have looked into the incident and state that it was hard to determine whether the symptoms were caused by a chemical or biological agent or by some sort of electromagnetic-radiation attack.

This comes after Abramovich was sanctioned by the UK Government and listed Chelsea for sale.

The Russian listed the Club for sale on March 2 after the Government released reasoning for his sanctioning.

In a statement released by gov.uk, it states: “Given the significant impact that today’s sanctions would have on Chelsea football club and the potential knock on effects of this, the Government has this morning published a licence which authorises a number of football-related activities to continue at Chelsea.

“This includes permissions for the club to continue playing matches and other football related activity which will in turn protect the Premier League, the wider football pyramid, loyal fans and other clubs. This licence will only allow certain explicitly named actions to ensure the designated individual is not able to circumvent UK sanctions. The licence will be kept under constant review and we will work closely with the football authorities.”

DPP HAS BEEN SENT ON FORCED LEAVE?

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===============

PF media has reported that, President Hakainde Hichilema has reportedly sent the Director of Public Prosecution, Lillian Fulata Shawa-Siyuni on forced leave.

But constitutional experts are already calling the action illegal and unconstitutional.

Siyuni was appointed in 2016, was ratified by Parliament and enjoys constitutional tenure of office and can only be removed through succeful findings of a judicial tribunal.

Article 182 provides;

• Tenure of office of Director of Public Prosecutions;

1. Subject to this Article, the Director of Public Prosecutions shall retire from office on attaining the age of sixty years.

2. The Director of Public Prosecutions may retire, with full benefits, on attaining the age of fifty-five years.

3. The Director of Public Prosecutions may be removed from office on the same grounds and procedure as apply to a judge.

4. The Director of Public Prosecutions may resign from office by three months’ notice, in writing, to the President.

State House has been said to behind maneuvers to pressure Siyuni to resign or be appointed as a High Court Judge but she has turned down both offers hence the latest assault on her tenure of office.

Because the Office enjoys independence and autonomy in decision making of prosecution of criminal cases, State House is determined to employ a compliant officer to the office.

State House has since been pushing a disputed case of alleged stolen MMD vehicles in which the DPP has refused to sanction prosecution for lack of merit, as a case of unethical conduct which the Nevers Mumba team reported to the Judicial Service Complaint Commission.

But the Constitution provides total independence to the DPP;

Article 180(7) states that;

7. The Director of Public Prosecutions shall not be subject to the direction or control of a person or an authority in the performance of the functions of that office, except that the Director of Public Prosecutions shall have regard to the public interest, administration of justice, the integrity of the judicial system and the need to prevent and avoid abuse of the legal process.

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PF IN POWER STRUGGLE…there’s hostility, mistrust towards each other – Chirwa

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PF IN POWER STRUGGLE

…there’s hostility, mistrust towards each other – Chirwa

By Christopher Miti

PATRIOTIC Front member and Lusaka lawyer Joseph Chirwa says the former ruling party should sober up and stop the trends that led to its downfall in the last election.

We must change, for example, in the way we handle conflicts within the party. We are still hostile towards each other. There is still mistrust within the party. There is power struggle within the party. As we are speaking, we haven’t rebranded. We are still the same party,” he told The Mast.

Announcing his decision to contest the position of national chairperson for legal affairs at the PF convention, Chirwa said every member should be allowed to contest positions they want from the presidency going down.

“I think that I can contribute to the revival of the PF. Are you aware that I tried to contest the same position prior to the general elections but unfortunately there were no elections? People were imposed on the general membership and this contributed to the bad performance of the PF,” he said in an interview.

“The PF as a party should sober up and stop the trends that contributed to its downfall. This is the time that, as the constitution provides, every member should be allowed to contest for the positions that they want. From the president, they should allow Brian Mundubile, Chishimba Kambwili, Emmanuel Mwamba and every person to stand as long as they are members of PF.”

Chirwa said majority of the people that were imposed on the general membership were not wanted.

He said this was not a right time when a party should be run like a cartel where leaders were imposed on the people.

“The moment we impose leaders on the people the party will not survive. The party will not be revived. The party will die by 2026. We are an opposition party, the time to dictate…even the former president should not have a hand in anyone,” Chirwa said.

“Him (Edgar Lungu) is a father figure. He is a patron of the PF. So let him facilitate a smooth transition of power so that we have a new membership in PF that has been voted and wanted by the party.”
Chirwa said the central committee of the PF was imposed on the general membership of the party.

On rebranding, he said it was difficult to rebrand with the same people.

“You can only rebrand with new people; meaning that you have to adopt new ideas. The pomposity that we had as a party where even our songs, our conduct as if we took people for granted that whether they wanted or not we will be in power… That pomposity, that pride, that ego should be dropped,” he said.

“To rebrand means that you have to change. You cannot rebrand something that hasn’t changed. We have to change our philosophy. We have to change our message. The most important thing is that we have to change our leadership. We cannot rebrand with the same leaders that are responsible for the status quo that we are in. We have to change our systems and our processes, that’s the only way.”

Chirwa said the rebranding process for the PF should have started immediately the party lost power.

He advised the party to critically look at issues that led to its loss in the last election.
“We must change, for example, in the way we handle conflicts within the party. We are still hostile towards each other. There is still mistrust within the party. There is power struggle within the party. As we are speaking, we haven’t rebranded. We are still the same party. We haven’t sold the new message to the people,” said Chirwa.

“We must be in a position to offer an alternative message. We cannot use the same tactics, for example, that the UPND were using when they were in opposition and us, we want to adopt those, no! We must be truthful to ourselves. We shouldn’t choose, for example, there is a postmortem report. Me, I am a member of PF, I was intimate with the campaigns but I have not even read it. The postmortem report must be published to everyone for us to know where we went wrong and where we need to focus on. The report must not be a secret document.”

Six questions and answers from Zimbabwe’s March 2022 by-elections

By Dr Phillan Zamchiya

Dear Reader, ahead of the 2023 general election, Zimbabweans went to cast their votes in parliamentary and local government by elections on 26 March 2022. Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) led by Nelson Chamisa came first, the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front (ZANU PF) led by Emmerson Mnangagwa second and the Movement for Democratic Change Alliance (MDC A) led by Douglas Mwonzora came last.

Out of the 28 parliamentary seats up for grabs, CCC won 19, ZANU PF nine and MDC Alliance got zero. Out of the 122 wards, CCC bagged 75, ZANU PF 47 whereas MDC Alliance got another zero. A total of 20 out of the contested 28 parliamentary seats and 78 out of the 122 local wards became vacant due to recalls of the representatives by a faction led by Mwonzora. Following the internecine fights, Chamisa eventually left the MDC A and rebranded his movement to CCC in January 2022.

There are a number of political questions that these by elections helped to answer. Here are six.

  • Which party is more popular between MDC A and CCC?
  • Is there now a credible infrastructure to run free and fair elections?
  • Are ZANU PF’s policies appealing to the urban voters?
  • Is the opposition making electoral inroads in the rural areas?
  • What is the new from Chamisa at CCC?
  • Are citizens ready to put a ceiling on election rigging?

Reader, come now let us debate some answers.

  1. Which party is more popular between MDC A and CCC?


The opposition movement, CCC, is the new kid on the block after trouncing Mwonzora’s MDC Alliance. CCC is already entrenched in the hearts and minds of the people. A related point is that with real or imagined flaws, Chamisa remains by far the most popular opposition leader in Zimbabwe today.

He demonstrated his political astuteness and charm in galvanizing the electorate. His heart beats with the masses. It is a herculean task for any opposition politician to match Chamisa before the 2023 general election.

Any effective coalition will mean that democratic forces will have to converge around him. However, Chamisa must make it easy for other actors through encouraging collective leadership, embracing the art of modern institution building, trusting his lieutenants and promoting inclusive politics.

As the undisputed opposition leader, Chamisa needs to reassure stakeholders that ‘it is not about him but about us’. On the other hand, MDC Alliance and its leader Mwonzora will not resurrect electorally in 2023. They are not Jesus Christ. In short, Mwonzora has suffered a politically premature death.

2. Is there now a credible infrastructure to run free and fair elections?


Reader, this was not an ideal free and fair by election. The Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) selectively stopped CCC’s campaign rallies. The CCC had to approach the courts to hold some of its rallies while ZANU PF and MDC-Alliance campaigned freely.

ZRP arrested six CCC candidates and more than 30 supporters during the campaign. The public media favoured ZANU PF, some traditional leaders were partisan, Mnangagwa’s party was the main perpetrator of political violence against opposition supporters, ZANU PF supporters killed a CCC activist, Mboneni Ncube, at a rally addressed by Chamisa in Mbizo, Kwekwe. ZANU PF partly used state resources for party campaigns.

On the other end, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) failed the credibility test. Thousands of registered voters were either moved to different wards and constituencies and had their names deleted from the voters’ roll. In some cases, multiple voters were registered under a single address.

Reader, this is a portent for the 2023 general election to come and threatens prospects of a democratic election. A practical take from by elections is to invest in reforms of institutions that will outlast reformers if ZEC is to deliver electoral democracy.

3. Are ZANU PF’s policies appealing to the urban voters?


Reader, a lot has been said about how ZANU PF has managed to narrow the margin in the urban areas and penetrate the opposition strongholds. However, the question is did ZANU PF manage to increase its urban vote numerically on the back of its policies? The answer is no. The vote did not grow.

Rather, the narrowing of the gap is a result of the decline of the opposition vote from previous trends. ZANU PF’s policies are still to have a significant impact electorally. Mnangagwa’s party won only one urban seat out of 20 that is Epworth.

In fact, Epworth is not at the centre. Like Harare South which ZANU PF won in 2018 it is located in the urban periphery. In the periphery, it is easier to use patronage because of informal land markets, informal markets and informal houses, a strategy to be replicated in the 2023 general election.

The people are relegated by the state to live as subjects. CCC significantly controls urban centres having won 95% of the parliamentary seats where people have a degree of autonomy and live as citizens with rights.

Some of ZANU PF’s urban policies seem detached from the immediate quotidian concerns of the poor urbanites. Part of the electorate construe them as utopian.

I remember very well on 12 March 2022 on my way to Robert Gabriel Mugabe (formerly Harare) airport. I had a conversation with the driver about whether the renovation of the airport would influence his vote. He said, ‘I never use an aeroplane. I do not eat the airport. I cannot vote for an airport. An airport is for the rich. Us the poor need food, rentals and school fees.’

I was surprised because infrastructure is key for development. However, the priority for the urban voters was to have a dollar in the pocket. Yet, in his campaign, Mnangagwa had confidently presented himself as a man of deeds through pointing at these utopian projects amidst a sea of poverty.

The majority of citizens continued to survive on less than USD 1.90 a day. Some of the policies failed to capture the urgent need for income across households amidst rising urban poverty. It was therefore not surprising that ZANU PF’s vote in the urban areas is still to grow.

4. Is the opposition making electoral inroads in the rural areas?


The answer is no. In fact, the numbers are declining significantly and the gap is widening. CCC won a single rural constituency out of eight that is Binga North. ZANU PF maintained its rural hegemonic domination scooping seven out of eight of the parliamentary seats.

Just to illustrate, in Mwenezi CCC had only 1 573 votes compared to ZANU PF’s 12 177 votes, in Chivi CCC had a paltry 1 414 whilst ZANU PF got 6 832 votes and in Murewa south CCC managed 1 729 compared to ZANU PF’s 11 125 votes. Free formation of preferences remains limited for the rural folks.

The partisan hierarchy of traditional leaders, perverse violence, the opposition’s failure to build pervasive structures deep in the rural hinterland and CCC’s urban bias in its campaign and messaging all contributed to the poor showing among other factors.

CCC’s most potent weapon, Chamisa, was largely visible in the urban spaces during the campaign. He was in Highfields, Epworth, Masvingo, Kwekwe, Mkoba, Bulawayo and Mutare. He had a rally in rural Tsholotsho but ZRP blocked him to hold rallies in Gokwe central and Binga.

It was surprising that CCC did not use its main man to campaign vigorously in the rural hinterlands like Mwenezi East, Mberengwa and Chivi. A rural strategy is needed ahead of next year’s general election. Failure of which, there will be a calamitous rural showing gifting ZANU PF a 2/3 majority on a silver platter and crippling the Presidential bid.

5. What is the new from Chamisa?


Chamisa’s narrative has largely remained the same compared to his days at the helm of MDC A. However, changes are observable in his articulation of transitional politics and state power. Throughout the campaign trail he appealed to the levers of state power transfer. The incumbent, the war veterans and the security services.

All this was accompanied by a patriotic ideology. Chamisa projected himself as the one who can complete the unfinished business of the liberation struggle. In many ways, he claimed to be the future guardian of sovereign national interests.

He knew that even if he wins the popular vote, the wielders of power might not hesitate to block him from entering state house. This was even more likely if he did not embrace the ideals and objectives of the liberation struggle.

In every province he went, he saluted towering liberation war heroes. He also exalted war veterans in general and promised them better government support to improve their welfare. This strategy was complemented by allaying fears that come with the winds of democratic change.

He reassured Chiwenga and Mnangagwa that his government was going to look after them given the contributions they made to the country. Despite the atrocities committed by the security services, Chamisa reassured the police and the soldiers that they were going to retain their positions with even better working conditions.

He fell short of absolving them from any wrongdoing and rather blamed those who gave them orders. This narrative was informed by his understanding of the levers of state power. Zimbabwe should expect Chamisa to strike this chord more consistently towards 2023.

It will not be surprising if he comes with a new narrative on the sanctions question. His mind is not just preoccupied with winning elections but with how to get state power the morning after.

6. Are citizens ready to put a ceiling on election rigging?


From the by elections one can conclude that citizens still have a lot to do to put a ceiling to election rigging. To put a ceiling, there should have been at least a million newly registered voters. The huge and electric rallies did not translate into a huge voter turnout.

One might argue that historically Zimbabwe has always had low voter-turn out during by elections. However, stakes were high, all the political parties pitted these elections as a dry run for 2023, they invested heavily and these mirrored a mini-general election.

ZEC controversially showed that only 2 971 people registered to vote in 2021. From 1 February to 20 February 2022 only 49, 636 people registered to vote during ZEC’s mobile voter registration blitz. These low figures will make it difficult to put a ceiling on rigging.

A robust, digital and efficient Parallel Voter Tabulation system should have been in place. Alongside an active citizenry should have been at most polling stations to defend the vote. This could have been an indicator that it is possible to reduce rigging related to inflation and deflation of numbers in 2023.

This is important because Zimbabwe is not likely to have a democratic election in next year’s general election. It is up to the opposition to work towards putting a durable ceiling as I seal this article.

Dr Phillan Zamchiya holds a Doctor of Philosophy (D. Phil) degree in international development from the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom.

After hitting Chris Rock for breaching the Code of Conduct, Will Smith’s Oscar might be revoked

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The Academy Awards could strip actor, Will Smith of his Best Actor award at the 2022 Oscara after he walked on stage and slapped comedian Chris Rock who was presenting an award on stage, after making a joke about Will’s wifeJada Pinkett’s hair.

According to the New York post, The Academy reestablished its Code of Conduct in 2017 during the Me Too Movement and is known to take a very a dim view of violence of any kind.

The Academy made known its disapproval of ‘violence of any form’ late on Sunday night, March 27.

After the award ceremony was over it tweeted: ‘The Academy does not condone violence of any form. Tonight we are delighted to celebrate our 94th Academy Awards winners, who deserve this moment of recognition from their peers and movie lovers around the world.’

According to Oscar rules, Smith would almost certainly have been removed by security guards and escorted out of the auditorium after the attack under normal circumstances, but the slap came moments before the award for Best Actor was to be announced.

The Los Angeles police department were also informed of what had occurred on stage but revealed later that no complaint had been filed.

Fifteen minutes after the attack by Smith, he picked up the biggest accolade of his life as an actor as he collected the Best Actor award making a tearful speech in which he attempted to link his outburst to his character in King Richard as someone who ‘defended his family.’

He also took a moment to issue an apology to the Academy and to his fellow nominees, but that may not be enough.

Twitter users were quick to call for his award to be taken from him as similar or less violent situations have result in the rescinding of the awards from past winners.

Harvey Weinstein was stripped of his membership in the organization after he was was found guilty of decades of sexual misbehavior, including allegations of rape.

In 2017, Greg P. Russell, a sound mixer on 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi, was been stripped of his Oscar nomination after he was caught phoning his fellow members from the Academy’s Sound Branch ‘to make them aware of his work on the film.

The calls were a ‘direct violation of a campaign regulation that prohibits telephone lobbying,’ a statement from the Academy said.

In 2014, the song Alone Yet Not Alone from the little-known film of the same name had its nomination for Best Original Song rescinded after composer Bruce Broughton, an Academy member and former governor, contacted fellow branch members by email, breaking Academy rules.

‘It’s basically assault. Everyone was just so shocked in the room, it was so uncomfortable’ An Academy awards executive told the New York Post.

Full list of winners at the Oscars 2022

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The 94th Academy Awards ceremony, aka the Oscars, presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, held at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles on March 27, 2022.

The ceremony was hosted by Regina Hall, Amy Schumer and Wanda Sykes.

The ceremony honored the best films released between March 1 and December 31, 2021

Below is the full list of winners at the Oscars 2022.

BEST PICTURE
“Belfast”

“CODA” *WINNER

“Don’t Look Up”

“Drive My Car”

“Dune”

“King Richard”

“Licorice Pizza”

“Nightmare Alley”

“The Power of the Dog”

“West Side Story”

ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE
Jessie Buckley, “The Lost Daughter”

Ariana DeBose, “West Side Story” *WINNER

Judi Dench, “Belfast”

Kirsten Dunst, “The Power of the Dog”

Aunjanue Ellis, “King Richard”

ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE
Ciaran Hinds, “Belfast”

Troy Kotsur, “CODA” *WINNER

Jesse Plemons, “The Power of the Dog”

J.K. Simmons, “Being the Ricardos”

Kodi Smit-McPhee, “The Power of the Dog”

INTERNATIONAL FEATURE FILM
“Drive My Car” *WINNER

“Flee”

“The Hand of God”

“Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom”

“The Worst Person in the World”

DOCUMENTARY (SHORT)
“Audible”

“Lead Me Home”

“The Queen of Basketball” *WINNER

“Three Songs for Benazir”

“When We Were Bullies”

DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
“Ascension”

“Attica”

“Flee”

“Summer of Soul” *WINNER

“Writing with Fire”

ORIGINAL SONG
“King Richard”

“Encanto”

“Belfast”

“No Time to Die” *WINNER

“Four Good Days”

ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
“Encanto” *WINNER

“Flee”

“Luca”

“The Mitchells vs. The Machine”

“Raya and the Last Dragon”

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
“CODA” *WINNER

“Drive My Car”

“Dune”

“The Lost Daughter”

“The Power of the Dog”

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
“Belfast” *WINNER

“Don’t Look Up”

“King Richard”

“Licorice Pizza”

“The Worst Person in the World”

ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE
Javier Bardem, “Being the Ricardos”

Benedict Cumberbatch, “The Power of the Dog”

Andrew Garfield, “Tick, Tick… Boom!”

Will Smith, “King Richard” *WINNER

Denzel Washington, “The Tragedy of Macbeth”

ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE
Jessica Chastain, “The Eyes of Tammy Faye” *WINNER

Olivia Colman, “The Lost Daughter”

Penelope Cruz, “Parallel Mothers”

Nicole Kidman, “Being the Ricardos”

Kristen Stewart, “Spencer”

DIRECTOR
Kenneth Branagh, “Belfast”

Ryusuke Hamaguchi, “Drive My Car”

Paul Thomas Anderson, “Licorice Pizza”

Jane Campion, “The Power of the Dog” *WINNER

Steven Spielberg, “West Side Story”

PRODUCTION DESIGN
“Dune” *WINNER

“Nightmare Alley”

“The Power of the Dog”

“The Tragedy of Macbeth”

“West Side Story”

CINEMATOGRAPHY
“Dune” *WINNER

“Nightmare Alley”

“The Power of the Dog”

“The Tragedy of Macbeth”

“West Side Story”

COSTUME DESIGN
“Cruella” *WINNER

“Cyrano”

“Dune”

“Nightmare Alley”

“Westside Story”

ACHIEVEMENT IN SOUND
“Belfast”

“Dune” *WINNER

“No Time to Die”

“The Power of the Dog”

“Westside Story”

ANIMATED SHORT FILE
“Affairs of the Art”

“Bestia”

“Boxballet”

“Robin Robin”

“The Windshield Wiper” *WINNER

LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM
“Ala Kachuu — Take and Run”

“The Dress”

“The Long Goodbye” *WINNER

“On My Mind”

“Please Hold”

ORIGINAL SCORE
“Don’t Look Up”

“Dune” *WINNER

“Encanto”

“Parallel Mothers”

“The Power of the Dog”

VISUAL EFFECTS
“Dune” *WINNER

“Free Guy”

“No Time to Die”

“Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings”

“Spider-Man: No Way Home”

FILM EDITING
“Don’t Look Up”

“Dune” *WINNER

“King Richard”

“The Power of the Dog”

“Tick, Tick… Boom!”

MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
“Coming 2 America”

“Cruella”

“Dune”

“The Eyes of Tammy Faye” *WINNER

“House of Gucci”

Chelsea owner Abramovich acting as a ‘peacemaker’ as he ‘delivers handwritten note to Putin from Zelensky dictating Ukraine’s terms’ in a bid to end war

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Roman Abramovich is reportedly acting as a ‘peacemaker’ in the Russian war in Ukraine as he avoids Western sanctions in Turkey.

The Chelsea FC owner is said to have been jetting between Istanbul, Moscow, and Kyiv to relay messages between Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky. But when handed a note from the Ukrainian president outlining peace terms, the Russian despot reportedly erupted with fury, according to Daily Mail.

Abramovich has been trying to rescue his reputation after being slapped with sanctions by the UK and EU over his closeness to Putin.

His assets have been frozen across Britain and the Continent and he started a fire sale of London property as well as Chelsea football club. But his yachts and jets, which are worth hundreds of millions of pounds, remain out of bounds as they dodge sanctioned waters and airspace.

Meanwhile, Zelensky reportedly pleaded with President Joe Biden for the US to hold off bringing measures against the oligarch due to his role in negotiations.

Abramovich left Ataturk airport in Istanbul on a private Hawker 800XP jet last Wednesday, heaving across the Black Sea towards Sochi.

The oligarch had flown in to meet Putin and hand him a handwritten note by Zelensky outlining Ukraine’s peace terms position.

According to the Times, the Russian president said to the oligarch: ‘Tell him I will thrash them.’

He returned to Istanbul and linked up with Ukrainian politician Rustem Umerov, who is said to be acting as Kyiv’s negotiator.

They met at five-star hotels in the Turkish capital, having been set up by President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an’s spokesman Ibrahim Kalin. And they appear to be making progress with future face-to-face talks set to continue this week.

Kalin told the newspaper Hurriyet last weekend they were ‘close to agreement’ on key issues on Nato, demilitarisation, and protected status for the Russian language. But there are still differences over the future of Crimea – which Russia annexed in 2014 – and Donbas, which has mostly been occupied during the current conflict.

Kalin floated the idea that Crimea and Donbas be held by Moscow under a long-term lease like Britain had over Hong Kong from 1898 to 1997.

Putin is believed to be considering the idea but his fury at his military’s failures and hatred of Zelensky are said to be holding him back.

Abramovich and Umerov have visited the Ukrainian President in war-torn Kyiv after travelling on private jets routed through Warsaw, Poland.

The businessman has been flying on one owned by a Turkish firm due to his being under EU sanctions.

He is one of at least 20 oligarchs in Turkey as they toe the line between Putin and Western restrictions.

Vladimir Putin will become ‘Lord of the World,’ according to blind psychic Baba Vanga, who correctly prophesied 9/11 and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

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A blind psychic who correctly predicted the Russian invasion of Ukraine as well as the 9/11 New York Al-qaeda attacks once claimed that president Vladimir Putin is to become ‘Lord of the World’ and that Russia will dominate the world.

Vanga grew up on a farm, in what is now Macedonia, and became blind after being dragged into a tornado when she was young, with her believers saying this accident was what gave her second sight.

Known as the Nostradamus of the Balkans, Baba Vanga, who died 25 years ago in 1996 aged 84, predicted in a 1979 interview that Russia was to dominate the world while also predicting World War Three and the potential use of nuclear weapons.

Blind psychic Baba Vanga who correctly predicted 9/11 and Russia

In a meeting with writer Valentin Sidorov, Vanga in 1979, BirminghamLive reported she said:

“All will thaw, as if ice, only one remain untouched – Vladimir’s glory, glory of Russia.

“Too much it is brought in a victim. Nobody can stop Russia.

“All will be removed by her from the way and not only will be kept, but also becomes the lord of the world. ”

Vanga is believed to be good at predicting major events across the globe and it is claimed that during her 50-year career, she also predicted the pandemic, Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine in 1986 and the death of Princess Diana in 1997.

The psychic reportedly predicted the pandemic outbreak ‘years ago’ when she warned: ‘The pandemic will be all over us.’

In 1989, she reportedly said of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Centre: ‘Horror, horror! The American brethren will fall after being attacked by the steel birds.

‘The wolves will be howling in a bush, and innocent blood will be gushing.’

Vanga’s devoted followers say 85 per cent of her predictions are accurate, but experts say only 68 per cent are.

One of the prophecies which didn’t come true was that the 45th president of the United States was to be ‘faced with a crisis’ that would ‘bring the country down’ .

She also insists that aliens will ‘not come in peace’, insisting that the extraterrestrials will arrive in asteroids’: ‘Alien ships will attack earth and they will bomb cities and take people captive’.

Woman claims spiritual attacks have entered her private parts preventing her husband from having s33x with her

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THE Kabushi Local Court has heard a chilling testimony in which a woman claimed that she was attacked spiritually by unknown powers which entered her head and settled on her privates preventing her husband from penetrating when having sex.

This came when Deborah Chipili 39 sued her husband Johsha Katuta for divorce stating that she wanted to set him free as the two were unble to have sex.

In her testimony, Chipili narrated that she was a happily married woman until she became unwell.

She said in 2011 she got sick which affected her and could not sleep.

Chipili said her illness continued and has now decided to end her marriage.

“My illness continued therefore I saw it fit to end the marriage and take back the dowry back to my husband to set him free,” she said.

She explained that whenever she was away from her matrimonial house, she never experience strange things.

“When I was away from my house I was not getting sick, everything was fine and i thought maybe it is the house which is causing all this,”she said.

And in his testimony Katuta said he loved his wife, however, he does not penetrate during sexual intercourse.

Katuta narrated that all was well when the two got married until his wife started to experience stomach pains.

He said in 2020 his wife Chipili started having strange episodes, a situation which got worse because of the spiritual attacks.

“She told me that spiritual things entered her through in head and settled on her private parts which are practically covered her private parts and i can not penetrate,”he said .

He despite the decision by Chipili to divorce him, he is ready to support her financially.

In passing judgment presiding senior magistrate John Kabwe sitting with senior Magistrate Emelda Masuwa dissolved the marriage as dowry had already been returned.

The court further ordered Katuta to take care of the children’s basic needs.

(Mwebantu)

Davies Mwila pleads to be heard on merit in his law suit against DEC

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By Mwaka Ndawa

FORMER PF secretary general Davies Mwila says it is in the public interest that his law suit against the Drug Enforcement Commission (DEC) is determined on merit, unlike curtailing it on baseless grounds.

He alleged that the UPND was trying to use State machinery to stop him from being heard by the courts by asking it to dismiss his case on a point of law which he said was wasting the court’s time.

Mwila has sued the State in the Lusaka High Court over the DEC’s decision to quiz him and Antonio Mwanza regarding the former ruling party’s source of funds during campaigns prior to the August 12, 2021 general elections.

Mwila who has commenced the action on behalf of the party wants damages for intimidation and harassment of PF members by the DEC.

He is seeking damages for discrimination, misrepresentation and defamation of character.

Mwila also wants the court to declare that the party cannot be compelled to disclose its source of income and that the money was not laundered.

The State had asked the court to dismiss the case with costs on a point of law.

The office of the Attorney General had submitted that Mwila’s action was an attempt to challenge the Commission’s statutory authority to conduct criminal investigations relating to allegations of money laundering against members of the public.

It said the reliefs Mwila was seeking were aimed at curtailing the ongoing criminal investigations, which involved some member of the PF, through the institution of the civil proceedings.

But in an affidavit in opposition to affidavit in support of notice of motion to dismiss the action on point of law, Mwila clarified that the action did not in any way attempt to circumvent the DEC from conducting its criminal investigations against him and other known persons.

“The defendant has merely failed to deduce or comprehend the questions which the pleadings have raised,” Mwila said. “The pleadings have raised the following questions which are supposed to be determined by the court; (1) whether or not the DEC has got the constitutional or statutory mandate to compel the plaintiff to disclose its source of funding used in the 2021 campaigns?

(2) whether or not the government has got a legal framework or statute which can be used to compel the plaintiff to disclose its source of campaign funding used in the 2021 general elections?

(3) whether or not political party funding is or amounts to money laundering?

(4) whether or not the action of the defendant through DEC was discriminatory when it’s only singled out the PF to disclose its source of campaign funds but left out other political parties which participated in the 2021 campaigns and the general elections?

5)Whether or not the DEC misrepresented facts and consequently defamed the plaintiff when PR manager maliciously misinformed the nation through the press that it summoned the plaintiff and the media director for purpose of investigating money laundering relating to the said individuals and not the party.”

Mwila said the court had not issued any court order compelling the Commission to stop carrying out its statutory obligation of investigating money laundering allegations.

He said the PF was not an institution regulated by the DEC’s supervisory authority.

“Out of the 16 political parties that participated in the 2021elections, the PF are the only ones that have been singled out and targeted by the DEC, and the discriminatory attack on the party has instilled fear in the mind of its members,’’ Mwila submitted.

“DEC knowingly and deliberately made false statement about the purpose of the interrogation the PF party’s media director and the said Commission knew that it was making a false statement to the public through the media and the malicious statement was actually published by several media houses. The Commission’s false statement made on September 21, 2021 about the purpose of interrogating Antio Mwanza, harmed the reputation of the plaintiff as members of the public were made to believe that the plaintiff was involved in money laundering.”

He said the DEC contumeliously disregarded his rights, damaged the reputation of the PF, and continued to threaten the existence of the party and the welfare and rights of its members.

“I am at pains to understand an untrue and unresearched assertion that this action is frivolous. The mode by which this court has been moved to determine the defendant’s application is not available in matters commenced by or against the defendant as such this application is improperly before court, consequently robing the court of its jurisdiction to determine the application,” said Mwila.

Statesman or father of Zambia – who?

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Statesman or father of Zambia – who?

By Dr Daniel Mvula Shimunza

The value of any presidency is the value, dignity, and worth of its people.

“Great leaders, raise other leaders, while weak leaders raise and maintain followers around them, and followers are the security of weak leaders.’’ People are the portrait of any President. The purpose of any government, is to make its people happy, that’s all, not fight them or their will (Shimunza, 2022).

The question of who qualifies to be a statesman or father of a nation, must be answered correctly.

A nation without accurate definition of things bound to be misled at the end. If we are precise

at the beginning, we can be sure of accuracy at the end. As a nation, we are neither a knowledge –

society, nor a truth- society. We are bankrupt of ideological politics, settling for ignorant cadreism.

Consequently, we are mostly pandering to ignorance, scandals, archaism, mediocrity, misrule

and false-relative national development. Our levels of ambition and vision, are too low. We are

satisfied easily by small things like cars, allowances, bribes, and an easy life. We compromise the eternal for the temporal, and major on minors and minor on majors, sadly. We are now fast becoming a post-truth society.

The death of now late president Rupiah Bwezani Banda has recently sparked a debate question

as to whether former president Dr Edgar Chagwa Lungu qualifies ‘automatically’ to be a

statesman or father of the nation of Zambia. However, statesmanship is earned, not imposed by

or on former presidents. Principally, not all former presidents qualify automatically to be statesmen or fathers of the nation.

Therefore, by definition, a statesman/woman, is “a skilled, experienced, and respected political

leader, as viewed from principles of the art of government and its business.” The respect factor,

is the objective test of statesmanship. Can people respect the prospective political figure? The

answer to this question, creates various objective tests of statesmanship. Statesmanship is

determined by how political leaders lived, led, and handed over governance, which determines

their earned place in the annals of statesmen.

Obviously, any former political leader who is unjust, immature, unwise, autocratic, deceptive, manipulates a partisan agenda, still participates in active politics – covertly or overtly, is divisive,

tribal, and corrupt, is automatically disqualified as a statesman. The respect a former leader has

engenders confidence in consequent generations to consult, seek advice, seek direction, seek wisdom, and lessons of governance and leadership of a nation state.

To be a father is not nominally a birthright, or a title, but a discernable function (Shimunza,

2022). There are credibility or legitimate objective tests, which make one qualify as a father, later

on a statesman of a nation. These include among others, the following tests: founders, principle,

source, sustaining unity and peace, provider, democracy credentials, human rights records,

constitutionalism, spiritual, transformative contribution, good governance, and human

development. Let us review these under specific headings:

1. Founders test. A father of a nation must be a founder of something politically in the

nation. This makes them ‘first’ in that national shift. Those who inherit organisations and

legacies of other leaders may not be fathers by virtue of continuity of what others founded. Every country is strong or weak based on its founder’s role in nation building and development models established from the beginning of statehood and nationhood. Consequently, only two late former leaders fit this profile thus far, in both first and second presidents Dr Kenneth David Kaunda, and Dr Frederick Jacob Titus Chiluba.

For South Africa, this rank is reserved for Nelson Mandela only, as first president of the black

people. The rest who carry on may be statesmen, but never fathers of South Africa. So, in Zambia, nominally and traditionally they maybe all fathers, but not by strict practice. Therefore, both men were founders of two significant political movements. The first president founded the United National Independence Party (UNIP), which later led to the

formation of a new nation called Zambia. It is a formation of two British protectorates

namely Barotseland and Northern Rhodesia, respectively. This contribution sets the man

apart as a father, albeit, he missed it fifteen years later after 1964.

The second president was a founder member of the Movement for Multiparty Democracy

(MMD), which later re-established pluralism or multi-party democracy, which we so much

enjoy today, a liberal market economy, and the declaration of Zambia as Christian nation.

The rest could be statesmen, yet not fathers of Zambia.

The next father of Zambia will be a fundamental movement that will shift us into a third

wave of national development, which must be a major one into real industrialisation and

first world Zambia from third world backwardness. It must not be a mere continuation or a mere improvement of national existence. But a radical transformation of the systems, structures, and strategies of state-crating and government for a first world nation.

Therefore, improved management is never transformation, if the form of something or a

nation remains principally and fundamentally the same. Transformation is a radical change, not relative or minimal change. Shifting from one party state to plurality, politically, was a fundamental shift. The economy, intelligence, and the military, are the three most important factors to state-crafting and national development.

Zambia needs a radical economic transformation, to become a first world nation, from the doldrums of third world mediocrity. The Movement for National Transformation (MNT) opposes everything third world as an ideology, politically. We can learn from it, but never to stay therein.

2. Principle test. It is important to understand the principles that drive any man, Mandela

said, “A man who changes his principles, depending on whoever he deals with, is not a man who can lead a nation.’’ This consequently buttresses the argument that principle-centered leadership is rare and vital for national development. Leadership requires a level of consistency, which the un-discerning perceive in their erroneous analysis, as being overly ‘opinionated’. Convictions, not convenience, drives great leaders. National fathers,

establish national principles, for generations after them, in their legacy.

3. Source test. “Never break the source of a river, so is a nation’s source,” (Shimunza). A national father is the source of national foundations, principles, and vision. The purpose of any nation is rooted in its founding fathers. If wrong, the nation develops wrongly. If right, the nation develops correctly.

Zambia in her foundation was birthed in internal betrayal, deception, and corruption of the Barotse people. This covenant breaking has affected us largely. Our founding fathers of Zambia sought to efface the Barotseland Agreement, sadly. How can one move forward when the brother you betrayed, is pulling you back spiritually? This will require great spiritual wisdom to address if any meaningful development will take place for Zambia.

4. Sustaining peace and unity test. A father of a nation is a peacemaker and sustainer of unity. He must not be a divider but a unifier. Security and peace are fundamental to sovereign existence by state and non-state actors. National development

is impossible in a state of no peace and security. Those who want to be fathers, yet divide

the nation, automatically cancel their legacy and statesmanship.

5. Provider test. If anybody claims to be a father of a nation yet cannot provide for his children, repudiates the fathering and statesmanship principle. Fathers never fail their children in a nation with all the necessary provisions of life, statehood, and governance. A nation fails for want of fathers and statesmen. We need less politicians, but must have more statesmen and fathers of nations. If you cannot provide what your people need the

most, you are not a father, or later on statesman.

6. Democratic redentials test. A true father is a democrat, not an autocratic leader of his people. The voice of everyone matters to a father. A father whose voice is only heard alone without children in a nation because of arrogance is a dictator. Autocratic

tendencies where we are not inclusive but exclusive of others, is not a qualification of a father of a nation or statesman.

The significant ‘otherness’ of those different from oneself, is the true test of fathering and

statesmanship. Any leader, who makes his country to lose democratic credentials, is neither

a statesman nor a father. Democracy, as an art requires that the will of the people thrives,

not that of a leader, or leaders by deception or manipulation of laws and otherwise

systems. Fathers and statesmen, upgrade the democratic credentials of their countries.

7. Human rights record test. The violation of human rights cancels fathering and statesmanship. When leaders can gas us and they remain quiet, suicides take place they are quite; ritual killings take place and they are quiet, it cancels the value of any human being. One person who dies even if it’s in Mozambique as a driver, must raise the entire nation’s consciousness to the rescue of one. All our people must enjoy the rights of being human. Abuse of human rights is detrimental to the concept of fathering a nation or statesmanship. Look at our prisons as a mirror of society and human rights. It is a sad reality. Abuse of the Pubic Order Act (POA) against political opponents, is abuse of human

rights. Undue use of force by the police against weak unarmed citizens, is abuse of human

rights. Child marriages and forced marriages are all forms of abuse of human rights. Domestic violence must end as a human rights abuse. Fathers and statesmen protect these

rights always for their people.

8. Constitutionalism test. Fathers and statesmen create for their nations by wider consultation, constitutions that are people driven; widely consultative, content and process reflective of the people’s aspirations, stand the test of time, and cost-effective systems of constitution making processes. All presidents swear oath, to protect and preserve the Constitution, as the social-contract between the governing and the governed from time to time. This is what constitutes the rule of law.

9. Spirituality test. The spirituality of a leader affects the nation. If leaders are God-fearing, so goes the nation. If they are cultic or consult mediums and practice witchcraft, so goes the nation. They may hide it but it will manifest somehow, and the discerning will know the source of such activities. We do not necessarily need perfect leaders, but surely those willing to honour God at most. Human fallibility is inevitable but possibilities exist.

To place statesmanship above honouring God is a failure with God. Abrahamic accords destroy or build God-fearing nations (Genesis 12: 1-4). As a Christian Nation, we must honour God how we even vote at the United Nations (UN) at any given time, lest we offend God. Those in power must be aware that nations that come against Israel will be judged by God as goat nations at the end. We must remain a sheep nation, which obeys covenants

of God with Abrahamic seed (Matthew 25).

10. Transformative leadership. Transactional, transitional, and transgressional leadership cannot be valued for statesmanship or fathering of a nation. It is weak to shift the nation into greatness. Both independence and multipartism were shifts of fundamental quality for Zambia. However, afterwards, we have failed to take the nation to greatness of first world nation status, sadly. This makes the first and second presidents fathers and

statesmen. They both changed the form of the country significantly.

11. Good governance test. Good governance, transparency, and accountability have

been described as acceptable measures of best democratic practices globally. If any

president claims to be a father or statesman, they must exude these dispositions, not

degenerate without them. African leaders, are mostly culprits of failure to promote these

traits of political leadership in their countries, Zambia sadly included. That is why

statesmen and fathers are fewer.

12. Human development test. It is sad to note that since post-independence, successive presidencies have failed the Zambian people with relative human development. The human development index has been very low compared to our counterparts in developed countries like Norway currently in the lead. People should matter most to transformative leaders. The high poverty levels, inequalities, illiteracy, under-development, shanty compounds,

lack of sanitation, all are indicative of the un-dignified life of our people; mostly in rural

and peri-urban communities, sadly. We need a new political will for radical social-economic transformation. Zambians cannot wait anymore by more promises since independence. Now is the time to deliver on the need for human development, if at all we have fathers and Statesmen.

Finally, if these said qualities are not evident in any man, then they fail the required objective tests of fathering a nation and the prospects of being a statesman. Who is a statesman and father of the nation? The one with the aforementioned objective tests qualifies as statesman or father of a nation.

The author is MNT founding president. Email: shimunzadaniel@gmail.com.

Don’t Be Too Excited; Your Cases Could Land You In Tears Very Soon

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PRESS STATEMENT

28 TH MARCH 2022

DON’T BE TOO EXCITED; YOUR CASES COULD LAND YOU IN TEARS VERY SOON

PF members being arrested for corruption must tone down and stop being too excited. Zambians are not interested in stories of how clean they have become now or issuing threats to the Investigative Agencies. Those stories are for their fellow inmates once they are locked up. The fact that they are accused of being in possession of property reasonably suspected to be proceeds of crime means that the burden of proof of their innocence rests on their shoulders.

Should they fail to satisfy the Courts on how suddenly they became filthy rich, the law will take its course. Zambians are eagerly waiting for their stolen money from PF. In fact Zambians are very uncomfortable to continue mixing freely with these highly corrupt elements in our society. These corrupt elements must be very careful in whatever they say in front of cameras. Their excitement and arrogance will one day end up in tears. INSANSA SHINYA UBULANDA.

The issue of parading yourselves before the cameras each time you are arrested is uncalled for. Why are you all of a sudden claiming that you are innocent? Just wait for your time to lay your evidence before the Courts of law. Whatever you have as your defense please keep that to yourself and use it in Court. You stole from the Zambian people therefore don’t expect Zambians to sympathize with you, stop mocking them with your rhetoric. Zambians are only interested in seeing that what was stolen from them is recovered.

Always remember that, had you not stolen that money a life could have not been lost because the money you stole was meant to purchase drugs. Why would you want to hoodwink innocent Zambians in your greediness, it’s not Zambians that sent you to go and steal, you had a choice of stealing or not. Zambians will never sympathize with people who deprived them of jobs, decent living and sent their loved ones early to their graves. Crooks and thieves cannot appreciate anything, they think they are too cleaver that’s why they managed to steal and are still very free. The right place for any crook and criminal is prison; correctional facilities are just too decent.

Percy Chanda

UPND – NMC Member and Chairman for Mines

Youths, stop black ‘muntu mentality’ – Austin Mbozi

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Youths, stop black ‘muntu mentality’; otherwise UPND should arrest you for not repaying loans – Part 1

By Austin Mbozi

I praise UPND: first, they listened to my article ‘Mr. President, Pay Faith Musonda’s K65 million to UNZA staff’ (The Mast, 12/11/2021). They paid it to UNZA youth tuitions. Second, they will release huge funds for youth empowerment.

Here are next proposals to UPND. First, do to youths what Ghanaian philosopher Kwasi Wiredu calls ‘mental decolonisation’. Tell youths that their parents/teachers lied to them that it is slavery/colonialism/neo-colonialism/politicians making them poor. What makes us poor is our black ‘muntu mentality’ of consuming more, working lazily and wanting free things. Second, give loans only to youths who had been BOSSES/OWNERS in their respective businesses for a minimum four years. Third, those four-year experienced youths must employ, say, one youth per each K15,000 loan they get. Fourth, district administrators’ offices must monthly inspect details of each funded project and reposes it if it shows signs of wasting loans. Fifth, a youth failing to repay at least 60 per cent of the loan must repay it by working in prison for us, the tax payers contributing those loans.

To help UPND, I hereby address youths on ‘mental decolonisation’. Zambian youths, stop the ‘muntu mentality’ that makes blacks everywhere they live including USA, the poorest race. Stop believing in the lie that your poverty is due to the slavery/colonialism/neoliberal capitalism from the likes of Walter Rodney’s 1974 book How Europe Underdeveloped Africa. Even your fellow Zambian Azwell Banda is insinuating that rich people ‘hyenas’ feeding on the carcasses of suffering poor (The Mast 27/12/21). Azwell is writing from South Africa where he is enjoying the same capitalist/former apartheid wealth. Why did blacks not enslave/colonise/exploit the whites in the first place? Fact: blacks were already poorer during the white/black formal contacts in the 15th century. In 2005, philosopher Mathias Riise published a journal article, ‘How does the global order harm the poor?’ trying to support Azwell-type arguments. Yet, he admits that the wealth gap ratio between Europe and Africa was 3 to 1 in 1820. Why was Africa not richer? Fact: Because your ancestors could not get rich by gathering/ eating wild imbula fruits instead of producing. Europeans did not enslave your ancestors because they were black but because they were productively weaker. White ancient Greeks kept white slaves and later kept Indians at Natal. Arabs of King Pharaoh kept ‘white’ Israelites of Moses. A black freed slave wrote a biography, Equiano’s Travels (1967): His own Igbo tribesmen caught and sold him to fellow Africans, initially as a domestic slave. On October 25, 1897, British resident representative in Barotseland Major Robert T Coryndon announced to King Lewanika that the British government has banned slavery. The indunas refused to release my Tonga slave ancestors and nearly fought him.

Some blacks even credit slavery for being born in the great America rather than backward Africa. When Muhamad Ali visited Zaire (Congo DR) in 1974 to fight George Foreman he joked that, ‘’thank God my granddaddy got on that [slave carrying] boat!’’ Thus, at the World Conference against Racism in Durban in September 2001, Senegalise president Abdoulaye Wade rejected suggestions of Europeans compensating Africa, saying that even his own ancestors kept slaves.

Revise history, stop self-pity. Your unproductive ancestors enabled the evils of slavery. Yet, in an article ‘Colonialism and Economic Development’ published in 2012 , researchers Leander Helding and Robinson James found that colonialism actually increased life expectancy in Uganda and Zimbabwe from a mere average of 24 in 1942 to 32 in 1965. But you messed it. Zambia inherited from colonial masters a per capital GDP of over US $500. But this declined to $250 by 1991. Now governments feed you on nkongole.

Replace your ‘muntu mentality’. Get great ideas from Chika Onyeani’s book ‘Capitalist Nigger’. In 2001, addressing a black entrepreneurship conference at the Morgan State University, Maryland, USA he said: ‘’my topic today is about the Black Race…My discussion is about the truth; it is about honesty and frankness. It is about no more lies, no more hiding the truth, and no more blaming others for what is happening to the Black Race. It is about accepting responsibility for our actions; it is about playing the same games that others are playing and becoming successful. …The Black Race as now constituted, though as endowed as others, is a non-productive race. We have to accept the fact that the Black Race basically is a consumer race, depending on other communities for culture, language, our feeding and our clothing.’’

You think Onyeani is just yapping? Are you crazy? Onyeani was a successful businessman, beating whites within the USA. He is an Igbo, the most successful black ethnic group on earth. Don’t argue. You Zambians feared president Edgar Lungu, barking at him in dark corners in fear like puppies barking at an elephant with tails pulled behind their behind legs. But an Igbo, Seer 1, fought him out as ‘One commando’. Even that Chinua Achebe you learn in high school literature is Igbo. Jay Jay Okocha and Nwanko Kanu whose soccer dribbles you enjoy watching are an Igbo. Innocent Chukwuma who makes Innoson Motor vehicles is Igbo.

Your leaders like Kenneth Kaunda, Frederick Chiluba, Michael Sata or Edgar you accuse of causing your poverty come from your muntu mentality community as you. So, it is a ‘muntu mentality’ voting for a ‘muntu mentality’. Among productive peoples like Asian Tigers, even dictators grew economies, like Adolf Hitler did. Asian and white Zambians, living among these your leaders, are prospering. Their culture is productive, selling you expensive phones and jackets they don’t wear. No wonder non-Christian Chinese mock you that they can manufacture and sell Jesus to you.

Watch out for Part 2 on Thursday 24 March 2022

The deeper this author gets into his PhD, the more he realises that most African PhD holders are only increasing their consumption/pomposity, not productivity.

Email: austin.mbozi2017@gmail.com. Phone: +260 978 741920.