Ngezi Platinum Stars have parted ways with head coach Benjani Mwaruwari and his assistant Bongani Mafu after 13 games in charge.
More to follow…
Ngezi Platinum Stars have parted ways with head coach Benjani Mwaruwari and his assistant Bongani Mafu after 13 games in charge.
More to follow…
THE family of slain Citizens’ Coalition for Change (CCC) activist Moreblessing Ali have been hounded out of their Chitungwiza house by Zanu PF activists while suspected state security agents are periodically visiting the home, instilling fear.
The family were driven out of their St Mary’s home soon after CCC held a prayer meeting at Moreblessing’s home on 13 June. The prayer meeting was attended by CCC leader Nelson Chamisa and other senior party officials.
Family members told The NewsHawks that Moreblessing’s son Silence and brother Wellington are in hiding since being hounded out of their home.
Moreblessing was kidnapped by a Zanu PF activist Pius Jamba in Nyatsime on 24 May and her dismembered body was found in a disused well on 11 June. Jamba was arrested in Hurungwe five days after the body was discovered at his mother’s plot. He indicated that he killed Moreblessing soon after abducting her.
Moreblessing’s body has still not been buried, two months after her murder.
Among other stipulations, the family are insisting that they will only bury her upon the release of their lawyer Job Sikhala, who was at the forefront of demanding justice for Moreblessing.
Sikhala has been incarcerated for over three weeks alongside Chitungwiza North member of Parliament Godfrey Sithole charged with inciting public violence.
Speaking from his hideout, Silence said burial arrangements for his slain mother will only begin after the release of their family lawyer. The family is also demanding answers on what happened to Moreblessing.
“There is nothing we can do while Job Sikhala is still in prison. We cannot proceed with burial arrangements for my mother while Mr Sikhala is still I in custody. We want to know the truth about her death and guidance from our family lawyer, Job Sikhala,” he said.
After the recovery of Moreblessing’s badly mutilated body, the family released a list of demands to be met before they could proceed with burial. These include the arrest of Nyatsime councillor Masimbi Masimbi and Nyatsime Zanu PF branch chairperson Simba Chisango, whom they are implicating.
Chisango is Jamba’s brother.
Masimbi made news during the first days of mourning after dispersing the Ali family and CCC members who had gathered at Moreblessing’s home. He “banned” the funeral, claiming to be the owner of the area where the deceased had been staying.
This resulted in violent clashes between CCC and Zanu PF supporters.
“We maintain the family position in that everyone involved in the murder of my mother should be arrested before we bury. That means Pius Jamba is not the only person in this murder. Simba Chisango told me in front of a Zanu PF crowd that if we fail to locate my mother, he would direct me to his brother, meaning he knew what had happened,” Silence said.
He also implicated Masimbi.
“He came to the house questioning me and pushing me to encourage my family to proceed with burial, and not politicise the death. He even stopped me from distributing fliers that would assist us in finding my mother. At one time, he said police were calling him to retrieve a body in some dam, but he was not very open with me,” Silence added.
Meanwhile, Jamba was remanded in custody and is awaiting indictment in the High Court for the murder. His next court appearance is on 28 July.
Wellington Ali, brother to the deceased, is also in hiding after he was attacked by Zanu activists at the Ali home after the prayer meeting.
He said it is not safe to return to his parents’ house.
“What is happening with this funeral has never happened at any funeral. We are no longer safe even as we are talking to you we are no longer open in this free Zimbabwe,” said Wellington.
The family are so fearful that they are yet to collect the belongings of the deceased from the police, despite an invitation to do so.
“We were asked to go and get my mother’s phones and clothes, but we never went there because of the threats that we had received, we are yet to go and collect the things,” Silence added.
He added that the family home is under constant surveillance from suspected state security agents.
“People call us and tell us of unmarked vehicles parked outside the house. We cannot go back there. We have asked some people to remove our belongings. We do not feel safe,” said Ali.
-Newshawks
Susan Vivian Mutami, a 33-ear-old Zimbabwean woman who lived with President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his wife, Auxillia, as a teenager, has filed rape charges against the 79-year-old Zanu PF leader with the Queensland Police Service in Australia.
Source: ZimLive
By A Correspondent- President Emmerson Mnangagwa will today officiate over the burial of the late Minister of State for Provincial Affairs and Devolution for Harare Metropolitan Province, Senator Oliver Mandishonha Chidawu.
Chidawu passed away on 19 July 2022, from cardiac arrest.
Said the Information ministry:
President Emmerson Mnangagwa @edmnangagwa will today preside over the burial of the late Minister of State for Provincial Affairs and Devolution for Harare Metropolitan Province, Senator Oliver Mandishonha Chidawu. He passed away on 19 July 2022, from cardiac arrest.
By A Correspondent- The Government has ordered schools that have charged formal candidates centre fees for Zimbabwe School Examinations Council (ZIMSEC) November examinations to reverse the transactions.
This follows reports that some school heads were demanding between US$10 and US$25 as centre fees for formal examination candidates enrolled in their schools.
Some schools reportedly barred prospective ZIMSEC candidates from paying registration fees.
Previously, centre fees were paid by external candidates while formal learners were exempted from paying that fee.
Director of Communications and Advocacy in the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education, Taungana Ndoro said:
We are not aware of that but we will be investigating the matter.
Students in formal school are not to be charged that fee. It is illegal for schools to do that.
Those that are doing so should stop while those that have done so already should reimburse the parents.
Registration commenced on Friday with the fees in US dollar terms set at US$10 per subject for Grade 7, while it is US$11 per subject for O-level and A-level is at US$22 per subject.
ZIMSEC announced that schools must use an exchange rate of ZWL$454.7 to US$1 when collecting the fees.
Meanwhile, registration will close on Friday.
The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) will release the Mosi-oa-Tunya gold coins onto the market today and they will be sold in local currency, US$ and other foreign currencies.
Their price is based on the prevailing international price of gold plus five percent to cover the cost of production and distribution of the coin on a payment versus delivery basis.
Individuals and institutional buyers of the coins will be required to hold them for at least 180 days before selling them while exporters earning less than US$1million will be allowed to use the surrender portion of their receipts to purchase the coins in foreign currency.
The Mosi-oa-Tunya gold coin, named after Victoria Falls is made mostly of gold.
Most gold coins minted since 1800 are 90–92 percent gold (22 carats), while most of today’s gold bullion coins are pure gold, such as the Britannia, Canadian Maple Leaf, and American Buffalo.
Alloyed gold coins, like the American Gold Eagle and South African Krugerrand, are typically 91,7 percent gold by weight, with the remainder being silver and copper.
In a statement, RBZ said once payment has been received by the selling agent, the buyer of the gold coin shall take physical possession of the gold coin or opt to keep the gold coin through bankers of own choice (custodial services) on terms and conditions of the custodial service provider.
-Online
By-Police have raided a truck carrying CCC party regalia from South Africa through the Beitbridge Border Post.
The police also arrested the driver of a commercial truck transporting the regalia.
According to the Police, the truck driver, Chamunorwa Shonhiwa, is expected to appear in court soon, facing a smuggling charge.
It is reported that the vehicle was raided at the Chicago security checkpoint, some 12km along the Beitbridge to Harare highway.
Police officer commanding Beitbridge district, Chief Superintendent Tichaona Nyongo, confirmed the incident yesterday.
“The matter is still under investigation and we will give you further information at a later stage,” he said.
A source close to the investigations said Chamunorwa was found with 108 golf t-shirts branded with CCC political messages and logos.
The value of the goods is yet to be ascertained.
“During interrogation, the driver claimed he was given the political regalia by one man identified only as Magumise.
“The consignment was destined for Chivi under Masvingo province. However, upon getting to the border, the driver didn’t declare the goods as per standard practice,” said a security official.
By- The opposition Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) has announced victory in two by-elections conducted in Chipinge and Kariba.
The by-elections took place on Saturday and were held in Ward 16 under Chipinge Rural District Council (RDC) and in Kariba’s Ward 5.
Posting on their Twitter page, CCC, their candidate in Chipinge Ward 16 garnered 1 291 votes, while the Zanu PF candidate won 1 205 votes.
CCC also said their candidate in Kariba Ward 5 won 303 votes, while the Zanu PF candidate amassed 175 votes.
ZEC has not yet officially announced the results for the two by-elections.
By-Zanu PF supporters in Motoko have beaten up CCC members.
CCC deputy President Tendai Biti posted on his Twitter announcing the brutal attacks on his party activists.
He posted:
The brutal attack on
cadres in Mutoko this afternoon is both barbaric and unacceptable.The closure of space under Emmerson Mnangwagwa &attack on democratic forces is unprecedented. Having failed to deliver a sustainable Zim ,the regime has resorted to fascism #Shame
By- Zanu PF has lost the Chipinge and Kariba local government by-elections to the opposition Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC).
The by-elections took place on Saturday and were held in Ward 16 under Chipinge Rural District Council (RDC) and in Kariba’s Ward 5.
Posting on their Twitter page, CCC, said their candidate in Chipinge Ward 16 garnered 1 291 votes, while the Zanu PF candidate won 1 205 votes.
CCC also said their candidate in Kariba Ward 5 won 303 votes, while the Zanu PF candidate amassed 175 votes.
ZEC has not yet officially announced the results for the two by-elections.
Tinashe Sambiri|CCC leader President Nelson Chamisa has appealed to Ama2000 to register to vote in numbers.
The CCC leader urged young people to join the citizens’ struggle for political emancipation.
“This is it!! Zimbabwe needs all of us thinking, walking, working and acting together. This is a Citizens’ struggle,” said President Chamisa.
He was responding to Advocate Thabani Mpofu’s tweet below:
Thabani Mpofu
@adv_fulcrum
· Jul 19
Let’s have 100 000 citizens in the middle class take upon themselves the obligation to register ama2000. 10 kids each. That’s a million new voters. Does not even cost $100. The middle class has the country’s future right in its hands. Let’s do this.
Tinashe Sambiri| CCC leader, President Nelson Chamisa is ready to serve the nation with humility and dignity.
President Chamisa has emphasized the importance of integrity and humility at a time the Zanu PF leader Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa stands accused of forcing himself on minors at some point.
“MY HOPE is to shepherd our great nation with integrity of heart & skillful hands.And to serve ZIMBABWE with love,in peace & with excellence,leading in righteousness and justice.
In the end, being noble & honourable in my service to the Republic and it’s citizens.#Sabbathprayer.”
On Thursday Joseph Kalimbwe of UNDP Zambia said:
“Try fresh ideas, try new thoughts, try Mukomana.
Support Nero Comrades. The stakes are too high to give up or else you will be in deeper problems. It’s for your sake.”
UN Report: Global Hunger
The number of people affected by hunger globally rose to as many as 828 million in 2021, an increase of about 46 million since 2020 and 150 million since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic (1), according to a United Nations report that provides fresh evidence that the world is moving further away from its goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms by 2030.
The 2022 edition of The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report presents updates on the food security and nutrition situation around the world, including the latest estimates of the cost and affordability of a healthy diet. The report also looks at ways in which governments can repurpose their current support to agriculture to reduce the cost of healthy diets, mindful of the limited public resources available in many parts of the world.
The report was jointly published today by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
The numbers paint a grim picture:
As many as 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021 – 46 million people more from a year earlier and 150 million more from 2019.
After remaining relatively unchanged since 2015, the proportion of people affected by hunger jumped in 2020 and continued to rise in 2021, to 9.8% of the world population. This compares with 8% in 2019 and 9.3% in 2020.
Around 2.3 billion people in the world (29.3%) were moderately or severely food insecure in 2021 – 350 million more compared to before the outbreak of the COVID‑19 pandemic. Nearly 924 million people (11.7% of the global population) faced food insecurity at severe levels, an increase of 207 million in two years.
The gender gap in food insecurity continued to rise in 2021 – 31.9% of women in the world were moderately or severely food insecure, compared to 27.6% of men – a gap of more than 4 percentage points, compared with 3 percentage points in 2020.
Almost 3.1 billion people could not afford a healthy diet in 2020, up 112 million from 2019, reflecting the effects of inflation in consumer food prices stemming from the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and the measures put in place to contain it.
An estimated 45 million children under the age of five were suffering from wasting, the deadliest form of malnutrition, which increases children’s risk of death by up to 12 times. Furthermore, 149 million children under the age of five had stunted growth and development due to a chronic lack of essential nutrients in their diets, while 39 million were overweight.
Progress is being made on exclusive breastfeeding, with nearly 44% of infants under 6 months of age being exclusively breastfed worldwide in 2020. This is still short of the 50% target by 2030. Of great concern, 2 in 3 children are not fed the minimum diverse diet they need to grow and develop to their full potential.
Looking forward, projections are that nearly 670 million people (8% of the world population) will still be facing hunger in 2030 – even if a global economic recovery is taken into consideration. This is a similar number to 2015, when the goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition by the end of this decade was launched under the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
As this report is being published, the ongoing war in Ukraine, involving two of the biggest global producers of staple cereals, oilseeds and fertilizer, is disrupting international supply chains and pushing up the prices of grain, fertilizer, energy, as well as ready-to-use therapeutic food for children with severe malnutrition. This comes as supply chains are already being adversely affected by increasingly frequent extreme climate events, especially in low-income countries, and has potentially sobering implications for global food security and nutrition.
“This report repeatedly highlights the intensification of these major drivers of food insecurity and malnutrition: conflict, climate extremes and economic shocks, combined with growing inequalities,” the heads of the five UN agencies (2) wrote in this year’s Foreword. “The issue at stake is not whether adversities will continue to occur or not, but how we must take bolder action to build resilience against future shocks.”
Repurposing agricultural policies
The report notes as striking that worldwide support for the food and agricultural sector averaged almost US$ 630 billion a year between 2013 and 2018. The lion’s share of it goes to individual farmers, through trade and market policies and fiscal subsidies. However, not only is much of this support market-distorting, but it is not reaching many farmers, hurts the environment and does not promote the production of nutritious foods that make up a healthy diet. That’s in part because subsidies often target the production of staple foods, dairy and other animal source foods, especially in high- and upper-middle-income countries. Rice, sugar and meats of various types are most incentivized food items worldwide, while fruits and vegetables are relatively less supported, particularly in some low-income countries.
With the threats of a global recession looming, and the implications this has on public revenues and expenditures, a way to support economic recovery involves the repurposing of food and agricultural support to target nutritious foods where per capita consumption does not yet match the recommended levels for healthy diets.
The evidence suggests that if governments repurpose the resources they are using to incentivize the production, supply and consumption of nutritious foods, they will contribute to making healthy diets less costly, more affordable and equitably for all.
Finally, the report also points out that governments could do more to reduce trade barriers for nutritious foods, such as fruits, vegetables and pulses.
(1) It is estimated that between 702 and 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021. The estimate is presented as a range to reflect the added uncertainty in data collection due to the COVID-19 pandemic and related restrictions. The increases are measured with reference to the middle of the projected range (768 million).
(2) For FAO – QU Dongyu, Director-General; for IFAD – Gilbert F. Houngbo, President; for UNICEF – Catherine Russell, Executive Director; for WFP – David Beasley, Executive Director; for WHO – Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General.
What they said
FAO Director-General QU Dongyu: “Low-income countries, where agriculture is key to the economy, jobs and rural livelihoods, have little public resources to repurpose. FAO is committed to continue working together with these countries to explore opportunities for increasing the provision of public services for all actors across agrifood systems.”
IFAD President Gilbert F. Houngbo: “These are depressing figures for humanity. We continue to move away from our goal of ending hunger by 2030. The ripple effects of the global food crisis will most likely worsen the outcome again next year. We need a more intense approach to end hunger and IFAD stands ready to do its part by scaling up its operations and impact. We look forward to having everyone’s support.”
UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell: “The unprecedented scale of the malnutrition crisis demands an unprecedented response. We must double our efforts to ensure that the most vulnerable children have access to nutritious, safe, and affordable diets — and services for the early prevention, detection and treatment of malnutrition. With so many children’s lives and futures at stake, this is the time to step up our ambition for child nutrition – and we have no time to waste.”
WFP Executive Director David Beasley: “There is a real danger these numbers will climb even higher in the months ahead. The global price spikes in food, fuel and fertilizers that we are seeing as a result of the crisis in Ukraine threaten to push countries around the world into famine. The result will be global destabilization, starvation, and mass migration on an unprecedented scale. We have to act today to avert this looming catastrophe.”
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus: “Every year, 11 million people die due to unhealthy diets. Rising food prices mean this will only get worse. WHO supports countries’ efforts to improve food systems through taxing unhealthy foods and subsidising healthy options, protecting children from harmful marketing, and ensuring clear nutrition labels. We must work together to achieve the 2030 global nutrition targets, to fight hunger and malnutrition, and to ensure that food is a source of health for all.”
GLOSSARY
Acute food insecurity: food insecurity found in a specified area at a specific point in time and of a severity that threatens lives or livelihoods, or both, regardless of the causes, context or duration. Has relevance in providing strategic guidance to actions that focus on short-term objectives to prevent, mitigate or decrease severe food insecurity.
Hunger: an uncomfortable or painful sensation caused by insufficient energy from diet. Food deprivation. In this report, the term hunger is synonymous with chronic undernourishment and is measured by the prevalence of undernourishment (PoU).
Malnutrition: an abnormal physiological condition caused by inadequate, unbalanced or excessive intake of macronutrients and/or micronutrients. Malnutrition includes undernutrition (child stunting and wasting, and vitamin and mineral deficiencies) as well as overweight and obesity.
Moderate food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which people face uncertainties about their ability to obtain food and have been forced to reduce, at times during the year, the quality and/or quantity of food they consume due to lack of money or other resources. It refers to a lack of consistent access to food, which diminishes dietary quality and disrupts normal eating patterns. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Severe food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which, at some time during the year, people have run out of food, experienced hunger and at the most extreme, gone without food for a day or more. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Undernourishment: a condition in which an individual’s habitual food consumption is insufficient to provide the amount of dietary energy required to maintain a normal, active, healthy life. The prevalence of undernourishment is used to measure hunger (SDG indicator 2.1.1).
Source: World Health Organization
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Benjani Mwaruwari’s struggles continue, after his Ngezi Platinum Stars succumbed to yet another defeat, a 0-1 loss to Yadah at the National Sports Stadium yesterday.
The former Warriors captain has now led his charges to one victory in the last seven matches.
The last time he was in Harare, his misfiring troops were taught a football lesson by Herentals, who demolished Madamburo 3-0 at the National Sports Stadium.
Yesterday, Tanaka Shandirwa’s solitary strike on the stroke of half time, was the difference between the two sides and Mwaruwari said the Madamburo faithful has the right to not be happy.
“We have to rectify our mistakes,” the former Manchester City striker said in his post-match interview.
“Obviously, the supporters have the right to complain when things are not working but the same supporters if we start winning they will be on our side. I feel for them but in future, we will work so hard so that we can be together,” Mwaruwari added.
Benjani has now presided over 13 matches he since he took over from Rodwell Dhlakama. He has won three, drawn six and lost four.- Soccer 24 Zimbabwe
Dynamos finally ended their four-match winless run in the Castle Lager Premier Soccer League with a 3-0 victory over Chicken Inn on Saturday afternoon at Barbourfields Stadium.
DeMbare had last won in early June when they beat CAPS United in the Harare Derby.
The Glamour Boys secured their emphatic victory through second-half goals from Frank Makarati, Blessing Makunike and Emmanuel Paga.
Alex Orotomal won a penalty in the 46th minute that was slotted home by Makarati.
Makunike followed up with the second in the 56th minute before Paga sealed the victory in the 66th minute.
Dynamos are now in third place on 39 points, while second-placed Chicken Inn fell six points behind leaders FC Platinum who beat ZPC Kariba 1-0.
In other matches played on Saturday, Yadah edged Ngezi Platinum Stars 1-0 while Cranborne Bullets beat Harare City 2-1.- Pindula News
A Bulawayo family is appealing for R45 000 to repatriate the remains of their relative who died in a car crash in Cape Town, South Africa last month.
Innocent Nyoni (58) died in the accident which occurred on the N2 Highway in Caledon, Cape Town and the family says it has been struggling to raise money to bring his body home for burial.
Nyoni died on June 29 this year and his body has been at Hermunus State Mortuary in Western Cape, South Africa.
In an interview, family’s spokesperson, Ms Rosemary Nyoni (67), said the family was only informed a week after his passing on July 3, while the mortuary bill was already piling up.
She appealed for financial assistance from members of the public and well-wishers so that Nyoni can be laid to rest in Bulawayo.
“The oni family would like to appeal for urgent assistance in bringing to Bulawayo the remains of the late Innocent Mandla Nyoni who passed on in a tragic road traffic accident in Cape Town.
We have tried as a family to raise the money but we have failed. This is our cry for help,” she said.
Ms Nyoni said they need about US$3 000 or R45 000 to repatriate the late Nyoni’s body for burial in Bulawayo.
Those who may wish to assist the Nyoni family can contact Nyoni’s brother Chemist Ncube on 0774 669 892/ 0713 140 383 or his niece Pinky Nyoni on +278 342… -Chronicle
Parents whose children are pupils at Mpopoma High School in Bulawayo are collecting signatures in an effort to petition authorities to remove a billboard that was erected just outside the learning institution advertising cigarettes.
The billboard, erected at beginning of this month, promotes the Pacific Cigarette brand.
A blogger, Mr Michael Mbele who initiated the plan to petition Government and council to remove the billboard said he is concerned that the billboard could influence children to smoke.
“I am seriously concerned about Mpopoma High students because that Pacific billboard will have devastating effects on them”, said Mr Mbele
Mr Allan Moyo who has a son who learns at Mpopoma High School said the billboard sends a wrong message as some pupils are already suffering from drug abuse.
He said it will be difficult for pupils to be advised against substance abuse when they are exposed to such a billboard.
“How are our children expected to learn when the first thing that they see before entering the school premises is a cigarette advert?” asked Mr Moyo.
He said he hopes that something positive will come out of their petition.
“If the petition that parents are trying to put together does not work matters of substance abuse will worsen,” he added.
The petition will ask the Government and the city council to have the billboard removed.
Ms Sistance Moyo, a Mpopoma resident said she does not understand why such an advert was put in front of a school.
“l do not understand why there is such an ad in front of a school gate when there are lot of pubs and beer gardens around Mpopoma.
They should be advertising scholarships here and not what they are doing,” she said.
Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education spokesperson Mr Taungana Ndoro said there is nothing wrong with the advert as long as it carries a message that says ‘smoking is harmful to your health’ as it teaches children that they must not smoke.
Efforts to get a comment from Pacific Cigarette Company were unsuccessful.–Chronicle
The Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) on Friday barred the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition (CiCZ) from marching against an alleged increase in human rights violations in the country.
The CiCZ had planned to march from the Harare Gardens to the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission (ZHRC) and Parliament building on Friday (yesterday) to deliver a petition against the erosion of human rights.
However, in a letter dated 18 July, the officer commanding Harare central district Chief Superintendent G Moyo said the march had not been approved.
Chief Superintendent Moyo said CiCZ “did not comply with section 7 of the Maintenance of Peace and Order Act Chapter 11: 23.
CiCZ chairperson Peter Mutasa told NewsDay that they have since approached the courts challenging the ban.
A ruling on their appeal is expected this Saturday.
NewsDay
Dynamos finally ended their four-match winless run in the Castle Lager Premier Soccer League with a 3-0 victory over Chicken Inn on Saturday afternoon at Barbourfields Stadium.
DeMbare had last won in early June when they beat CAPS United in the Harare Derby.
The Glamour Boys secured their emphatic victory through second-half goals from Frank Makarati, Blessing Makunike and Emmanuel Paga.
Alex Orotomal won a penalty in the 46th minute that was slotted home by Makarati.
Makunike followed up with the second in the 56th minute before Paga sealed the victory in the 66th minute.
Dynamos are now in third place on 39 points, while second-placed Chicken Inn fell six points behind leaders FC Platinum who beat ZPC Kariba 1-0.
In other matches played on Saturday, Yadah edged Ngezi Platinum Stars 1-0 while Cranborne Bullets beat Harare City 2-1.- Pindula News
The Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) on Friday barred the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition (CiCZ) from marching against an alleged increase in human rights violations in the country.
The CiCZ had planned to march from the Harare Gardens to the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission (ZHRC) and Parliament building on Friday (yesterday) to deliver a petition against the erosion of human rights.
However, in a letter dated 18 July, the officer commanding Harare central district Chief Superintendent G Moyo said the march had not been approved.
Chief Superintendent Moyo said CiCZ “did not comply with section 7 of the Maintenance of Peace and Order Act Chapter 11: 23.
CiCZ chairperson Peter Mutasa told NewsDay that they have since approached the courts challenging the ban.
A ruling on their appeal is expected this Saturday.
NewsDay
Benjani Mwaruwari’s struggles continue, after his Ngezi Platinum Stars succumbed to yet another defeat, a 0-1 loss to Yadah at the National Sports Stadium yesterday.
The former Warriors captain has now led his charges to one victory in the last seven matches.
The last time he was in Harare, his misfiring troops were taught a football lesson by Herentals, who demolished Madamburo 3-0 at the National Sports Stadium.
Yesterday, Tanaka Shandirwa’s solitary strike on the stroke of half time, was the difference between the two sides and Mwaruwari said the Madamburo faithful has the right to not be happy.
“We have to rectify our mistakes,” the former Manchester City striker said in his post-match interview.
“Obviously, the supporters have the right to complain when things are not working but the same supporters if we start winning they will be on our side. I feel for them but in future, we will work so hard so that we can be together,” Mwaruwari added.
Benjani has now presided over 13 matches he since he took over from Rodwell Dhlakama. He has won three, drawn six and lost four.- Soccer 24 Zimbabwe
Dynamos ended their four-match winless run with a 3-0 victory over Chicken Inn on Matchday 22 of the Castle Lager Premier Soccer League.
The Glamour Boys had last won in early June when they beat CAPS United in the Harare Derby.
Second-half goals from Frank Makarati, Blessing Makunike and Emmanuel Paga secured the victory.
Makarati opened the scoring from the spot in the 47th minute following a foul on Alex Orotomal inside the box.
Makunike followed up with the second seven minutes later with his deflected finding the back of the net. The goal was his first in the Dynamos colours.
Paga sealed the victory in the 66th minute after connecting Makanda’s cross.
The result lifted Dynamos to 39 points in third place, while second-placed Chicken Inn suffered a blow in the title race as they fell six points behind leaders FC Platinum.
The Platinum Boys opened the gap thanks to their 1-0 victory over ZPC Kariba, who slumped into the relegation zone.
Donald Tegure scored the only goal of the match in the 61st minute.
Elsewhere, Yadah edged Ngezi Platinum Stars while Cranborne Bullets beat Harare City 2-1.- Soccer 24 Zimbabwe
Tinashe Sambiri|President Nelson Chamisa’s CCC romped to victory in the Kariba and Chipinge by-elections held on Saturday.
A few months after its formation, CCC is giving Zanu PF hoodlums a torrid time.
See below prominent journalist Hopewell Chin’ono’s presentation of results:
CCC which is led by charismatic young leader Nelson Chamisa has won the Kariba ward 5 By-Election.
CCC won with 303 votes.
The beleaguered and highly unpopular ruling party ZANUPF got 175 votes.
ZANUPF has failed to run the economy!
Zimbabwe’s main opposition CCC led by Nelson Chamisa has won the Chipinge West Ward 16 By-Election.
CCC got 1291 votes and the ruling party ZANU PF got 1205.
However the margin difference between CCC and ZANUPF is still worrying in a shattered economy.
It requires more people to register to vote for 2023 of CCC and Nelson Chamisa want an emphatic victory which can’t be rigged by ZANUPF.
CCC spokesperson Fadzayi Mahere said:
“Victory is only certain of citizens register to vote!
Thank you, citizens, for yet another landslide victory for the yellow movement. Despite intimidation, vote buying & attempts to rig, you chose change in Kariba & Chipinge. We won both by-elections emphatically. Thank you polling agents for defending the vote. #FakaPressure.”
Staff Writer
Controversial philanthropist and healthcare worker Susan Mutami has pointed out the Zanu PF leader Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa forced himself on her.
However, an analysis made by ZimEye.com shows Mutami is not completely innocent in the whole saga…
UN Report: Global Hunger
The number of people affected by hunger globally rose to as many as 828 million in 2021, an increase of about 46 million since 2020 and 150 million since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic (1), according to a United Nations report that provides fresh evidence that the world is moving further away from its goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms by 2030.
The 2022 edition of The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report presents updates on the food security and nutrition situation around the world, including the latest estimates of the cost and affordability of a healthy diet. The report also looks at ways in which governments can repurpose their current support to agriculture to reduce the cost of healthy diets, mindful of the limited public resources available in many parts of the world.
The report was jointly published today by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
The numbers paint a grim picture:
As many as 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021 – 46 million people more from a year earlier and 150 million more from 2019.
After remaining relatively unchanged since 2015, the proportion of people affected by hunger jumped in 2020 and continued to rise in 2021, to 9.8% of the world population. This compares with 8% in 2019 and 9.3% in 2020.
Around 2.3 billion people in the world (29.3%) were moderately or severely food insecure in 2021 – 350 million more compared to before the outbreak of the COVID‑19 pandemic. Nearly 924 million people (11.7% of the global population) faced food insecurity at severe levels, an increase of 207 million in two years.
The gender gap in food insecurity continued to rise in 2021 – 31.9% of women in the world were moderately or severely food insecure, compared to 27.6% of men – a gap of more than 4 percentage points, compared with 3 percentage points in 2020.
Almost 3.1 billion people could not afford a healthy diet in 2020, up 112 million from 2019, reflecting the effects of inflation in consumer food prices stemming from the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and the measures put in place to contain it.
An estimated 45 million children under the age of five were suffering from wasting, the deadliest form of malnutrition, which increases children’s risk of death by up to 12 times. Furthermore, 149 million children under the age of five had stunted growth and development due to a chronic lack of essential nutrients in their diets, while 39 million were overweight.
Progress is being made on exclusive breastfeeding, with nearly 44% of infants under 6 months of age being exclusively breastfed worldwide in 2020. This is still short of the 50% target by 2030. Of great concern, 2 in 3 children are not fed the minimum diverse diet they need to grow and develop to their full potential.
Looking forward, projections are that nearly 670 million people (8% of the world population) will still be facing hunger in 2030 – even if a global economic recovery is taken into consideration. This is a similar number to 2015, when the goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition by the end of this decade was launched under the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
As this report is being published, the ongoing war in Ukraine, involving two of the biggest global producers of staple cereals, oilseeds and fertilizer, is disrupting international supply chains and pushing up the prices of grain, fertilizer, energy, as well as ready-to-use therapeutic food for children with severe malnutrition. This comes as supply chains are already being adversely affected by increasingly frequent extreme climate events, especially in low-income countries, and has potentially sobering implications for global food security and nutrition.
“This report repeatedly highlights the intensification of these major drivers of food insecurity and malnutrition: conflict, climate extremes and economic shocks, combined with growing inequalities,” the heads of the five UN agencies (2) wrote in this year’s Foreword. “The issue at stake is not whether adversities will continue to occur or not, but how we must take bolder action to build resilience against future shocks.”
Repurposing agricultural policies
The report notes as striking that worldwide support for the food and agricultural sector averaged almost US$ 630 billion a year between 2013 and 2018. The lion’s share of it goes to individual farmers, through trade and market policies and fiscal subsidies. However, not only is much of this support market-distorting, but it is not reaching many farmers, hurts the environment and does not promote the production of nutritious foods that make up a healthy diet. That’s in part because subsidies often target the production of staple foods, dairy and other animal source foods, especially in high- and upper-middle-income countries. Rice, sugar and meats of various types are most incentivized food items worldwide, while fruits and vegetables are relatively less supported, particularly in some low-income countries.
With the threats of a global recession looming, and the implications this has on public revenues and expenditures, a way to support economic recovery involves the repurposing of food and agricultural support to target nutritious foods where per capita consumption does not yet match the recommended levels for healthy diets.
The evidence suggests that if governments repurpose the resources they are using to incentivize the production, supply and consumption of nutritious foods, they will contribute to making healthy diets less costly, more affordable and equitably for all.
Finally, the report also points out that governments could do more to reduce trade barriers for nutritious foods, such as fruits, vegetables and pulses.
(1) It is estimated that between 702 and 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021. The estimate is presented as a range to reflect the added uncertainty in data collection due to the COVID-19 pandemic and related restrictions. The increases are measured with reference to the middle of the projected range (768 million).
(2) For FAO – QU Dongyu, Director-General; for IFAD – Gilbert F. Houngbo, President; for UNICEF – Catherine Russell, Executive Director; for WFP – David Beasley, Executive Director; for WHO – Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General.
What they said
FAO Director-General QU Dongyu: “Low-income countries, where agriculture is key to the economy, jobs and rural livelihoods, have little public resources to repurpose. FAO is committed to continue working together with these countries to explore opportunities for increasing the provision of public services for all actors across agrifood systems.”
IFAD President Gilbert F. Houngbo: “These are depressing figures for humanity. We continue to move away from our goal of ending hunger by 2030. The ripple effects of the global food crisis will most likely worsen the outcome again next year. We need a more intense approach to end hunger and IFAD stands ready to do its part by scaling up its operations and impact. We look forward to having everyone’s support.”
UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell: “The unprecedented scale of the malnutrition crisis demands an unprecedented response. We must double our efforts to ensure that the most vulnerable children have access to nutritious, safe, and affordable diets — and services for the early prevention, detection and treatment of malnutrition. With so many children’s lives and futures at stake, this is the time to step up our ambition for child nutrition – and we have no time to waste.”
WFP Executive Director David Beasley: “There is a real danger these numbers will climb even higher in the months ahead. The global price spikes in food, fuel and fertilizers that we are seeing as a result of the crisis in Ukraine threaten to push countries around the world into famine. The result will be global destabilization, starvation, and mass migration on an unprecedented scale. We have to act today to avert this looming catastrophe.”
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus: “Every year, 11 million people die due to unhealthy diets. Rising food prices mean this will only get worse. WHO supports countries’ efforts to improve food systems through taxing unhealthy foods and subsidising healthy options, protecting children from harmful marketing, and ensuring clear nutrition labels. We must work together to achieve the 2030 global nutrition targets, to fight hunger and malnutrition, and to ensure that food is a source of health for all.”
GLOSSARY
Acute food insecurity: food insecurity found in a specified area at a specific point in time and of a severity that threatens lives or livelihoods, or both, regardless of the causes, context or duration. Has relevance in providing strategic guidance to actions that focus on short-term objectives to prevent, mitigate or decrease severe food insecurity.
Hunger: an uncomfortable or painful sensation caused by insufficient energy from diet. Food deprivation. In this report, the term hunger is synonymous with chronic undernourishment and is measured by the prevalence of undernourishment (PoU).
Malnutrition: an abnormal physiological condition caused by inadequate, unbalanced or excessive intake of macronutrients and/or micronutrients. Malnutrition includes undernutrition (child stunting and wasting, and vitamin and mineral deficiencies) as well as overweight and obesity.
Moderate food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which people face uncertainties about their ability to obtain food and have been forced to reduce, at times during the year, the quality and/or quantity of food they consume due to lack of money or other resources. It refers to a lack of consistent access to food, which diminishes dietary quality and disrupts normal eating patterns. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Severe food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which, at some time during the year, people have run out of food, experienced hunger and at the most extreme, gone without food for a day or more. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Undernourishment: a condition in which an individual’s habitual food consumption is insufficient to provide the amount of dietary energy required to maintain a normal, active, healthy life. The prevalence of undernourishment is used to measure hunger (SDG indicator 2.1.1).
Source: World Health Organization
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Below is a list of correspondence emails from a family member of the rape complainant, Susan Mutami from early last year.
….
xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx
A complaint
18/02/2021, 21:50
xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx Simba I know this girl akamitiwa na ed akabvisiwa mimba then compansetion was kuendesa mai vake Ku Australia vakawana line house and a car
Good day xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx thank you for contacting your news network, ZimEye. We’ll get back to you as soon as possible.
But, meanwhile, are you able to tip us – is it:
ZimEye.com http://www.zimeye.net/ zimeye.com
Ask her aigara Ku mbizo
Akamitiwa achita form four
Pa Emtonjen secondary
Anosipinda se mwana waEd akamuendesa kuschool I think she is now a Dr
Please don’t publish my name ihama yangu
xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx
She is from gokwe
19/02/2021, 02:37
Many thanks Ma’am. How can we prove this?
Sent by Simba Chikanza
19/02/2021, 06:19
xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx
Mubvunzei kuti akaendasei kuAustralia ihama yangu chero muhHarare akatengerwa imba nemota Benz yaanoshandisa .
21/02/2021, 12:43
xxxxxx xxxxxxxxxn
I’ve been listening to that thing ya Susan you should have asked her what I told you. The lats time I met her was 2015 in Zimbabwe. All these allegations should be coming from Ed. Her dad was my late sister’s husband’s cousin. Actually he lived with my sister in Mbizo 19. She told me she was studying as a Dr then which was not a surprise because she was very bright. I’ve been to her grandmother’s home in Chinyenyetu in Gokwe. Akabvisiwa mimba ya Ed that was the passport to go to Australia after the mother was dening and was given options to go or disappear. She is well known at the airport as mwana wa Ed. I haven’t spoken to her after I met her but what I’m telling you is real.
Good day xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx thank you for contacting your news network, ZimEye. We’ll get back to you as soon as possible.
But, meanwhile, are you able to tip us – is it:
ZimEye.com http://www.zimeye.net/ zimeye.com
Story because I know she is lying just ask her how they went to Australia
xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx
She was pregnant when she was 17 doing form four at Emtonjen kuMbizo
?1
21/02/2021, 15:52
Right. Emtonjeni doesn’t have a secondary school.
21/02/2021, 17:42
Did you realise?
Sent by Simba Chikanza
xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx
No but either way she went to that school I remember pretty well
22/02/2021, 08:25
xxxxxx xxxxxxxxxn
I’m happy you exposed vakuru
22/02/2021, 17:27
xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx
Simba it’s very true akandiudza the time we met in Zimbabwe 2015 kuti she is always going for testing since vakuru vaka•••••••••••• naye. The guy on that call arikutaura chokwadi
VIDEO LOADING BELOW….
Tinashe Sambiri|President Nelson Chamisa’s CCC romped to victory in the Kariba and Chipinge by-elections held on Saturday.
A few months after its formation, CCC is giving Zanu PF hoodlums a torrid time.
See below prominent journalist Hopewell Chin’ono’s presentation of results:
CCC which is led by charismatic young leader Nelson Chamisa has won the Kariba ward 5 By-Election.
CCC won with 303 votes.
The beleaguered and highly unpopular ruling party ZANUPF got 175 votes.
ZANUPF has failed to run the economy!
Zimbabwe’s main opposition CCC led by Nelson Chamisa has won the Chipinge West Ward 16 By-Election.
CCC got 1291 votes and the ruling party ZANU PF got 1205.
However the margin difference between CCC and ZANUPF is still worrying in a shattered economy.
It requires more people to register to vote for 2023 of CCC and Nelson Chamisa want an emphatic victory which can’t be rigged by ZANUPF.
CCC spokesperson Fadzayi Mahere said:
“Victory is only certain of citizens register to vote!
Thank you, citizens, for yet another landslide victory for the yellow movement. Despite intimidation, vote buying & attempts to rig, you chose change in Kariba & Chipinge. We won both by-elections emphatically. Thank you polling agents for defending the vote. #FakaPressure.”
By- The late MDC founder Morgan Tsvangirai’s chief strategist, Maxwell Shumba, has announced that he will contest the 2023 presidential elections.
Shumba, who is now based in the United States of America, leads Zimbabwe People First (ZimFirst).
He said:
ZimFirst is a people-first party that is founded on principles of accountability, honesty and unity.
Our key message to the Zimbabwean people is we put forward the people’s welfare because people come first.
Our core message to the people of Zimbabwe is that we got independence, yes, and we need to unite to fight the war against poverty that has afflicted the majority of citizens because of ZANU PF, corruption, greed (and) incompetence.
ZimFirst has come with a leadership that is untainted, clean, and fresh.
Shumba said his party has devised a campaign strategy in response to how ZANU PF works and how it manages to stay in power despite its “unpopularity”. He said:
We do have a strategy for them that is beyond merely holding rallies to show off supporters.
We launched a Silent Revolution (Chimhukutira/Umtshetsha Phansi). Chimhukutira is a unique strategy that was developed based on the experience of past opposition failures to defeat Zanu PF.
I cannot divulge the details of our strategy, but I would like the nation to know that ZimFirst is here with a transformative vision for the country and ask for their support because together, we will make Zimbabwe work again.
Shumba failed to contest in the 2018 elections as his party had just been formed.
More: The Standard
By-The Emerson Mnangagwa-led government is planning to return ownership of land to former farmers whose farms were protected by the Bilateral Investment Protection and Promotion Agreements (BIPPAs).
These farms were seized during the fast-track land redistribution exercise at the turn of the Millenium.
Out of the 153 farms which were protected under the BIPPAs, about 116 were forcibly taken by the government during the land reform exercise.
Speaking to Business Times recently, Foreign Affairs and International Trade deputy minister David Musabayana said indigenous Zimbabweans will also get their land back. He said:
It’s very clear if you go to the Constitution, section 72 and you read it with Chapter 16.
We will certainly return land under the BIPPAs and that which was owned by indigenous people who have title deeds.
What the government has done so far is to regularise that and align the Constitution by saying whoever was dispossessed of their land during the land reform programme but with title deeds is going to be given their land back or given alternative land. That land is given back to its original holders.
If the land under BIPPAs was not occupied, they can be given back the occupation and there is an option for compensation.
The return of farms that were protected by BIPPAs is expected to mend relations between Zimbabwe and western countries after the former disregarded existing agreements.
More: Business Times
By James Gwati- President Emmerson Mnangagwa has been implicated in an embarrassing s*x scandal involving a minor.
Mnangagwa is said to have raped controversial healthcare worker and socialite Susan Mutami when she was young.
The controversial businesswoman also threatened to disclose how Mr Mnangagwa “killed” a young lady in Kwekwe.
“This man (Mnangagwa) raped me when I was a minor and tomorrow I am hosting a space where I will be telling everyone what u did,I’m also going to tell people what u did to that young girl who was studying at Kwekwe High School who later died and u paid all her funeral expenses. Satan,” fumed Mutami.
She was responding to Mr Mnangagwa’s tweet below:
President of Zimbabwe
@edmnangagwa
Jul 20:
A Parliament to be proud of.
Zimbabwe’s new Parliament is testament to our commitment to democracy and progress!
Tinashe Sambiri| CCC leader, President Nelson Chamisa is ready to serve the nation with humility and dignity.
President Chamisa has emphasized the importance of integrity and humility at a time the Zanu PF leader Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa stands accused of forcing himself on minors at some point.
“MY HOPE is to shepherd our great nation with integrity of heart & skillful hands.And to serve ZIMBABWE with love,in peace & with excellence,leading in righteousness and justice.
In the end, being noble & honourable in my service to the Republic and it’s citizens.#Sabbathprayer.”
On Thursday Joseph Kalimbwe of UNDP Zambia said:
“Try fresh ideas, try new thoughts, try Mukomana.
Support Nero Comrades. The stakes are too high to give up or else you will be in deeper problems. It’s for your sake.”
The World Health Organization has activated its highest alert level for the growing monkeypox outbreak, declaring the virus a public health emergency of international concern.
The rare designation means the WHO now views the outbreak as a significant enough threat to global health that a coordinated international response is needed to prevent the virus from spreading further and potentially escalating into a pandemic.
Although the declaration does not impose requirements on national governments, it serves as an urgent call for action. The WHO can only issue guidance and recommendations to its member states, not mandates. Member states are required to report events that pose a threat to global health.
monkeypox. But infections have increased substantially over the past several weeks, pushing WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus to issue the highest alert.
Before a global health emergency is declared, the WHO’s emergency committee meets to weigh the evidence and make a recommendation to the director general. The committee was unable to reach a consensus on whether monkeypox constitutes an emergency. Tedros, as the WHO’s chief, made the decision to issue the highest alert based on the rapid spread of the outbreak around the world.
“We have an outbreak that has spread around the world rapidly, through new modes of transmission, about which we understand too little,” Tedros said. “For all of these reasons, I have decided that the global monkeypox outbreak represents a public health emergency of international concern.”
More than 16,000 cases of monkeypox have been reported across more than 70 countries so far this year, and the number of confirmed infections rose 77% from late June through early July, according to WHO data. Men who have sex with men are currently at highest risk of infection.
Five deaths from the virus have been reported in Africa this year. No deaths have been reported outside Africa so far.
Most people are recovering from monkeypox in two to four weeks, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The virus causes a rash that can spread over the body. People who have caught the virus said the rash, which looks like pimples or blisters, can be very painful.
The current monkeypox outbreak is highly unusual because it is spreading widely in North American and European nations where the virus is not usually found. Historically, monkeypox has spread at low levels in remote parts of West and Central Africa where rodents and other animals carried the virus.
Europe is currently the global epicenter of the outbreak, reporting more than 80% of confirmed infections worldwide in 2022. The U.S. has reported more than 2,500 monkeypox cases so far across 44 states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico.
Tedros said the risk posed by monkeypox is moderate globally, but the threat is high in Europe. There’s clearly a risk that the virus will continue to spread around the world, he said, though it’s unlikely to disrupt global trade or travel right now.
In early May, the United Kingdom reported a case of monkeypox in a person who recently returned from travel to Nigeria. Several days later, the U.K. reported three more cases of monkeypox in people who appeared to have become infected locally. Other European nations, Canada and the U.S. then also began confirming cases. It’s unclear where the outbreak actually began.
-CNBC
Four years after President Emmerson Mnangagwa survived an assassination attempt it has emerged that a former soldier, who was convicted by the military for the grenade attack, was in India on the day it happened.
Mnangagwa was leaving the VIP tent at White City Stadium on June 23, 2018 after a Zanu PF campaign rally when a grenade was thrown in his direction.
Scores of people including former Vice-President Kembo Mohadi and Defence minister and Zanu PF chairperson, Oppah Muchinguri, security aides, politicians and supporters suffered varying degrees of injuries from the blast.
It has since emerged that Tendai Kandima, an ex-corporal and Special Forces (SAS) training dropout, was convicted by a military court martial in February 2019, but the case was kept under wraps until now after this publication obtained his court documents.
Kandima says he was detained at an unknown remote area following his arrest after he “confessed” that he was behind the attack.
He says he did that after he came across a message offering monetary rewards for people with information about the assassination plot.
Kandima, who is said to be not an expert in handling bombs, was in India for medical attention for a chronic heart ailment on the day the incident happened.
He is now appealing against both the conviction and the sentence in a case that could shed light on the investigations into the case that the government has not commented about.
“The accused member has got a serious medical condition and I believe at one time he was in India for medical attention,” Kandima’s legal team from Lawman Law Chambers submitted in the Supreme Court appeal.
“He has got a heart problem whereby he cannot stand for a long time, which is a very serious condition.
“He was in India from June 13 up to June 26 that is when he was going through all those examinations.
“The accused has no capacity whatsoever to conduct the said allegations in that charge considering the fact that the military training that he has received since the date of attestation up to present day, he just did basic military training, medical training class 3 and 4.
“So with these courses, I do not think that he was in any position or any capacity or condition to conduct such allegations.”
In his appeal, Kandima does not deny making the statements, but said he was joking after a £1 000 reward was offered for any details that may lead to the arrest of the culprits.
The offer was made by one Kerina Mujati through a WhatsApp group.
The court documents, however, do not state Mujati’s profession or whether she was a soldier or police officer.
Bomb experts from Belarus joined the Criminal Investigations Department and Military Intelligence in the investigations, but there was no headway.
At one time, police arrested some vagabonds and later released them, but after beatings.
Kandima’s lawyers said he thought he was going to get the money that would change his fortunes.
“The accused…has made his falsehoods as highlighted on the charge after the said lady as mentioned had promised to give him £1000.
“So the accused member thought this would be the chance to have that money not knowing that he is committing a crime,” the court papers read.
“So all these falsehoods were peddled just because he was promised.
“The accused had no capacity whatsoever to conduct the said allegations in that charge.”
Kandima also said he was not afforded a fair trial as he revealed how he was denied access to legal representation and communication to the outside world before trial.
“The appellant was not afforded a right to a fair trial as envisaged above.
“He was only furnished with the trial papers in advance of the trial proceedings, but the appellant was detained at some remote area until the trial and with no one to communicate with,” the court papers read.
“The conviction is, therefore, bad at law as it is clearly a violation of the applicants right to a fair trial.”
He also said the conduct of defence counsel he was provided with was suspicious as the latter did not take his instructions, but acted in a manner that resulted in his conviction.
“The facts of his case show gross irregularity in that the applicant was appointed a defence officer, who acted prejudicially to the client by conducting the trial without taking adequate instruction from the appellant.
“For such a serious case, the defense officer was ill equipped to adequately represent the appellant.
“It follows that the appellant was as good as unrepresented accused as his legal practitioner acted prejudicial to his interest or an instruction that was not the appellant’s.”
It also emerged that Chief Justice Luke Malaba in January appointed appeal judges to hear his case, but the matter has mysteriously not been brought to court.
“Sometime in January, the registrar communicated with the applicant’s legal practitioners of record that the chief justice had appointed judges to the court martials appeal court.
“Despite the delay, since the noting of the appeal, and the subsequent appointment of the court martial’s appeal, the applicant is still suffering injustice by serving a sentence.”
Reports said the grenade ricocheted off a tent rope and Mnangagwa in a BBC interview days after the attack blamed the G40 Faction in Zanu PF.
“I think this is a political action by some persons aggrieved by the current democratic dispensation of the country,” Mnangagwa was quoted saying at the time
“My hunch without evidence is that the people who are aggrieved about the new dispensation are the G40.”
Bomb experts from Belarus concluded that the explosive device was an offensive fragmentation grenade made in Russia and lobbed in the direction of Mnangagwa from a distance of 17-20metres.
-The Standard
By- Justice Minister and Zanu PF politburo member Ziyambi Ziyambi has threatened the residents of Kariba and forced them to vote for his party candidate.
Ziyambi made the threats at a rally attended mostly by women in Mahombekombe Suburb last Saturday.
The rally was held to campaign for Kariba Ward 5 Council seat due for a by-election.
At the meeting, he also said that government would starve Kariba if the locals voted for Nelson Chamisa’s CCC party.
Said Ziyambi:
Vote wisely because development doesn’t need people to throw away votes. Electing CCC is throwing away votes as they are not responsible for allocating resources.
If you realise the lack of development in this place, Mahombekombe, blame yourselves because you would have thrown away votes by choosing a CCC candidate.
CCC interim provincial spokesperson Blessing Mandava said Ziyambi took the electorate for granted.
The Kariba Ward 5 seat fell vacant following the resignation of then CCC councillor Tendai Mapondera over criminal abuse of office charges.
Tonderai Chikwati will stand for CCC, while Zanu PF will field Kudakwashe Mafusire in the by-election.
More: NewZimbabwe.com
When Jordan Zemura’s AFC Bournemouth gained promotion into the English Premier League, the development was celebrated wildly in the city of Bournemouth.
Scott Parker led his his charges to what the Cheries fans dreamt of —a return to the English top-flight after a 2-year absence.
If Zimbabwe was not a county where any gathering is mistaken for a demonstration, perhaps Bournemouth’s promotion would have been celebrated similarly in some parts of the country because among the Cherries, is 22-year-old Warriors star Jordan Zemura.
JZ, as he is affectionately-known, will become the fifth Zimbabwean to play in the Premier League — after Bruce Grobelaar, Peter Ndlovu, Benjani Mwaruwari and Marvelous Nakamba.
He is ready to give everything on the pitch.
“I think I’ve always said to myself, when the opportunity arises, I’ll be ready,” Zemura told The Bournemouth Echo.
“I didn’t want to ever look back and I haven’t done really. I’ve just gone for it and I’ve loved every moment.
“I can only thank the gaffer (Parker), Wellsy (assistant manager, Matt Wells), everyone for what they’ve done for me.
“I’m just going to give them more next year. I’m going to give them twice as much as I gave this year, next season,” he added.
Interestingly, Zemura’s Bournemouth host Nakamba’s Aston Villa on match day one in the 2022/23 Premier League season.- Soccer 24 Zimbabwe
Tinashe Sambiri| CCC leader, President Nelson Chamisa is ready to serve the nation with humility and dignity.
President Chamisa has emphasized the importance of integrity and humility at a time the Zanu PF leader Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa stands accused of forcing himself on minors at some point.
“MY HOPE is to shepherd our great nation with integrity of heart & skillful hands.And to serve ZIMBABWE with love,in peace & with excellence,leading in righteousness and justice.
In the end, being noble & honourable in my service to the Republic and it’s citizens.#Sabbathprayer.”
On Thursday Joseph Kalimbwe of UNDP Zambia said:
“Try fresh ideas, try new thoughts, try Mukomana.
Support Nero Comrades. The stakes are too high to give up or else you will be in deeper problems. It’s for your sake.”
Staff Writer
Controversial philanthropist and healthcare worker Susan Mutami has revealed how the Zanu PF leader Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa forced her to touch his manhood after circumcision.
Mutami has further accused the Zanu PF leader of abusing her when she was a minor.
However, an analysis made by ZimEye.com shows Mutami is not completely innocent in the whole saga.
Mutami wrote on Twitter:
“Citizens I had forgotten to tell u that in 2010
@edmnangagwa
got circumcised at Manyame Airbase and he once ordered me to have a feel of his penis in his office at Defence House when I had gone to Zim . I was so uncomfortable and didn’t have an option akati very soon.”
Zimbabwe’s ministry Of Justice says diasporans can’t vote because they are an administrative nightmare.
Over the past four years, the Government has instituted high-impact legislative reforms to help strengthen the country’s democracy and promote personal freedoms. Ahead of next year’s harmonised elections, plans are underway to reform the Electoral Act in order to guarantee a credible, free and fair election. Sunday Mail Reporter Debra Matabvu (DM) spoke to Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi (ZZ) on these and other issues.
ZZ: I am sure you remember that there was an outcry, especially from our people in the Diaspora, calling on us to stop amending the Constitution, and the Government listened.
The Diaspora vote cannot happen with the way the Constitution is right now.
The country is divided into 210 constituencies and our voting system is polling station-based.
For example, if someone votes in Zvimba constituency at Murombedzi Vocational Training Centre (VTC), this means that person cannot go and cast their vote at Murombedzi Primary School.
Their name will not appear on the voters’ roll at Murombedzi Primary School.
So it is not about those in Diaspora only.
This is the system that we have in the Constitution.
So those in the Diaspora cannot vote.
Even if we had assumed that the votes of those in the Diaspora will be sent to their polling station, it would be an administrative nightmare.
The logistical process may cause massive rigging.
Our system provides for that kind of voting for those in Government service.
One may argue that in South Africa it is allowed. Our electoral process is different from that of South Africa. The South African system is based on proportional representation and ours is a hybrid system.
With ours, you vote for a candidate of your choice, while in South Africa you vote for a party.- State Media
Staff Writer
Controversial philanthropist and healthcare worker Susan Mutami has revealed how the Zanu PF leader Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa forced her to touch his manhood after circumcision.
Mutami has further accused the Zanu PF leader of abusing her when she was a minor.
However, an analysis made by ZimEye.com shows Mutami is not completely innocent in the whole saga.
Mutami wrote on Twitter:
“Citizens I had forgotten to tell u that in 2010
@edmnangagwa
got circumcised at Manyame Airbase and he once ordered me to have a feel of his penis in his office at Defence House when I had gone to Zim . I was so uncomfortable and didn’t have an option akati very soon.”
Jesse Lingard has signed for Nottingham Forest on a one-year contract.
Manchester City have had a £30m offer for Spain left-back Marc Cucurella rejected by Brighton, who value the 23-year-old at £50m. Athletic
Paris St-Germain have decided to part ways with Netherlands midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum, 31 and AS Roma want to sign the player. Fabrizio Romano
Napoli officials are in Istanbul finalising the signing of Fenerbahce defender Kim Min-Jae. The South Korean international was their number one choice to replace Kalidou Koulibaly, who joined Chelsea on a four-year contract last week. Sky Sports
Barcelona will make a final attempt to sign Sevilla and France defender Jules Kounde, despite acknowledging they are unable to match Chelsea’s £55m bid for the 23-year-old. Sport
And if Barca fails to sign the defender, the La Liga side will turn to Manchester City and Spain centre-back Aymeric Laporte, 28. Fichajes
Manchester United and Chelsea are competing to sign Bayern Munich and France defender Benjamin Pavard, 26. L’Equipe
Southampton have confirmed that they have agreed terms over the signing of Sekou Mara from Bordeaux.
West Ham have made an official bid for Sassuolo striker Gianluca Scamacca. The offer is understood to be more than €40m – with Sassuolo’s value thought to be €50m.
Tottenham have reportedly failed in an attempt to swap Joe Rodon for Roma midfielder Nicolo Zaniolo. Antonio Conte also offered £25million in addition to the centre-back, however, this was rebuffed by former manager Jose Mourinho. Daily Express
Dani Alves has completed his move to Mexican side Pumas on a free transfer. The 39-year-old has signed a one-year deal until June 2023. Fabrizio Romano.- Soccer 24 Zimbabwe
Zimbabwean goalkeeper Donovan Bernard’s proposed move Tshakhuma Tsha Madzivhandila (TTM)has collapsed , amid revelations that the Motsepe Foundation Championship side changed goalposts on the player’s wages.
The Warriors goalkeeper attracted the interest of TTM and personal terms were agreed before he travelled to South Africa.
Sources close to the player say the Limpopo-based club reduced the package they had initially offered Bernard and negotiations between the two parties hit a brick wall.
The player has since travelled Zimbabwe and is back at Chicken Inn, though he will not be in Joey ‘Mafero’ Antipas’ match day squad for tomorrow’s game against Dynamos at Luveve.-Soccer 24 Zimbabwe
UN Report: Global Hunger
The number of people affected by hunger globally rose to as many as 828 million in 2021, an increase of about 46 million since 2020 and 150 million since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic (1), according to a United Nations report that provides fresh evidence that the world is moving further away from its goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms by 2030.
The 2022 edition of The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report presents updates on the food security and nutrition situation around the world, including the latest estimates of the cost and affordability of a healthy diet. The report also looks at ways in which governments can repurpose their current support to agriculture to reduce the cost of healthy diets, mindful of the limited public resources available in many parts of the world.
The report was jointly published today by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
The numbers paint a grim picture:
As many as 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021 – 46 million people more from a year earlier and 150 million more from 2019.
After remaining relatively unchanged since 2015, the proportion of people affected by hunger jumped in 2020 and continued to rise in 2021, to 9.8% of the world population. This compares with 8% in 2019 and 9.3% in 2020.
Around 2.3 billion people in the world (29.3%) were moderately or severely food insecure in 2021 – 350 million more compared to before the outbreak of the COVID‑19 pandemic. Nearly 924 million people (11.7% of the global population) faced food insecurity at severe levels, an increase of 207 million in two years.
The gender gap in food insecurity continued to rise in 2021 – 31.9% of women in the world were moderately or severely food insecure, compared to 27.6% of men – a gap of more than 4 percentage points, compared with 3 percentage points in 2020.
Almost 3.1 billion people could not afford a healthy diet in 2020, up 112 million from 2019, reflecting the effects of inflation in consumer food prices stemming from the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and the measures put in place to contain it.
An estimated 45 million children under the age of five were suffering from wasting, the deadliest form of malnutrition, which increases children’s risk of death by up to 12 times. Furthermore, 149 million children under the age of five had stunted growth and development due to a chronic lack of essential nutrients in their diets, while 39 million were overweight.
Progress is being made on exclusive breastfeeding, with nearly 44% of infants under 6 months of age being exclusively breastfed worldwide in 2020. This is still short of the 50% target by 2030. Of great concern, 2 in 3 children are not fed the minimum diverse diet they need to grow and develop to their full potential.
Looking forward, projections are that nearly 670 million people (8% of the world population) will still be facing hunger in 2030 – even if a global economic recovery is taken into consideration. This is a similar number to 2015, when the goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition by the end of this decade was launched under the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
As this report is being published, the ongoing war in Ukraine, involving two of the biggest global producers of staple cereals, oilseeds and fertilizer, is disrupting international supply chains and pushing up the prices of grain, fertilizer, energy, as well as ready-to-use therapeutic food for children with severe malnutrition. This comes as supply chains are already being adversely affected by increasingly frequent extreme climate events, especially in low-income countries, and has potentially sobering implications for global food security and nutrition.
“This report repeatedly highlights the intensification of these major drivers of food insecurity and malnutrition: conflict, climate extremes and economic shocks, combined with growing inequalities,” the heads of the five UN agencies (2) wrote in this year’s Foreword. “The issue at stake is not whether adversities will continue to occur or not, but how we must take bolder action to build resilience against future shocks.”
Repurposing agricultural policies
The report notes as striking that worldwide support for the food and agricultural sector averaged almost US$ 630 billion a year between 2013 and 2018. The lion’s share of it goes to individual farmers, through trade and market policies and fiscal subsidies. However, not only is much of this support market-distorting, but it is not reaching many farmers, hurts the environment and does not promote the production of nutritious foods that make up a healthy diet. That’s in part because subsidies often target the production of staple foods, dairy and other animal source foods, especially in high- and upper-middle-income countries. Rice, sugar and meats of various types are most incentivized food items worldwide, while fruits and vegetables are relatively less supported, particularly in some low-income countries.
With the threats of a global recession looming, and the implications this has on public revenues and expenditures, a way to support economic recovery involves the repurposing of food and agricultural support to target nutritious foods where per capita consumption does not yet match the recommended levels for healthy diets.
The evidence suggests that if governments repurpose the resources they are using to incentivize the production, supply and consumption of nutritious foods, they will contribute to making healthy diets less costly, more affordable and equitably for all.
Finally, the report also points out that governments could do more to reduce trade barriers for nutritious foods, such as fruits, vegetables and pulses.
(1) It is estimated that between 702 and 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021. The estimate is presented as a range to reflect the added uncertainty in data collection due to the COVID-19 pandemic and related restrictions. The increases are measured with reference to the middle of the projected range (768 million).
(2) For FAO – QU Dongyu, Director-General; for IFAD – Gilbert F. Houngbo, President; for UNICEF – Catherine Russell, Executive Director; for WFP – David Beasley, Executive Director; for WHO – Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General.
What they said
FAO Director-General QU Dongyu: “Low-income countries, where agriculture is key to the economy, jobs and rural livelihoods, have little public resources to repurpose. FAO is committed to continue working together with these countries to explore opportunities for increasing the provision of public services for all actors across agrifood systems.”
IFAD President Gilbert F. Houngbo: “These are depressing figures for humanity. We continue to move away from our goal of ending hunger by 2030. The ripple effects of the global food crisis will most likely worsen the outcome again next year. We need a more intense approach to end hunger and IFAD stands ready to do its part by scaling up its operations and impact. We look forward to having everyone’s support.”
UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell: “The unprecedented scale of the malnutrition crisis demands an unprecedented response. We must double our efforts to ensure that the most vulnerable children have access to nutritious, safe, and affordable diets — and services for the early prevention, detection and treatment of malnutrition. With so many children’s lives and futures at stake, this is the time to step up our ambition for child nutrition – and we have no time to waste.”
WFP Executive Director David Beasley: “There is a real danger these numbers will climb even higher in the months ahead. The global price spikes in food, fuel and fertilizers that we are seeing as a result of the crisis in Ukraine threaten to push countries around the world into famine. The result will be global destabilization, starvation, and mass migration on an unprecedented scale. We have to act today to avert this looming catastrophe.”
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus: “Every year, 11 million people die due to unhealthy diets. Rising food prices mean this will only get worse. WHO supports countries’ efforts to improve food systems through taxing unhealthy foods and subsidising healthy options, protecting children from harmful marketing, and ensuring clear nutrition labels. We must work together to achieve the 2030 global nutrition targets, to fight hunger and malnutrition, and to ensure that food is a source of health for all.”
GLOSSARY
Acute food insecurity: food insecurity found in a specified area at a specific point in time and of a severity that threatens lives or livelihoods, or both, regardless of the causes, context or duration. Has relevance in providing strategic guidance to actions that focus on short-term objectives to prevent, mitigate or decrease severe food insecurity.
Hunger: an uncomfortable or painful sensation caused by insufficient energy from diet. Food deprivation. In this report, the term hunger is synonymous with chronic undernourishment and is measured by the prevalence of undernourishment (PoU).
Malnutrition: an abnormal physiological condition caused by inadequate, unbalanced or excessive intake of macronutrients and/or micronutrients. Malnutrition includes undernutrition (child stunting and wasting, and vitamin and mineral deficiencies) as well as overweight and obesity.
Moderate food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which people face uncertainties about their ability to obtain food and have been forced to reduce, at times during the year, the quality and/or quantity of food they consume due to lack of money or other resources. It refers to a lack of consistent access to food, which diminishes dietary quality and disrupts normal eating patterns. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Severe food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which, at some time during the year, people have run out of food, experienced hunger and at the most extreme, gone without food for a day or more. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Undernourishment: a condition in which an individual’s habitual food consumption is insufficient to provide the amount of dietary energy required to maintain a normal, active, healthy life. The prevalence of undernourishment is used to measure hunger (SDG indicator 2.1.1).
Source: World Health Organization
Inserted by Zimbabwe Online Health Centre
Facebook page :Zimbabwe Online Health Centre
email :[email protected]
Twitter :zimonlinehealthcentre
@zimonlinehealt1
YouTube: zimbabwe online health centre
Instagram: Zimonlinehealth
Website:www.zimonlinehealthcentre.co.zw
By Fadzayi Mahere
I am a politician but I am not writing this letter to you in that capacity.
I am writing to you as a young woman, as a citizen and as part of a generation to whom a debt is due. When we were little, we were told we were “born free” but for reasons caused by this government we go everywhere in chains. We are demanding our freedom because this great nation feels like prison. We were told that a war of liberation was fought on our behalf and that a world of opportunity had been opened. However, with each passing day, it is becoming evident that the oppressor only changed name, face and colour but his methods, laws and operations have remained exactly the same.
The social contract between the state and the people has been broken and replaced by threats of arrest, persecution and underhand punishment for those who dare challenge the torn fabric of a once promising dream. Why must a nation with all the ingredients for success be a graveyard for aspiration? Why must the rich fly in private jets while the poor get stuffed like sardines in rickety buses? Why must the many toil and sweat but starve so that the few can live like royalty?
Why is it a crime to want a better society?
Why is a crime to want funding for public health and schools? Why is it a crime to demand jobs or modern infrastructure? Why is it a crime to seek accountability for the money that we pay in taxes? Why is it a crime to protest against hunger? Why are the police who are meant to protect and secure the lives of citizens mimicking the behaviour of the Special Branch by breaking into the homes of journalists who speak out against corruption? Why do those who are innocent get treated like criminals yet criminals go Scot free?
Imagine if all the young people who are arrested on spurious charges of subversion were included in the economy and spending all those wasted court hours contributing towards the economy through innovation and productivity? Imagine if all the lawyers who waste time arguing bail applications for the pro-democracy activists that are continuously arrested on bogus charges spent their time working on mergers and acquisitions that would grow and develop the economy? Imagine if the property rights framework of the nation enabled more of that to happen? Imagine if people were so inspired by the national vision that they were not planning endless strikes and protests but they were knuckling down to work and they were rewarded in a meaningful currency for their hard work?
The people deserve better and more. We are sick and tired of being sick and tired. There is a generation that is ready to pick up the broken pieces and re-write the contract that you repeatedly breach through violations of the Constitution and fundamental freedoms. People deserve hope. People deserve an ecosystem that allows them to work hard and reap the rewards of their hard work. People deserve to be free and secure in their homes. People deserve a government that they can trust. We will never stop believing in the beauty of this nation regardless of the madness. But the madness must stop.
When people unite and find their collective voice to fight injustice, a nation is reborn.
Sincerely
A citizen who wants a better society,
Fadzayi Mahere
Ministry of HealthZW
@MoHCCZim
·
Jul 21
@MoHCCZim
&
@ProtonBakers
combine efforts in creating awareness in Marondera on the ongoing Tracoma MDA.
Everyone in the targeted districts(Shamva,Bindura,Rushinga,Binga,Nyanga,Mutasa,Gweru&Marondera) is encouraged to visit their nearest health facility to receive treatment
VIDEO LOADING BELOW….
Zimbabwean goalkeeper Donovan Bernard’s proposed move Tshakhuma Tsha Madzivhandila (TTM)has collapsed , amid revelations that the Motsepe Foundation Championship side changed goalposts on the player’s wages.
The Warriors goalkeeper attracted the interest of TTM and personal terms were agreed before he travelled to South Africa.
Sources close to the player say the Limpopo-based club reduced the package they had initially offered Bernard and negotiations between the two parties hit a brick wall.
The player has since travelled Zimbabwe and is back at Chicken Inn, though he will not be in Joey ‘Mafero’ Antipas’ match day squad for tomorrow’s game against Dynamos at Luveve.-Soccer 24 Zimbabwe
Jesse Lingard has signed for Nottingham Forest on a one-year contract.
Manchester City have had a £30m offer for Spain left-back Marc Cucurella rejected by Brighton, who value the 23-year-old at £50m. Athletic
Paris St-Germain have decided to part ways with Netherlands midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum, 31 and AS Roma want to sign the player. Fabrizio Romano
Napoli officials are in Istanbul finalising the signing of Fenerbahce defender Kim Min-Jae. The South Korean international was their number one choice to replace Kalidou Koulibaly, who joined Chelsea on a four-year contract last week. Sky Sports
Barcelona will make a final attempt to sign Sevilla and France defender Jules Kounde, despite acknowledging they are unable to match Chelsea’s £55m bid for the 23-year-old. Sport
And if Barca fails to sign the defender, the La Liga side will turn to Manchester City and Spain centre-back Aymeric Laporte, 28. Fichajes
Manchester United and Chelsea are competing to sign Bayern Munich and France defender Benjamin Pavard, 26. L’Equipe
Southampton have confirmed that they have agreed terms over the signing of Sekou Mara from Bordeaux.
West Ham have made an official bid for Sassuolo striker Gianluca Scamacca. The offer is understood to be more than €40m – with Sassuolo’s value thought to be €50m.
Tottenham have reportedly failed in an attempt to swap Joe Rodon for Roma midfielder Nicolo Zaniolo. Antonio Conte also offered £25million in addition to the centre-back, however, this was rebuffed by former manager Jose Mourinho. Daily Express
Dani Alves has completed his move to Mexican side Pumas on a free transfer. The 39-year-old has signed a one-year deal until June 2023. Fabrizio Romano.- Soccer 24 Zimbabwe
Tinashe Sambiri| CCC leader, President Nelson Chamisa is ready to serve the nation with humility and dignity.
President Chamisa has emphasized the importance of integrity and humility at a time the Zanu PF leader Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa stands accused of forcing himself on minors at some point.
“MY HOPE is to shepherd our great nation with integrity of heart & skillful hands.And to serve ZIMBABWE with love,in peace & with excellence,leading in righteousness and justice.
In the end, being noble & honourable in my service to the Republic and it’s citizens.#Sabbathprayer.”
On Thursday Joseph Kalimbwe of UNDP Zambia said:
“Try fresh ideas, try new thoughts, try Mukomana.
Support Nero Comrades. The stakes are too high to give up or else you will be in deeper problems. It’s for your sake.”
Staff Writer
Controversial philanthropist and healthcare worker Susan Mutami has revealed how the Zanu PF leader Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa forced her to touch his manhood after circumcision.
Mutami has further accused the Zanu PF leader of abusing her when she was a minor.
However, an analysis made by ZimEye.com shows Mutami is not completely innocent in the whole saga.
Mutami wrote on Twitter:
“Citizens I had forgotten to tell u that in 2010
@edmnangagwa
got circumcised at Manyame Airbase and he once ordered me to have a feel of his penis in his office at Defence House when I had gone to Zim . I was so uncomfortable and didn’t have an option akati very soon.”
UN Report: Global Hunger
The number of people affected by hunger globally rose to as many as 828 million in 2021, an increase of about 46 million since 2020 and 150 million since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic (1), according to a United Nations report that provides fresh evidence that the world is moving further away from its goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms by 2030.
The 2022 edition of The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report presents updates on the food security and nutrition situation around the world, including the latest estimates of the cost and affordability of a healthy diet. The report also looks at ways in which governments can repurpose their current support to agriculture to reduce the cost of healthy diets, mindful of the limited public resources available in many parts of the world.
The report was jointly published today by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
The numbers paint a grim picture:
As many as 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021 – 46 million people more from a year earlier and 150 million more from 2019.
After remaining relatively unchanged since 2015, the proportion of people affected by hunger jumped in 2020 and continued to rise in 2021, to 9.8% of the world population. This compares with 8% in 2019 and 9.3% in 2020.
Around 2.3 billion people in the world (29.3%) were moderately or severely food insecure in 2021 – 350 million more compared to before the outbreak of the COVID‑19 pandemic. Nearly 924 million people (11.7% of the global population) faced food insecurity at severe levels, an increase of 207 million in two years.
The gender gap in food insecurity continued to rise in 2021 – 31.9% of women in the world were moderately or severely food insecure, compared to 27.6% of men – a gap of more than 4 percentage points, compared with 3 percentage points in 2020.
Almost 3.1 billion people could not afford a healthy diet in 2020, up 112 million from 2019, reflecting the effects of inflation in consumer food prices stemming from the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and the measures put in place to contain it.
An estimated 45 million children under the age of five were suffering from wasting, the deadliest form of malnutrition, which increases children’s risk of death by up to 12 times. Furthermore, 149 million children under the age of five had stunted growth and development due to a chronic lack of essential nutrients in their diets, while 39 million were overweight.
Progress is being made on exclusive breastfeeding, with nearly 44% of infants under 6 months of age being exclusively breastfed worldwide in 2020. This is still short of the 50% target by 2030. Of great concern, 2 in 3 children are not fed the minimum diverse diet they need to grow and develop to their full potential.
Looking forward, projections are that nearly 670 million people (8% of the world population) will still be facing hunger in 2030 – even if a global economic recovery is taken into consideration. This is a similar number to 2015, when the goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition by the end of this decade was launched under the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
As this report is being published, the ongoing war in Ukraine, involving two of the biggest global producers of staple cereals, oilseeds and fertilizer, is disrupting international supply chains and pushing up the prices of grain, fertilizer, energy, as well as ready-to-use therapeutic food for children with severe malnutrition. This comes as supply chains are already being adversely affected by increasingly frequent extreme climate events, especially in low-income countries, and has potentially sobering implications for global food security and nutrition.
“This report repeatedly highlights the intensification of these major drivers of food insecurity and malnutrition: conflict, climate extremes and economic shocks, combined with growing inequalities,” the heads of the five UN agencies (2) wrote in this year’s Foreword. “The issue at stake is not whether adversities will continue to occur or not, but how we must take bolder action to build resilience against future shocks.”
Repurposing agricultural policies
The report notes as striking that worldwide support for the food and agricultural sector averaged almost US$ 630 billion a year between 2013 and 2018. The lion’s share of it goes to individual farmers, through trade and market policies and fiscal subsidies. However, not only is much of this support market-distorting, but it is not reaching many farmers, hurts the environment and does not promote the production of nutritious foods that make up a healthy diet. That’s in part because subsidies often target the production of staple foods, dairy and other animal source foods, especially in high- and upper-middle-income countries. Rice, sugar and meats of various types are most incentivized food items worldwide, while fruits and vegetables are relatively less supported, particularly in some low-income countries.
With the threats of a global recession looming, and the implications this has on public revenues and expenditures, a way to support economic recovery involves the repurposing of food and agricultural support to target nutritious foods where per capita consumption does not yet match the recommended levels for healthy diets.
The evidence suggests that if governments repurpose the resources they are using to incentivize the production, supply and consumption of nutritious foods, they will contribute to making healthy diets less costly, more affordable and equitably for all.
Finally, the report also points out that governments could do more to reduce trade barriers for nutritious foods, such as fruits, vegetables and pulses.
(1) It is estimated that between 702 and 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021. The estimate is presented as a range to reflect the added uncertainty in data collection due to the COVID-19 pandemic and related restrictions. The increases are measured with reference to the middle of the projected range (768 million).
(2) For FAO – QU Dongyu, Director-General; for IFAD – Gilbert F. Houngbo, President; for UNICEF – Catherine Russell, Executive Director; for WFP – David Beasley, Executive Director; for WHO – Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General.
What they said
FAO Director-General QU Dongyu: “Low-income countries, where agriculture is key to the economy, jobs and rural livelihoods, have little public resources to repurpose. FAO is committed to continue working together with these countries to explore opportunities for increasing the provision of public services for all actors across agrifood systems.”
IFAD President Gilbert F. Houngbo: “These are depressing figures for humanity. We continue to move away from our goal of ending hunger by 2030. The ripple effects of the global food crisis will most likely worsen the outcome again next year. We need a more intense approach to end hunger and IFAD stands ready to do its part by scaling up its operations and impact. We look forward to having everyone’s support.”
UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell: “The unprecedented scale of the malnutrition crisis demands an unprecedented response. We must double our efforts to ensure that the most vulnerable children have access to nutritious, safe, and affordable diets — and services for the early prevention, detection and treatment of malnutrition. With so many children’s lives and futures at stake, this is the time to step up our ambition for child nutrition – and we have no time to waste.”
WFP Executive Director David Beasley: “There is a real danger these numbers will climb even higher in the months ahead. The global price spikes in food, fuel and fertilizers that we are seeing as a result of the crisis in Ukraine threaten to push countries around the world into famine. The result will be global destabilization, starvation, and mass migration on an unprecedented scale. We have to act today to avert this looming catastrophe.”
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus: “Every year, 11 million people die due to unhealthy diets. Rising food prices mean this will only get worse. WHO supports countries’ efforts to improve food systems through taxing unhealthy foods and subsidising healthy options, protecting children from harmful marketing, and ensuring clear nutrition labels. We must work together to achieve the 2030 global nutrition targets, to fight hunger and malnutrition, and to ensure that food is a source of health for all.”
GLOSSARY
Acute food insecurity: food insecurity found in a specified area at a specific point in time and of a severity that threatens lives or livelihoods, or both, regardless of the causes, context or duration. Has relevance in providing strategic guidance to actions that focus on short-term objectives to prevent, mitigate or decrease severe food insecurity.
Hunger: an uncomfortable or painful sensation caused by insufficient energy from diet. Food deprivation. In this report, the term hunger is synonymous with chronic undernourishment and is measured by the prevalence of undernourishment (PoU).
Malnutrition: an abnormal physiological condition caused by inadequate, unbalanced or excessive intake of macronutrients and/or micronutrients. Malnutrition includes undernutrition (child stunting and wasting, and vitamin and mineral deficiencies) as well as overweight and obesity.
Moderate food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which people face uncertainties about their ability to obtain food and have been forced to reduce, at times during the year, the quality and/or quantity of food they consume due to lack of money or other resources. It refers to a lack of consistent access to food, which diminishes dietary quality and disrupts normal eating patterns. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Severe food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which, at some time during the year, people have run out of food, experienced hunger and at the most extreme, gone without food for a day or more. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Undernourishment: a condition in which an individual’s habitual food consumption is insufficient to provide the amount of dietary energy required to maintain a normal, active, healthy life. The prevalence of undernourishment is used to measure hunger (SDG indicator 2.1.1).
Source: World Health Organization
Inserted by Zimbabwe Online Health Centre
Facebook page :Zimbabwe Online Health Centre
email :[email protected]
Twitter :zimonlinehealthcentre
@zimonlinehealt1
YouTube: zimbabwe online health centre
Instagram: Zimonlinehealth
Website:www.zimonlinehealthcentre.co.zw
Tinashe Sambiri| CCC leader, President Nelson Chamisa is ready to serve the nation with humility and dignity.
President Chamisa has emphasized the importance of integrity and humility at a time the Zanu PF leader Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa stands accused of forcing himself on minors at some point.
“MY HOPE is to shepherd our great nation with integrity of heart & skillful hands.And to serve ZIMBABWE with love,in peace & with excellence,leading in righteousness and justice.
In the end, being noble & honourable in my service to the Republic and it’s citizens.#Sabbathprayer.”
On Thursday Joseph Kalimbwe of UNDP Zambia said:
“Try fresh ideas, try new thoughts, try Mukomana.
Support Nero Comrades. The stakes are too high to give up or else you will be in deeper problems. It’s for your sake.”
Staff Writer
Controversial philanthropist and healthcare worker Susan Mutami has revealed how the Zanu PF leader Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa forced her to touch his manhood after circumcision.
Mutami has further accused the Zanu PF leader of abusing her when she was a minor.
However, an analysis made by ZimEye.com shows Mutami is not completely innocent in the whole saga.
Mutami wrote on Twitter:
“Citizens I had forgotten to tell u that in 2010
@edmnangagwa
got circumcised at Manyame Airbase and he once ordered me to have a feel of his penis in his office at Defence House when I had gone to Zim . I was so uncomfortable and didn’t have an option akati very soon.”
By A Correspondent- Australia-based socialite Susan Mutami claims she was abused by President Emmerson Mnangagwa in the back of a car when she was 15 years old.
Speaking during a Twitter Spaces monologue on Friday, Mutami also claimed she slept with several top government officials, among them, the late foreign affairs minister Sibusiso Busi (SB) Moyo.
She also claimed she bedded Norton MP, Temba Mliswa (Independent), and deputy mines minister Polite Kambamura.
Mutami said she loved the late SB Moyo and could have been his wife had she not chosen to save Justice Loice Matanda Moyo’s marriage.
Matanda Moyo is the chairperson of the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC).
Mutami said she loved the late SB Moyo and could have been his wife had she not chosen to save Justice Loice Matanda Moyo’s marriage.
Matanda Moyo is the chairperson of the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC).
Labour, Economists and African Democrats (LEAD) leader, Linda Masarira, dismissed Mutami’s allegations, saying the self-proclaimed philanthropist has psychological issues. She wrote:
When thousands leave their work to listen to a woman with psychological issues partnered with a rejection phobia, it just clearly shows how broken we are as a people that we will believe any sort of trash peddled against those we hate. Manipulation is a skill that Susan is using.
In response, Mutami alleged Masarira was on “rapists’ payroll” and warned her that it will soon be over. Said Mutami:
Linda u are a sick woman who defends rapists. u have daughters and one day someone will do that to ur daughter and u will understand my pain.
I don’t know u nor have I ever met u bt what I know is that u are on their payroll and very soon zvichakuperera. God is for all of us.
By A Correspondent- The family of murdered CCC activist Moreblessing Ali is living in hiding as suspected state security agents and ZANU PF activists have been visiting their home periodically.
Moreblessing’s son Silence and brother Wellington are in hiding since being harassed out of their home, reported The NewsHawks.
Police said Moreblessing was kidnapped by Pius Mukandi, alias Jamba, at Chibhanguza Shopping Centre in Nyatsime on 24 May and her dismembered body was found in a disused well on 11 June. Jamba is believed to be a ZANU PF member.
The suspect was arrested in Hurungwe five days after the body was discovered at his mother’s plot.
Moreblessing’s body has still not been buried, two months after her murder as the family is demanding their lawyer, Job Sikhala, to be released first.
The Ali family has also demanded the arrest of Nyatsime councillor Masimbi Masimbi and Nyatsime ZANU PF branch chairperson Simba Chisango who is reported to be Jamba’s half-brother, whom they are implicating in Moreblessing’s murder. Added Silence:
We maintain the family position that everyone involved in the murder of my mother should be arrested before we bury her. That means Pius Jamba is not the only person in this murder.
Simba Chisango told me in front of a ZANU PF crowd that if we fail to locate my mother, he would direct me to his brother, meaning he knew what had happened.
Silence also implicated Masimbi in the murder of her mother. He said:
He came to the house questioning me and pushing me to encourage my family to proceed with burial, and not politicise the death.
He even stopped me from distributing fliers that would assist us in finding my mother.
At one time, he said police were calling him to retrieve a body in some dam, but he was not very open with me.
Wellington Ali, brother to the deceased, said he is also in hiding after he was attacked by ZANU PF activists at the Ali home after the prayer meeting.
Meanwhile, Jamba was remanded in custody and is awaiting indictment in the High Court for the murder.
He is scheduled to appear in court on 28 July.
By A Correspondent- ZANU PF members in Kariba District on Thursday disrupted learning at Mahombekombe Primary School in the district after they held a political rally at the school.
The rally was staged for ZANU PF Kariba Ward 5 candidate, Kudakwashe Mafusire ahead of this weekend’s by-election.
Pupils and Mahombekombe residents were made to sit in the blazing sun while ZANU PF officials “sold” their candidate and also donated a handful of textbooks.
ZANU PF sent high-ranking officials to the rally, among them, Mashonaland West Provincial Affairs minister and ZANU PF provincial chairman, Mary Mliswa-Chikoka, and Politburo member, Ziyambi Ziyambi, as well as senior war veterans and Youth League members.
Meanwhile, the country’s third-largest political party after ZANU PF and MDC Alliance, the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) accused the ruling party of vote-buying.
CCC interim provincial spokesperson, Blessing Mandava, told NewZimbabwe.com that ZANU PF promised US$20 cash for those who vote for the ruling party.
Said Mandava:
We have heard plans of vote buying, where people were promised US$20 each.
Our Intelligence team on the ground in Ward 5 has gathered that Zanu PF is promising each voter US$20 if one captures his/her ballot after voting for them.
We call on alert citizens and agents to foil this act of criminality and protect the people’s will.
The Kariba Ward 5 seat fell vacant following the resignation of then CCC councillor, Tendai Mapondera, over criminal abuse of office charges.
By A Correspondent- Retired Dairibord Holdings Limited group chief executive officer Anthony Mandiwanza has reportedly handpicked his second wife Mercy Ndoro to take over his position, a report by Nehanda Radio claims.
Mandiwanza is retiring from Dairiboard with effect from 30 September 2022 after serving the company for 43 years.
He is being accused of nepotism and violating corporate governance principles by pushing for the appointment of his alleged second wife.
A statement attributed to Dairibord shareholder and former Institute of Directors board member Engineer Jacob Kudzayi Mutisi reads:
We are the only country where shareholders are taken for fools. How in the world can a board allow the appointment of the former CEO’s second wife?
Anthony Mandiwanza has appointed his second wife Mercy Ndoro as the CEO for Dairiboard Zimbabwe which is an act of nepotism and misconduct according to corporate governance rules.
The strategy is simple Anthony is going to appoint himself as the chairman.
As a former board member and chairman of the Institute of Directors (IODZ), the home of corporate governance Anthony should know better that these kinds of appointments are illegal.
As a shareholder, I am requesting a response from the board on why it is allowing such an illegal decision to be made.
Such decisions are usually taken by a board that is tainted. Dairibord is not a family business.
It is a listed institution which should adhere to corporate governance and this kind of action does not reflect respect for the rules.
I am hereby requesting that the Zimbabwe Stock Exchangeinvestigate this and charge the board of Dairibord with misconduct.
Board members should respect corporate governance and adhere to the rules.
Nehanda Radio reported that Mutisi confirmed writing the statement in an interview with the Express Mail Zim. Mutisi was quoted as saying:
Yes, I can confirm that I did write that and I do not regret it. I am a law-abiding citizen and need answers from Anthony.
Where do we go as a nation if we have such violations of corporate governance rules?
He arm twists the board by providing unlimited fuel to board members, he captures them.
If he so wishes he can challenge me if he disputes raising children with Ndoro.
HARARE: Zimbabwe has a monopolistic mine workers’ representation system which constitutes National Chamber of Mines and AMWUZ – Associated Mine Workers Union of Zimbabwe.
By Maxwell Teedzai- This uneven terrain in worker representation has thrown the entire extractives sector into a topsytavy situation with workers earning minimum wages way-down below the PDL – Poverty Datum Line.
To that effect, NMWUZ – National Mine Workers Union of Zimbabwe has since called on the National Chamber of Mines and NEC – National Employment Council to seriously look into the issue as a matter of urgency and ensure that the mine workers’ representation platform is democratized.
“As the President of National Mine Workers’ Union of Zimbabwe we are calling on the National Chamber of Mines to consider it’s workers and convince AMWUZ to co-opt into NEC all the other unions with membership through the introduction of a proportional representation system,” said Kurebwa Javangwe Nomboka.
When NEC was constituted in 1990 there was only one union (AMWUZ), and one employer we now call Chamber of Mines.
Meanwhile, the mining sector in Zimbabwe is fast-expanding while new unions with membership are sprouting all over the country.
This automatically means that there is now need for systems to change and migrate from monopolistic to proportional representation so that all mine workers are represented in NEC.
AMWUZ is using negotiation methodologies that help it maintain good ties with National Chamber of Mines so that it remains the only union with membership representing workers through a monopolistic system of dictatorship.
Nomboka argued that, “AMWUZ leadership is dictatorial in it’s approach and is serving the interests of employers alone. Members of AMWUZ are wandering why their concerns never get expected outcomes when they’re part of a union that enjoys monopoly in NEC”.
“It’s disheartening to learn that even some of the members within AMWUZ are not happy with the way their labour grievances are being represented in NEC, arguing that AMWUZ lacks the knowledge of the reality of their struggles as mine workers in Zimbabwe,” Nomboka added.
Industrial democracy is therefore proposed by unions as the key to decent work in Zimbabwe’s extractives sector.
The tendency has been that mine workers in Zimbabwe hardly make decisions, nor share responsibility and authority in their respective workplaces.
Apparently, workers’ struggle in the mining sector in Zimbabwe is grounded in everyday acts of resistance and is directed towards power relationships exercised at work between the employer and employee.
Sadly overt forms of resistance have been waning in because of various pieces of draconian legislation, and subterranean forms of resistance have been gaining traction.
The monopoly enjoyed by AMWUZ and National Chamber of Mines is a repressive machinery designed to keep mine workers poor and ensure that the ruling elite and mining employers continue to reap huge profits from this exploitative system of worker representation.
Mr Kurebwa Javangwe Nomboka has condemned the May 2022 salary adjustments which AMWUZ brokered on the behalf of mine workers as mere pittance and the “destruction of the poor”
“As Unionists, we feel that the May 2022 wage adjustments reached are nothing but a farce, and a selling-out salary negotiation outcome,” he further remarked.
Prices of basic commodities continue to soar higher with every passing day.
Until the Interbank and black market rates meet, the inflation rate will continue to skyrocket.
“As president of NMWUZ, I strongly condemn and accuse AMWUZ, as being insensitive to the plight of workers,” argued Nomboka.
Nomboka added, “National Chamber of Mines must co-opt all mine workers’ unions with membership onto the NEC negotiation table in a bid to ensure that the welfare of all mine workers is well catered for by the very same employers”.
Mine workers’ unions in Zimbabwe are not happy with AMWUZ being the sole representative of all mine workers.
On another platform, Unions are also worried that the $93000 brokered by AMWUZ for the entire year is mere mockery as it cannot even reach a quarter of the expected US$650 which NMWUZ is demanding employers pay thier workers.
“It’s not fair that despite the fact that some of the country’s major retailers are accessing foreign currency on the auction system, higher lending rates and indexing prices to open market exchange rates has eroded the buying power of many workers,” said Nomboka.
While the official exchange rate is $403: US$1, the black market rates are ranging between $800 and $900 to the greenback.
Consequently, the pricing regime where prices are pegged using the black market rates is eroding the spending power of consumers.
“We’re calling for the least paid worker to be paid a minimum wage of not less than US$650 but as long as there is unfair representation of workers in our negotiation fora (NEC), we have no hope for meaningful adjustments for all workers across the board”.
Zimbabwe’s mining industry accounts for 13 percent of the gross domestic product and is the largest foreign currency earner, yet it’s workers are languishing in abject poverty in the midst of plenty.
“AMWUZ is now playing the role of a psuedo-representation, and for that we’re advising National Chamber of Mines to build an inclusive NEC that represents all mine workers in Zimbabwe.
Creating an inclusive NEC will pave way for redress of mine workers’ grievances in a very short period of time.
Rearing the current monopolistic system of worker representation will one create mayhem and downturn productivity in the sector as workers will be left with no other option but to redirect their ernegies into industrial action as a last resort,” advised Nomboka.
One of Zimbabwe’s oligarch Kuda Tagwirei’s trucks on Saturday derailed on its own into the bush near Melfort on the Mutare Harare highway. PICTURES:
This is Talent Chiwenga’s secret girlfriend, Tariro Mafuka (left) he secretly married in 2015, over 4yrs before the 120km per hr speed rush accident in the Masvingo-Mvuma strip rd that killed his wife, Rejoice (right). He says uniformed CIO’s have crossed the Limpopo into SA to kill him
By A Correspondent- An unidentified mother reportedly abandoned her newly-born baby girl in the middle of the Mutare-Harare Highway.
The baby who was placed inside a plastic bag and naked was discovered by an unidentified woman who was travelling with her husband recently.
Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) spokesperson in Manicaland Province, Inspector Norbert Muzondo confirmed the incident. He said:
The informant was travelling with her husband along the Harare-Mutare Highway going towards Rusape at around 2 AM.
Upon approaching the 180km peg, the informant saw a plastic bag lying in the middle of the road.
They immediately stopped and upon investigation, they discovered that a baby was inside the plastic bag.
Muzondo said the couple took the infant to a police roadblock at the 175km peg where they picked up a police officer.
They went to Rusape General Hospital where they handed the infant over to the hospital authorities for examinations.
Hospital authorities concluded that the baby was in stable condition and had just been delivered.
Inspector Muzondo castigated the mother of the infant for baby-dumping. He said:
What the mother did is cruel. We discourage baby dumping and we encourage would-be mothers who may fail to provide for their newly-born babies to approach organisations like the Department of Social Welfare or development partners for assistance.
There are mechanisms in place to assist parents who may not be in a position to support their children. We also applaud the Good Samaritan for a job well done.
She did exceptionally well by acting timely and making a quick reaction to ensure the safety of the baby. The philanthropic works should not go unnoticed.
By A Correspondent- The Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) on Friday barred the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition (CiCZ) from marching against an alleged increase in human rights violations in the country.
The CiCZ had planned to march from the Harare Gardens to the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission (ZHRC) and Parliament building on Friday (yesterday) to deliver a petition against the erosion of human rights.
However, in a letter dated 18 July, the officer commanding Harare central district Chief Superintendent G Moyo said the march had not been approved.
Chief Superintendent Moyo said CiCZ “did not comply with section 7 of the Maintenance of Peace and Order Act Chapter 11: 23.
CiCZ chairperson Peter Mutasa told NewsDay that they have since approached the courts challenging the ban.
A ruling on their appeal is expected this Saturday.
By James Gwati- At least eight (8) senior Zanu PF officials, including President Emerson Mnangagwa, have slept with Susan Mutami, the controversial health care worker has revealed.
Susan Mutami revealed this on Twitter spaces Friday.
She said that among the eight men are the former CIO Minister Owen Mudha Ncube, the late Foreign Affairs Minister Sibusiso Moyo, deputy Mines Minister Polite Kambamura and Zanu PF Central Committee member Kenneth Musanhi.
Mutami also said that she was raped by Mnangagwa and his young brother Patrick when she was 15 years old.
By Maxwell Teedzai: NMWUZ President Kurebwa Javangwe Nomboka is demanding the immediate release of ARTUZ – Amalgamated Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe’s teachers’ union leader Obert Masaraure whose recent detention by the ZRP – Zimbabwe Republic Police he had labeled as unlawful.
“The real reason they’re incarcerating Masaraure is because he is fighting for the labour rights of teachers in Zimbabwe.
It’s a legal right of civil servants in particular and workers in general to hold peaceful demonstrations or even participate in a industrial action where they might feel that their rights as teachers would have been grossly tempered with,” said Nomboka in his recent solidarity message while speaking on behalf of NMWUZ Executive, National Council and General Members.
Consequently, a Harare court has repeatedly denied bail ruling for Masaraure, who was arrested on charges of inciting public violence using his Twitter and, or social media account.
However, reports indicate that Masaraure was arrested in connection with the death of an ARTUZ member that happened in 2016.
After the death of the ARTUZ member, the magistrate court ruled out foul play following an inquest. Shockingly after six years, the police arrested Comrade Masaraure over the case that he was never implicated on.
“We view this as a clear effort by the State to silence Comrade Masaraure who has been very vocal against human rights violations as well as his push for the betterment of working conditions for teachers and with that we’re left with no other option but to go on a nationwide strike as a last resort to demand the unconditional release of Masaraure,” retorted Nomboka.
Apparently, teachers are now incapacitated and can no longer render services because they are getting pittance as pay.
The current salaries have reduced teachers to paupers and the once noble profession has been reduced to ashes and cinders.
Southern Africa Human Rights Defenders Network (Southern Defenders) has described Amalgamated Rural Teachers Union (ARTUZ) president Obert Masaraure’s recent arrest as unlawful and a misuse of the justice system.
Masaraure was arrested, Tuesday, when he availed himself in accordance with bail conditions in a different matter.
He was charged with murder stemming from a 2016 incident that saw an ARTUZ member Roy Issa plunging to his death from Jameson hotel’s seventh floor.
Investigations in 2016 indicated that Masaraure was nowhere near the scene when Issa fell to his death.
Workers unions in Zimbabwe are speaking with one voice and strongly condemn Mararaure’s which they consider as a premeditated arrest meant to instill fear in trade unionists and the general public.
In the same wavelength, Nomboka has also cast an eye on opposition political leaders who remain under incarceration by the State including CCC – Citizens Coalition for Change lawmaker Job Sikhala, Godfrey Sithole who are in remand and being denied bail to be also freed unconditionally.
‘We bemoan the cases of Hon Job Sikhala, Godfrey Sithole,and other CCC activists who are being persecuted for demanding justice on the murder of a CCC woman Moreblessing Ali and we feel that the justice delivery system is selectively applying the law in Zimbabwe.”
Meanwhile, the real or legitimate issue from whence Masaraure’s charges are emanating from are still shrouded in a mist.
It is such behavior in our justice delivery system which paints Zimbabwe as a pariah state in the international arena.
“We however demand Masaraure’s immediate and unconditional release.”
By Jane Mlambo| Gokwe Nembudziya legislator has come under fire from members of his committee and civil society to relinquish his position as chairperson of the parliamentary committee on lands and agriculture following revelations that he corruptily benefitted from Cottco inputs.
The inputs have since been seized by the police and is also under investigation from the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC).
A member of parliament from Wadyajena’s committee who spoke on condition of anonymity told ZimEye that it is only logical for the powerful Gokwe Nembudziya legislator to step down from his role in order to allow investigations into his alleged dealings.
“It is only logical that he steps down because it is clear that he abused his power and privilege of being the chairperson of a committee that monitors Cottco where he corruptily benefitted,” said the legislator.
Meanwhile, an organisation by the name Agenda for Development and Empowerment (ADE) has also petitioned parliament to have Wadyajena removed from the Lands and Agriculture Parliamentary Committee.
“It is only fair and prudent that Justice Mayor Wadyajena steps aside from the Portfolio committee he chairs as the issues under investigation involve the parliamentary portfolio committee which he chairs,” reads part of the petition signed by Mgcini Ncube.
Ncube also urged the parliamentary committee on lands and agriculture to sit and discuss Wadyajena’s issue saying his continued leadership will curtail investigations into his abuse of office issue.
“This committee should sit immediately and discuss Wadyajena’s locus standi as Chairman of the Parliamentary Portfolio committee on Agriculture,” added Ncube.
“We therefore petition and ask the Speaker of the National Assembly(Chairperson), President of the Senate(Deputy Chairperson), Deputy Speaker, Deputy President of the Senate, Minister of Finance and two other Ministers appointed by the President, the Leader of Government Business, the Leader of the Opposition, Chief Whips of all parties represented in Parliament, the President of the National Council of Chiefs, eight members elected by Parliament, four from each House and two members appointed by the Speaker of the National Assembly and the President of the Senate who make up the Committee on Standing rules to deliberate on this matter and ensure that Justice Mayor Wadyajena is suspended from the committee chairmanship until his name has been cleared,” further reads the petition.
By James Gwati- Socialite and Australian-based health care worker Susan Mutami has implicated fellow socialite and businesswoman Zodwa Mkandla in the death of former Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.
Tsvangirai died on the 14th of February 2018 after a long battle with cancer.
Speaking on Twitter spaces, Friday Susan said Zodwa connived with Tsvangirai’s wife Elizabeth Macheka and poisoned the MDC founder
“Zodwa is the one who caused the death of Morgan Tsvangirai. She is the one who Organised the same plane with MRT and Elizabeth Macheka, and they poisoned him,” she said.
Zodwa and Elizabeth had not responded by the time of publication of this story.
By James Gwati- Several senior Zanu PF officials, including their leader Emmerson Mnangagwa faces rape charges for allegedly forcing Susan Mutami.
Mutami said the Zanu PF leader, Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa forced her to have sex with him when she was young.
Mutami has also posted bedroom pictures of her with Zanu PF central committee member Kenneth Musanhi and deputy mines minister Polite Kambamura.
The controversial businesswoman also threatened to disclose how Mr Mnangagwa “killed” a young lady in Kwekwe.
“This man (Mnangagwa) raped me when I was a minor and tomorrow I am hosting a space where I will be telling everyone what u did,I’m also going to tell people what u did to that young girl who was studying at Kwekwe High School who later died and u paid all her funeral expenses. Satan,” fumed Mutami.
She was responding to Mr Mnangagwa’s tweet below:
President of Zimbabwe
@edmnangagwa
Jul 20:
A Parliament to be proud of.
Zimbabwe’s new Parliament is testament to our commitment to democracy and progress!
By- A palace which housed English Queen Elizabeth in Kwekwe when she visited Zimbabwe during the colonial era is under siege from artisanal miners.
The palace is now being used by Kuvimba Mining House’s Homestake Mining Company as a guest house.
A source within Homestake Mine told NewZimbabwe.com.
It is true the Queen used to stay in that place whenever she visited the country. It is unfortunate the place is now under siege from illegal gold panners.
Residents who stay close to the Palace said the artisanal miners overran the place about two months ago. One resident said:
For two months now the illegal gold miners have been prospecting at the house. They have been having running battles with the police, but they always come back to prospect.
What is sad is the fact that these illegal gold mining activities are being conducted just close to the CBD. It is really an eyesore.
Kwekwe is home to some historical sites, which include the Paper House, where imperialist Cicil John Rhodes used to stay when he visited the gold mining city.
Both the Paper House and the Queen’s Palace are not very far from Kwekwe’s Central Business District (CBD).
Meanwhile, Globe and Phoenix Primary School has also come under siege from the illegal miners.
Kwekwe legislator Judith Tobaiwa has since raised red flags.
By James Gwati- President Emmerson Mnangagwa faces rape charges for allegedly forcing Susan Mutami into s*x with him at a tender age, the controversial Susan Mutami has claimed.
Mutami said the Zanu PF leader, Mr Emmerson Mnangagwa forced her to have sex with him when she was young.
The controversial businesswoman also threated to disclose how Mr Mnangagwa “killed” a young lady in Kwekwe.
“This man (Mnangagwa) raped me when I was a minor and tomorrow I am hosting a space where I will be telling everyone what u did,I’m also going to tell people what u did to that young girl who was studying at Kwekwe High School who later died and u paid all her funeral expenses. Satan,” fumed Mutami.
She was responding to Mr Mnangagwa’s tweet below:
President of Zimbabwe
@edmnangagwa
Jul 20:
A Parliament to be proud of.
Zimbabwe’s new Parliament is testament to our commitment to democracy and progress!
Freelance journalist Simbarashe Sithole’s lawyer, Alice Mujakachi, has sent a formal complaint to Police Commissioner General Godwin Matanga over delay by police in bringing ZANU PF militia Isheanesu aka “Chief Saunyama” Dzimbiti to book.
Dzimbiti is facing threats of future violence charge against Sithole.
In a letter addressed to Matanga and copied to Bindura law and order officer-in-charge Jealous Chitsa, Mujakachi said Police should bring Dzimbiti to court in line with the Constitution.
However, contacted for comment Chitsa professed ignorance saying Dzimbiti was attending to ZANU PF programmes.
“Dzimbiti is busy with ZANU PF programmes. As soon as he finishes, he will come to court,” said Chief Inspector Chitsa.
According to a police memorandum leaked to this publication, Police said the ZANU PF youth league needed schooling on how to handle issues amicably without committing offences.
“ZANU PF youth league needs to be educated on how to handle issues amicably rather than to end up committing offences. It was noted that Isheanesu Dzimbiti also contested for ZANU PF Mashonaland Central Youth Chairmanship. It was also noted that Isheanesu Dzimbiti must desist from using ZANU PF when committing crimes or when threatening individuals since this will go far in tarnishing the political party ZANU PF and the country at large. The issue of factions within ZANU PF political party is dividing supporters hence weakening it’s support base,” reads the police memo in part.
-Byo24
By Fadzayi Mahere I am a politician but I am not writing this letter to you in that capacity.
I am writing to you as a young woman, as a citizen and as part of a generation to whom a debt is due. When we were little, we were told we were “born free” but for reasons caused by this government we go everywhere in chains. We are demanding our freedom because this great nation feels like prison. We were told that a war of liberation was fought on our behalf and that a world of opportunity had been opened. However, with each passing day, it is becoming evident that the oppressor only changed name, face and colour but his methods, laws and operations have remained exactly the same.
The social contract between the state and the people has been broken and replaced by threats of arrest, persecution and underhand punishment for those who dare challenge the torn fabric of a once promising dream. Why must a nation with all the ingredients for success be a graveyard for aspiration? Why must the rich fly in private jets while the poor get stuffed like sardines in rickety buses? Why must the many toil and sweat but starve so that the few can live like royalty?
Why is it a crime to want a better society?
Why is a crime to want funding for public health and schools? Why is it a crime to demand jobs or modern infrastructure? Why is it a crime to seek accountability for the money that we pay in taxes? Why is it a crime to protest against hunger? Why are the police who are meant to protect and secure the lives of citizens mimicking the behaviour of the Special Branch by breaking into the homes of journalists who speak out against corruption? Why do those who are innocent get treated like criminals yet criminals go Scot free?
Imagine if all the young people who are arrested on spurious charges of subversion were included in the economy and spending all those wasted court hours contributing towards the economy through innovation and productivity? Imagine if all the lawyers who waste time arguing bail applications for the pro-democracy activists that are continuously arrested on bogus charges spent their time working on mergers and acquisitions that would grow and develop the economy? Imagine if the property rights framework of the nation enabled more of that to happen? Imagine if people were so inspired by the national vision that they were not planning endless strikes and protests but they were knuckling down to work and they were rewarded in a meaningful currency for their hard work?
The people deserve better and more. We are sick and tired of being sick and tired. There is a generation that is ready to pick up the broken pieces and re-write the contract that you repeatedly breach through violations of the Constitution and fundamental freedoms. People deserve hope. People deserve an ecosystem that allows them to work hard and reap the rewards of their hard work. People deserve to be free and secure in their homes. People deserve a government that they can trust. We will never stop believing in the beauty of this nation regardless of the madness. But the madness must stop.
When people unite and find their collective voice to fight injustice, a nation is reborn.
Sincerely
A citizen who wants a better society, Fadzayi Mahere
Human rights groups have expressed grave concerns over Home Office plans to deport 150 people to Zimbabwe next week, warning that their lives would be in danger.
The flight, scheduled for July 21, comes after the British government reportedly struck a secret deal with President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s regime last month to deport hundreds of Zimbabwean asylum-seekers.
Zimbabwean community groups in Britain said they are horrified by the Home Office’s mass deportation plans given the country’s “atrocious human rights record.”
Restoration of Human Rights (ROHR) said the move was disturbing not only because it disregards the risk to deportees’ lives but also as “this development is pursuant to a bilateral arrangement between the notorious government of Zimbabwe and the government of the United Kingdom.”
The group said that abuses had worsened under the late Robert Mugabe’s successor, including cases of state-sanctioned murder, assault and torture of those critical of the ruling party.
But the Zimbabwe Human Rights Organisation claims that the Home Office’s assessment of the conditions in Zimbabwe are based on the situation in 2016, with only a “few minor updates.”
ROHR added: “The clandestine nature of the operation and the speed at which it is being executed appears to be designed to give the victims little to no chance of access to legal representation.”
The Home Office has already rounded up and detained 150 Zimbabwe citizens for removal next week — the first charter flight to the country since 2019.
Campaigners told the Morning Star that they include people who have lived in Britain for decades, some of whom arrived as children, as well as political activists. The Home Office said that deportees are foreign criminals.
ROHR is among a number of groups considering legal action to halt the flight.
Human rights campaigner and Zimbabwean national Violet, who lives in Britain, warned that the risk for deportees is massive.
“Whatever deal the Home Office made with the Zimbabwean government — those people are not going to be safe at all,” she told the Star.
Ministry of HealthZW
@MoHCCZim
·
Jul 21
@MoHCCZim
&
@ProtonBakers
combine efforts in creating awareness in Marondera on the ongoing Tracoma MDA.
Everyone in the targeted districts(Shamva,Bindura,Rushinga,Binga,Nyanga,Mutasa,Gweru&Marondera) is encouraged to visit their nearest health facility to receive treatment
By- Zanu PF Politburo member and Justice Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi has bribed Kariba residents with sweets.
Ziyambi dished sweets at a rally attended by women in Mahombekombe Suburb last Saturday.
The rally was held to campaign for Kariba Ward 5 Council seat due for a by-election.
At the meeting, Ziyambi also said that government would starve Kariba if the locals voted for Nelson Chamisa’s CCC party.
Said Ziyambi:
Vote wisely because development doesn’t need people to throw away votes. Electing CCC is throwing away votes as they are not responsible for allocating resources.
If you realise the lack of development in this place, Mahombekombe, blame yourselves because you would have thrown away votes by choosing a CCC candidate.
CCC interim provincial spokesperson Blessing Mandava said Ziyambi took the electorate for granted.
The Kariba Ward 5 seat fell vacant following the resignation of then CCC councillor Tendai Mapondera over criminal abuse of office charges.
Tonderai Chikwati will stand for CCC, while Zanu PF will field Kudakwashe Mafusire in the by-election.
More: NewZimbabwe.com
Tinashe Sambiri|CCC leader President Nelson Chamisa has appealed to Ama2000 to register to vote in numbers.
The CCC leader urged young people to join the citizens’ struggle for political emancipation.
“This is it!! Zimbabwe needs all of us thinking, walking, working and acting together. This is a Citizens’ struggle,” said President Chamisa.
He was responding to Advocate Thabani Mpofu’s tweet below:
Thabani Mpofu
@adv_fulcrum
· Jul 19
Let’s have 100 000 citizens in the middle class take upon themselves the obligation to register ama2000. 10 kids each. That’s a million new voters. Does not even cost $100. The middle class has the country’s future right in its hands. Let’s do this.
A 37-year-old man has been arrested in Shurugwi on allegations of killing his two lovers who were businesswomen in separate incidents before stealing their vehicles and various property.
The suspect Emmanuel Mahembe was arrested in connection with the two cases of murder and theft of motor vehicles involving the two businesswomen in Shurugwi.
Investigations revealed that Mahembe killed and buried Patricia Mutero (35) in a shallow grave along the river banks of Gwamvurachena River, Makotore Village in 2021.
He then stole her Honda Fit and the victim’s passport.
This year, Mahembe also killed Idah Chigumbate (37) on May 21 and dumped the remains in Mutevekwi River before getting away with the victim’s cellphone, identity particulars and a Honda fit vehicle.
National police spokesperson Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi confirmed the arrest of Mahembe and said investigations were still in progress. Herald
Tinashe Sambiri|Chief Mazuru left a funeral programme in Gutu East with egg on the face after unsuccessfully attempting to ban CCC songs and slogans.
The traditional leader was forced to leave the burial of CCC cadre Beria Musimudziwa after attempting to block mourners from singing party songs.
CCC supporters ignored Chief Mazuru’s announcement.
See full story below:
Masvingo Mirror
GUTU – Chief Mazuru allegedly left a funeral function at Musimudzirwa Village in Ward 13, Gutu East in a huff as Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) members defied his order to stop sloganeering and singing party songs.
The party was burying its senior member and prominent businessman Beriya Musimudzirwa who died after a long illness.
The situation got to the edge when Chief Mazuru allegedly tried to stop a CCC representative from giving a speech just before burial and he was overwhelmed by the singing and the large number of CCC members.
Having lost the tug-of-war, he allegedly gathered his aides and left in a huff and sources said he was hoping that mourners would dare not bury the deceased in his absence.
Asked for comment, Chief Mazuru told The Mirror that he did not give the order directly to CCC members but talked to the deceased’s family to stop slogans at a funeral because that was not the tradition of the area.
He said CCC members also angered him because they called Musimudzirwa a hero and yet according to him the hero status is only for those who are buried at the Heroes’ Acre.
He warned that those who called Musimudzirwa a hero would get into serious trouble if he reported them to Government adding that it was illegal to call anyone a hero.
“They don’t know that they were committing a serious crime. If I report them they will be in serious trouble. In our tradition we don’t bury our loved ones while wearing party regalia or calling them heroes,” said Mazuru.
Musimudzirwa was the chairperson of the then MDC Alliance and he worked with former MDC MP for Gutu East, Ramson Makamure in 2008.
Present at the funeral was aspiring Gutu East CCC candidate and veteran banker, Gift Gonese.
Gonese calmed mourners after the chief’s departure and told them that burial would continue because the chief like any other citizen has the right to associate or not to associate with a CCC burial. Mourners agreed and the burial went ahead without the chief.
CCC national deputy spokesperson Gift ‘Ostallos’ Siziba said the chief is out of line and his utterances show that he is a partisan chief.
“There is nothing wrong with people wearing party regalia at their member’s funeral. Chiefs should not meddle in political issues,” he said. https://www.masvingomirror.com/
Audio : Susan Mutami reveals Mnangagwa bedroom secrets
Audio : Susan Mutami reveals Mnangagwa bedroom secrets
UN Report: Global Hunger
The number of people affected by hunger globally rose to as many as 828 million in 2021, an increase of about 46 million since 2020 and 150 million since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic (1), according to a United Nations report that provides fresh evidence that the world is moving further away from its goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms by 2030.
The 2022 edition of The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report presents updates on the food security and nutrition situation around the world, including the latest estimates of the cost and affordability of a healthy diet. The report also looks at ways in which governments can repurpose their current support to agriculture to reduce the cost of healthy diets, mindful of the limited public resources available in many parts of the world.
The report was jointly published today by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
The numbers paint a grim picture:
As many as 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021 – 46 million people more from a year earlier and 150 million more from 2019.
After remaining relatively unchanged since 2015, the proportion of people affected by hunger jumped in 2020 and continued to rise in 2021, to 9.8% of the world population. This compares with 8% in 2019 and 9.3% in 2020.
Around 2.3 billion people in the world (29.3%) were moderately or severely food insecure in 2021 – 350 million more compared to before the outbreak of the COVID‑19 pandemic. Nearly 924 million people (11.7% of the global population) faced food insecurity at severe levels, an increase of 207 million in two years.
The gender gap in food insecurity continued to rise in 2021 – 31.9% of women in the world were moderately or severely food insecure, compared to 27.6% of men – a gap of more than 4 percentage points, compared with 3 percentage points in 2020.
Almost 3.1 billion people could not afford a healthy diet in 2020, up 112 million from 2019, reflecting the effects of inflation in consumer food prices stemming from the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and the measures put in place to contain it.
An estimated 45 million children under the age of five were suffering from wasting, the deadliest form of malnutrition, which increases children’s risk of death by up to 12 times. Furthermore, 149 million children under the age of five had stunted growth and development due to a chronic lack of essential nutrients in their diets, while 39 million were overweight.
Progress is being made on exclusive breastfeeding, with nearly 44% of infants under 6 months of age being exclusively breastfed worldwide in 2020. This is still short of the 50% target by 2030. Of great concern, 2 in 3 children are not fed the minimum diverse diet they need to grow and develop to their full potential.
Looking forward, projections are that nearly 670 million people (8% of the world population) will still be facing hunger in 2030 – even if a global economic recovery is taken into consideration. This is a similar number to 2015, when the goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition by the end of this decade was launched under the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
As this report is being published, the ongoing war in Ukraine, involving two of the biggest global producers of staple cereals, oilseeds and fertilizer, is disrupting international supply chains and pushing up the prices of grain, fertilizer, energy, as well as ready-to-use therapeutic food for children with severe malnutrition. This comes as supply chains are already being adversely affected by increasingly frequent extreme climate events, especially in low-income countries, and has potentially sobering implications for global food security and nutrition.
“This report repeatedly highlights the intensification of these major drivers of food insecurity and malnutrition: conflict, climate extremes and economic shocks, combined with growing inequalities,” the heads of the five UN agencies (2) wrote in this year’s Foreword. “The issue at stake is not whether adversities will continue to occur or not, but how we must take bolder action to build resilience against future shocks.”
Repurposing agricultural policies
The report notes as striking that worldwide support for the food and agricultural sector averaged almost US$ 630 billion a year between 2013 and 2018. The lion’s share of it goes to individual farmers, through trade and market policies and fiscal subsidies. However, not only is much of this support market-distorting, but it is not reaching many farmers, hurts the environment and does not promote the production of nutritious foods that make up a healthy diet. That’s in part because subsidies often target the production of staple foods, dairy and other animal source foods, especially in high- and upper-middle-income countries. Rice, sugar and meats of various types are most incentivized food items worldwide, while fruits and vegetables are relatively less supported, particularly in some low-income countries.
With the threats of a global recession looming, and the implications this has on public revenues and expenditures, a way to support economic recovery involves the repurposing of food and agricultural support to target nutritious foods where per capita consumption does not yet match the recommended levels for healthy diets.
The evidence suggests that if governments repurpose the resources they are using to incentivize the production, supply and consumption of nutritious foods, they will contribute to making healthy diets less costly, more affordable and equitably for all.
Finally, the report also points out that governments could do more to reduce trade barriers for nutritious foods, such as fruits, vegetables and pulses.
(1) It is estimated that between 702 and 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021. The estimate is presented as a range to reflect the added uncertainty in data collection due to the COVID-19 pandemic and related restrictions. The increases are measured with reference to the middle of the projected range (768 million).
(2) For FAO – QU Dongyu, Director-General; for IFAD – Gilbert F. Houngbo, President; for UNICEF – Catherine Russell, Executive Director; for WFP – David Beasley, Executive Director; for WHO – Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General.
What they said
FAO Director-General QU Dongyu: “Low-income countries, where agriculture is key to the economy, jobs and rural livelihoods, have little public resources to repurpose. FAO is committed to continue working together with these countries to explore opportunities for increasing the provision of public services for all actors across agrifood systems.”
IFAD President Gilbert F. Houngbo: “These are depressing figures for humanity. We continue to move away from our goal of ending hunger by 2030. The ripple effects of the global food crisis will most likely worsen the outcome again next year. We need a more intense approach to end hunger and IFAD stands ready to do its part by scaling up its operations and impact. We look forward to having everyone’s support.”
UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell: “The unprecedented scale of the malnutrition crisis demands an unprecedented response. We must double our efforts to ensure that the most vulnerable children have access to nutritious, safe, and affordable diets — and services for the early prevention, detection and treatment of malnutrition. With so many children’s lives and futures at stake, this is the time to step up our ambition for child nutrition – and we have no time to waste.”
WFP Executive Director David Beasley: “There is a real danger these numbers will climb even higher in the months ahead. The global price spikes in food, fuel and fertilizers that we are seeing as a result of the crisis in Ukraine threaten to push countries around the world into famine. The result will be global destabilization, starvation, and mass migration on an unprecedented scale. We have to act today to avert this looming catastrophe.”
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus: “Every year, 11 million people die due to unhealthy diets. Rising food prices mean this will only get worse. WHO supports countries’ efforts to improve food systems through taxing unhealthy foods and subsidising healthy options, protecting children from harmful marketing, and ensuring clear nutrition labels. We must work together to achieve the 2030 global nutrition targets, to fight hunger and malnutrition, and to ensure that food is a source of health for all.”
GLOSSARY
Acute food insecurity: food insecurity found in a specified area at a specific point in time and of a severity that threatens lives or livelihoods, or both, regardless of the causes, context or duration. Has relevance in providing strategic guidance to actions that focus on short-term objectives to prevent, mitigate or decrease severe food insecurity.
Hunger: an uncomfortable or painful sensation caused by insufficient energy from diet. Food deprivation. In this report, the term hunger is synonymous with chronic undernourishment and is measured by the prevalence of undernourishment (PoU).
Malnutrition: an abnormal physiological condition caused by inadequate, unbalanced or excessive intake of macronutrients and/or micronutrients. Malnutrition includes undernutrition (child stunting and wasting, and vitamin and mineral deficiencies) as well as overweight and obesity.
Moderate food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which people face uncertainties about their ability to obtain food and have been forced to reduce, at times during the year, the quality and/or quantity of food they consume due to lack of money or other resources. It refers to a lack of consistent access to food, which diminishes dietary quality and disrupts normal eating patterns. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Severe food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which, at some time during the year, people have run out of food, experienced hunger and at the most extreme, gone without food for a day or more. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Undernourishment: a condition in which an individual’s habitual food consumption is insufficient to provide the amount of dietary energy required to maintain a normal, active, healthy life. The prevalence of undernourishment is used to measure hunger (SDG indicator 2.1.1).
Source: World Health Organization
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One person died while 8 others were critically injured when a Tenda bus they were travelling on veered off the road and overturned near Rusape.
Police said the accident occurred around 4 PM this Thursday at the 165km peg along the Harare-Mutare highway. A statement posted on the ZRP official Twitter page reads:
The ZRP confirms a fatal road traffic accident which occurred today at around 1600 hours at the 165 km peg along Harare-Mutare road near Rusape where one person died while 30 passengers were injured, eight of them in critical condition.
The driver of a Tenda bus with 50 passengers on board tried to overtake another vehicle resulting in the bus veering off the road before overturning.
Police said they will release more details pertaining to the accident in due course.
Meanwhile, one of the passengers, Enoch Zhungu, who sustained minor injuries, told ZBC News that the bus overturned and dragged on the tarmac after the driver was stopped by police as he was overtaking a haulage truck.
He said the driver lost control of the bus as he tried to return to his lane.- ZBC
By-South Africa’s former President Thabo Mbeki has criticised President Cyril Ramaphosa for failing to deliver on a pledge he made on February 10 to provide a comprehensive social compact to boost economic growth within 100 days.
The plan has yet to be announced.
He also warned that South Africa faces the danger of protests similar to those that toppled governments in the Arab world a decade ago unless it addresses growing lawlessness and inequality.
Mbeki led South Africa immediately after Nelson Mandela stepped down in 1999.
Arab Spring was a wave of pro-democracy protests and uprisings that took place in the Middle East and North Africa beginning in 2010 and 2011, challenging some of the region’s entrenched authoritarian regimes.
The wave began when protests in Tunisia and Egypt toppled their regimes in quick succession, inspiring similar attempts in other Arab countries.
Not every country saw success in the protest movement, however, and demonstrators expressing their political and economic grievances were often met with violent crackdowns by their countries’ security forces.
South Africa’s economy has been going receding in recent years mainly because the country’s three major macroeconomic problems – slim economic growth, growing inflation, and very high unemployment, have been exacerbated by a series of major disruptions.
These include the COVID pandemic, floods, violence that erupted in Kwa-Zulu Natal and Gauteng, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine which is pushing up food prices.
Mbeki’s statements could be seen as a direct incitement to violence from xenophobic South Africans.
By-Bail ruling for the detained CCC deputy Chairman, Job Sikhala, has been moved to next week Tuesday.
CCC posted on Twitter announcing the new bail ruling date.
“Our MP Job Sikhala’s bail ruling will be handed down on Tuesday, the 26th of July 2022 at 1415hrs. Let’s come to show solidarity with our change champion who’s being persecuted by the regime in Harare for demanding justice for Moreblessing Ali,” posted the party.
Sikhala is facing charges of inciting violence and obstruction of justice.
He was arrested last month while representing the family of the late CCC activist Moreblesing Ali, who Zanu PF activists in Nyatsime murdered.
By- A palace which housed English Queen Elizabeth in Kwekwe when she visited Zimbabwe during the colonial era is under siege from artisanal miners.
The palace is now being used by Kuvimba Mining House’s Homestake Mining Company as a guest house.
A source within Homestake Mine told NewZimbabwe.com.
It is true the Queen used to stay in that place whenever she visited the country. It is unfortunate the place is now under siege from illegal gold panners.
Residents who stay close to the Palace said the artisanal miners overran the place about two months ago. One resident said:
For two months now the illegal gold miners have been prospecting at the house. They have been having running battles with the police, but they always come back to prospect.
What is sad is the fact that these illegal gold mining activities are being conducted just close to the CBD. It is really an eyesore.
Kwekwe is home to some historical sites, which include the Paper House, where imperialist Cicil John Rhodes used to stay when he visited the gold mining city.
Both the Paper House and the Queen’s Palace are not very far from Kwekwe’s Central Business District (CBD).
Meanwhile, Globe and Phoenix Primary School has also come under siege from the illegal miners.
Kwekwe legislator Judith Tobaiwa has since raised red flags.
By-Bail ruling for the detained CCC deputy Chairman, Job Sikhala, has been moved to next week Tuesday.
CCC posted on Twitter announcing the new bail ruling date.
“Our MP Job Sikhala’s bail ruling will be handed down on Tuesday, the 26th of July 2022 at 1415hrs. Let’s come to show solidarity with our change champion who’s being persecuted by the regime in Harare for demanding justice for Moreblessing Ali,” posted the party.
Sikhala is facing charges of inciting violence and obstruction of justice.
He was arrested last month while representing the family of the late CCC activist Moreblesing Ali, who Zanu PF activists in Nyatsime murdered.
By James Gwati- Socialite and controversial health care worker Susan Mutami has released her bedroom pictures within the mines deputy minister Polite Kambamura.
Mutami also posted her WhatsApp conversation with one Debbie Vico complaining that Kambamura was not paying her rentals obligation for her.
She also threatened to reveal more pictures with her and President Emerson Mnangagwa.
Early this week, Mutami shocked the nation when she said she had sex with the President.
Posting on her social media platforms Thursday, the controversial socialite said she would reveal more images of her and Mnangagwa.
She posted:
Citizens I’m going to post a few pics that I need u to keep kuitira pandinenge ndichitaura story yangu munge mune reference as well.
can u please do me a huge favor and dig up
old office pics when he was the VP of
The winners for the CAF Awards 2022 were confirmed at a ceremony that took place in Rabat on Thursday.
Bayern Munich and Senegal forward Sadio Mane took home the men’s Player of the Year award for the second time in his career after beating the competition of fellow countryman Edouard Mendy and his ex-Liverpool teammate Mohamed Salah.
In the women’s category, Asisat Oshoala of Nigeria won her fifth best player award, overcoming Zambia’s Grace Chanda and Cameroonian Ajara Nchout Njoya.
The Men’s Coach of the Year gong went to Senegal national team Aliou Cisse, while Desiree Ellis (South Africa) won the female category.
Full list of winners:
Player of the Year (Women)
Asisat Oshoala (Nigeria & Barcelona)
Player of the Year (Men)
Sadio Mane (Senegal & Bayern Munich)
Interclub Player of the Year (Women)
Evelyn Badu (Ghana & Sekondi Hasaacas Ladies/Alvaldsnes)
Interclub Player of the Year (Men)
Mohamed El Shenawy (Egypt & Al Ahly)
Young Player of the Year (Women)
Evelyn Badu (Ghana & Sekondi Hasaacas Ladies/Alvaldsnes)
Young Player of the Year (Men)
Pape Matar Sarr (Senegal & Tottenham Hotspur)
Coach of the Year (Men)
Aliou Cisse (Senegal)
Coach of the Year (Women)
Desiree Ellis (South Africa)
Club of the Year (Women)
Mamelodi Sundowns (South Africa)
Club of the Year (Men)
Wydad Athletic Club (Morocco)
National Team of the Year (Men)
Senegal
National Team of the Year (Women)
The winner will be announced on 23 July 2022 during the final match of the Women’s AFCON.
Goal of the Year
Pape Ousmane Sakho (Senegal & Simba)- Soccer 24 Zimbabwe
UN Report: Global Hunger
The number of people affected by hunger globally rose to as many as 828 million in 2021, an increase of about 46 million since 2020 and 150 million since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic (1), according to a United Nations report that provides fresh evidence that the world is moving further away from its goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms by 2030.
The 2022 edition of The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report presents updates on the food security and nutrition situation around the world, including the latest estimates of the cost and affordability of a healthy diet. The report also looks at ways in which governments can repurpose their current support to agriculture to reduce the cost of healthy diets, mindful of the limited public resources available in many parts of the world.
The report was jointly published today by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
The numbers paint a grim picture:
As many as 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021 – 46 million people more from a year earlier and 150 million more from 2019.
After remaining relatively unchanged since 2015, the proportion of people affected by hunger jumped in 2020 and continued to rise in 2021, to 9.8% of the world population. This compares with 8% in 2019 and 9.3% in 2020.
Around 2.3 billion people in the world (29.3%) were moderately or severely food insecure in 2021 – 350 million more compared to before the outbreak of the COVID‑19 pandemic. Nearly 924 million people (11.7% of the global population) faced food insecurity at severe levels, an increase of 207 million in two years.
The gender gap in food insecurity continued to rise in 2021 – 31.9% of women in the world were moderately or severely food insecure, compared to 27.6% of men – a gap of more than 4 percentage points, compared with 3 percentage points in 2020.
Almost 3.1 billion people could not afford a healthy diet in 2020, up 112 million from 2019, reflecting the effects of inflation in consumer food prices stemming from the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and the measures put in place to contain it.
An estimated 45 million children under the age of five were suffering from wasting, the deadliest form of malnutrition, which increases children’s risk of death by up to 12 times. Furthermore, 149 million children under the age of five had stunted growth and development due to a chronic lack of essential nutrients in their diets, while 39 million were overweight.
Progress is being made on exclusive breastfeeding, with nearly 44% of infants under 6 months of age being exclusively breastfed worldwide in 2020. This is still short of the 50% target by 2030. Of great concern, 2 in 3 children are not fed the minimum diverse diet they need to grow and develop to their full potential.
Looking forward, projections are that nearly 670 million people (8% of the world population) will still be facing hunger in 2030 – even if a global economic recovery is taken into consideration. This is a similar number to 2015, when the goal of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition by the end of this decade was launched under the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
As this report is being published, the ongoing war in Ukraine, involving two of the biggest global producers of staple cereals, oilseeds and fertilizer, is disrupting international supply chains and pushing up the prices of grain, fertilizer, energy, as well as ready-to-use therapeutic food for children with severe malnutrition. This comes as supply chains are already being adversely affected by increasingly frequent extreme climate events, especially in low-income countries, and has potentially sobering implications for global food security and nutrition.
“This report repeatedly highlights the intensification of these major drivers of food insecurity and malnutrition: conflict, climate extremes and economic shocks, combined with growing inequalities,” the heads of the five UN agencies (2) wrote in this year’s Foreword. “The issue at stake is not whether adversities will continue to occur or not, but how we must take bolder action to build resilience against future shocks.”
Repurposing agricultural policies
The report notes as striking that worldwide support for the food and agricultural sector averaged almost US$ 630 billion a year between 2013 and 2018. The lion’s share of it goes to individual farmers, through trade and market policies and fiscal subsidies. However, not only is much of this support market-distorting, but it is not reaching many farmers, hurts the environment and does not promote the production of nutritious foods that make up a healthy diet. That’s in part because subsidies often target the production of staple foods, dairy and other animal source foods, especially in high- and upper-middle-income countries. Rice, sugar and meats of various types are most incentivized food items worldwide, while fruits and vegetables are relatively less supported, particularly in some low-income countries.
With the threats of a global recession looming, and the implications this has on public revenues and expenditures, a way to support economic recovery involves the repurposing of food and agricultural support to target nutritious foods where per capita consumption does not yet match the recommended levels for healthy diets.
The evidence suggests that if governments repurpose the resources they are using to incentivize the production, supply and consumption of nutritious foods, they will contribute to making healthy diets less costly, more affordable and equitably for all.
Finally, the report also points out that governments could do more to reduce trade barriers for nutritious foods, such as fruits, vegetables and pulses.
(1) It is estimated that between 702 and 828 million people were affected by hunger in 2021. The estimate is presented as a range to reflect the added uncertainty in data collection due to the COVID-19 pandemic and related restrictions. The increases are measured with reference to the middle of the projected range (768 million).
(2) For FAO – QU Dongyu, Director-General; for IFAD – Gilbert F. Houngbo, President; for UNICEF – Catherine Russell, Executive Director; for WFP – David Beasley, Executive Director; for WHO – Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General.
What they said
FAO Director-General QU Dongyu: “Low-income countries, where agriculture is key to the economy, jobs and rural livelihoods, have little public resources to repurpose. FAO is committed to continue working together with these countries to explore opportunities for increasing the provision of public services for all actors across agrifood systems.”
IFAD President Gilbert F. Houngbo: “These are depressing figures for humanity. We continue to move away from our goal of ending hunger by 2030. The ripple effects of the global food crisis will most likely worsen the outcome again next year. We need a more intense approach to end hunger and IFAD stands ready to do its part by scaling up its operations and impact. We look forward to having everyone’s support.”
UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell: “The unprecedented scale of the malnutrition crisis demands an unprecedented response. We must double our efforts to ensure that the most vulnerable children have access to nutritious, safe, and affordable diets — and services for the early prevention, detection and treatment of malnutrition. With so many children’s lives and futures at stake, this is the time to step up our ambition for child nutrition – and we have no time to waste.”
WFP Executive Director David Beasley: “There is a real danger these numbers will climb even higher in the months ahead. The global price spikes in food, fuel and fertilizers that we are seeing as a result of the crisis in Ukraine threaten to push countries around the world into famine. The result will be global destabilization, starvation, and mass migration on an unprecedented scale. We have to act today to avert this looming catastrophe.”
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus: “Every year, 11 million people die due to unhealthy diets. Rising food prices mean this will only get worse. WHO supports countries’ efforts to improve food systems through taxing unhealthy foods and subsidising healthy options, protecting children from harmful marketing, and ensuring clear nutrition labels. We must work together to achieve the 2030 global nutrition targets, to fight hunger and malnutrition, and to ensure that food is a source of health for all.”
GLOSSARY
Acute food insecurity: food insecurity found in a specified area at a specific point in time and of a severity that threatens lives or livelihoods, or both, regardless of the causes, context or duration. Has relevance in providing strategic guidance to actions that focus on short-term objectives to prevent, mitigate or decrease severe food insecurity.
Hunger: an uncomfortable or painful sensation caused by insufficient energy from diet. Food deprivation. In this report, the term hunger is synonymous with chronic undernourishment and is measured by the prevalence of undernourishment (PoU).
Malnutrition: an abnormal physiological condition caused by inadequate, unbalanced or excessive intake of macronutrients and/or micronutrients. Malnutrition includes undernutrition (child stunting and wasting, and vitamin and mineral deficiencies) as well as overweight and obesity.
Moderate food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which people face uncertainties about their ability to obtain food and have been forced to reduce, at times during the year, the quality and/or quantity of food they consume due to lack of money or other resources. It refers to a lack of consistent access to food, which diminishes dietary quality and disrupts normal eating patterns. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Severe food insecurity: a level of severity of food insecurity at which, at some time during the year, people have run out of food, experienced hunger and at the most extreme, gone without food for a day or more. Measured based on the Food Insecurity Experience Scale.
Undernourishment: a condition in which an individual’s habitual food consumption is insufficient to provide the amount of dietary energy required to maintain a normal, active, healthy life. The prevalence of undernourishment is used to measure hunger (SDG indicator 2.1.1).
Source: World Health Organization
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By Fadzayi Mahere
I am a politician but I am not writing this letter to you in that capacity.
I am writing to you as a young woman, as a citizen and as part of a generation to whom a debt is due. When we were little, we were told we were “born free” but for reasons caused by this government we go everywhere in chains. We are demanding our freedom because this great nation feels like prison. We were told that a war of liberation was fought on our behalf and that a world of opportunity had been opened. However, with each passing day, it is becoming evident that the oppressor only changed name, face and colour but his methods, laws and operations have remained exactly the same.
The social contract between the state and the people has been broken and replaced by threats of arrest, persecution and underhand punishment for those who dare challenge the torn fabric of a once promising dream. Why must a nation with all the ingredients for success be a graveyard for aspiration? Why must the rich fly in private jets while the poor get stuffed like sardines in rickety buses? Why must the many toil and sweat but starve so that the few can live like royalty?
Why is it a crime to want a better society?
Why is a crime to want funding for public health and schools? Why is it a crime to demand jobs or modern infrastructure? Why is it a crime to seek accountability for the money that we pay in taxes? Why is it a crime to protest against hunger? Why are the police who are meant to protect and secure the lives of citizens mimicking the behaviour of the Special Branch by breaking into the homes of journalists who speak out against corruption? Why do those who are innocent get treated like criminals yet criminals go Scot free?
Imagine if all the young people who are arrested on spurious charges of subversion were included in the economy and spending all those wasted court hours contributing towards the economy through innovation and productivity? Imagine if all the lawyers who waste time arguing bail applications for the pro-democracy activists that are continuously arrested on bogus charges spent their time working on mergers and acquisitions that would grow and develop the economy? Imagine if the property rights framework of the nation enabled more of that to happen? Imagine if people were so inspired by the national vision that they were not planning endless strikes and protests but they were knuckling down to work and they were rewarded in a meaningful currency for their hard work?
The people deserve better and more. We are sick and tired of being sick and tired. There is a generation that is ready to pick up the broken pieces and re-write the contract that you repeatedly breach through violations of the Constitution and fundamental freedoms. People deserve hope. People deserve an ecosystem that allows them to work hard and reap the rewards of their hard work. People deserve to be free and secure in their homes. People deserve a government that they can trust. We will never stop believing in the beauty of this nation regardless of the madness. But the madness must stop.
When people unite and find their collective voice to fight injustice, a nation is reborn.
Sincerely
A citizen who wants a better society,
Fadzayi Mahere
Tinashe Sambiri|CCC leader President Nelson Chamisa has appealed to Ama2000 to register to vote in numbers.
The CCC leader urged young people to join the citizens’ struggle for political emancipation.
“This is it!! Zimbabwe needs all of us thinking, walking, working and acting together. This is a Citizens’ struggle,” said President Chamisa.
He was responding to Advocate Thabani Mpofu’s tweet below:
Thabani Mpofu
@adv_fulcrum
· Jul 19
Let’s have 100 000 citizens in the middle class take upon themselves the obligation to register ama2000. 10 kids each. That’s a million new voters. Does not even cost $100. The middle class has the country’s future right in its hands. Let’s do this.
Tinashe Sambiri|Chief Mazuru left a funeral programme in Gutu East with egg on the face after unsuccessfully attempting to ban CCC songs and slogans.
The traditional leader was forced to leave the burial of CCC cadre Beria Musimudziwa after attempting to block mourners from singing party songs.
CCC supporters ignored Chief Mazuru’s announcement.
See full story below:
Masvingo Mirror
GUTU – Chief Mazuru allegedly left a funeral function at Musimudzirwa Village in Ward 13, Gutu East in a huff as Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) members defied his order to stop sloganeering and singing party songs.
The party was burying its senior member and prominent businessman Beriya Musimudzirwa who died after a long illness.
The situation got to the edge when Chief Mazuru allegedly tried to stop a CCC representative from giving a speech just before burial and he was overwhelmed by the singing and the large number of CCC members.
Having lost the tug-of-war, he allegedly gathered his aides and left in a huff and sources said he was hoping that mourners would dare not bury the deceased in his absence.
Asked for comment, Chief Mazuru told The Mirror that he did not give the order directly to CCC members but talked to the deceased’s family to stop slogans at a funeral because that was not the tradition of the area.
He said CCC members also angered him because they called Musimudzirwa a hero and yet according to him the hero status is only for those who are buried at the Heroes’ Acre.
He warned that those who called Musimudzirwa a hero would get into serious trouble if he reported them to Government adding that it was illegal to call anyone a hero.
“They don’t know that they were committing a serious crime. If I report them they will be in serious trouble. In our tradition we don’t bury our loved ones while wearing party regalia or calling them heroes,” said Mazuru.
Musimudzirwa was the chairperson of the then MDC Alliance and he worked with former MDC MP for Gutu East, Ramson Makamure in 2008.
Present at the funeral was aspiring Gutu East CCC candidate and veteran banker, Gift Gonese.
Gonese calmed mourners after the chief’s departure and told them that burial would continue because the chief like any other citizen has the right to associate or not to associate with a CCC burial. Mourners agreed and the burial went ahead without the chief.
CCC national deputy spokesperson Gift ‘Ostallos’ Siziba said the chief is out of line and his utterances show that he is a partisan chief.
“There is nothing wrong with people wearing party regalia at their member’s funeral. Chiefs should not meddle in political issues,” he said. https://www.masvingomirror.com/
Tinashe Sambiri|CCC leader President Nelson Chamisa has appealed to Ama2000 to register to vote in numbers.
The CCC leader urged young people to join the citizens’ struggle for political emancipation.
“This is it!! Zimbabwe needs all of us thinking, walking, working and acting together. This is a Citizens’ struggle,” said President Chamisa.
He was responding to Advocate Thabani Mpofu’s tweet below:
Thabani Mpofu
@adv_fulcrum
· Jul 19
Let’s have 100 000 citizens in the middle class take upon themselves the obligation to register ama2000. 10 kids each. That’s a million new voters. Does not even cost $100. The middle class has the country’s future right in its hands. Let’s do this.