Minister of Information and Media and Chief Government Spokesperson, Hon. Cornelius Mweetwa, held a press briefing addressing key matters of national interest, ranging from constitutional reforms and the economy to the ongoing dispute over the funeral of former President Edgar Lungu.
IMPEACHMENT CALLS DISMISSED AS “POLITICAL STUNTS”
Hon. Mweetwa strongly dismissed calls for the impeachment of President Hakainde Hichilema, labelling them a politically motivated distraction aimed at derailing public focus from the country’s developmental progress.
“President Hichilema has not breached any article of the Constitution or written law with respect to Bill 7,” the Minister said. “There is no legal basis, even from the courts, suggesting a violation warranting impeachment.”
He clarified that the Constitutional Court’s judgment regarding Bill 7 was advisory, not instructive, and no part of the ruling accused the government of violating constitutional provisions.
The Minister confirmed that Bill 7 has been deferred, not withdrawn, in order to facilitate broader consultations, particularly in response to concerns raised during the June 4, 2025 stakeholder meeting. The government plans to reintroduce the bill in September to address constitutional gaps ahead of the 2026 elections.
“Let us focus on real issues like the cost of living, which is slowly improving, the reduction in fuel prices, and the strengthening kwacha — all signs of solid economic policy,” Mweetwa urged political players.
COST OF LIVING & BUSINESS RESPONSIBILITY
The Minister acknowledged public frustration with static commodity prices despite the recent fuel price reduction announced by the Energy Regulation Board (ERB).
“Every time fuel goes up, prices of goods and services increase — but when fuel drops, nothing changes,” he said. “We urge the business community to reflect the government’s efforts to make life affordable for ordinary Zambians.”
He also refuted social media rumours that Zambia’s power generation was reducing Zimbabwe’s load-shedding, noting that Zambezi River Authority allocates water equally to both countries. Zambia’s gains, he clarified, are not at Zimbabwe’s expense.
President Hichilema has directed all ministries to minimize travel and use virtual platforms like Zoom as part of broader fiscal discipline amid current economic realities.
LUNGU FUNERAL IMPASSE: SEEKING A ZAMBIAN SOLUTION
Hon. Mweetwa addressed the ongoing legal impasse regarding the burial of former President Edgar Lungu, stating that the Attorney General’s lawsuit in South Africa was not malicious or intended to pressure the Lungu family.
“Government has always desired an amicable, dignified resolution — as one Zambian family,” he said. “It would be wonderful to look back and say we resolved this among ourselves, not through a foreign court directive.”
The Minister thanked the South African Government for encouraging dialogue and noted that the court in Pretoria is expected to deliver its ruling on 4th August 2025. He reaffirmed President Hichilema’s desire to maintain the national tradition of burying former presidents in one designated location.
“Let us exercise restraint, particularly in the political space, and avoid making inflammatory remarks,” he added.
SOLAR ENERGY EXPANSION AND EXPORTS EXPLAINED
Mweetwa revealed that Phase II of the 100MW Chisamba Solar Power Plant will commence by August 2025, with a 10-month completion timeline. Zambia currently faces a 590MW power deficit, which the Chisamba plant and load management efforts are helping to cushion.
Addressing public concerns over power exports, the Minister clarified that Zambia is exporting only 190MW, strictly to meet binding contracts under the Southern Africa Power Pool.
“Terminating these agreements would lead to costly penalties for ZESCO,” he noted, adding that Zambia is importing power at lower rates than it exports, making it an economically rational decision.
As the nation moves forward on multiple fronts — constitutional reform, energy expansion, and economic recovery — the government has urged all stakeholders to engage constructively and prioritize national unity and progress.
“The path ahead is clearer, greener, and more hopeful,” Mweetwa concluded.
Ati the path is clearer, greener and hopeful. In the 4th year? What is the difference between contents of this statement from Mweetwa with the other statement of sworn in at 10hrs and Kwacha picking at 14hrs same day.
He even says the “cost of living which is slowly improving” who told you it is improving. Improving where when living standards have worsened ever since your government took over. Beat the PF record first in prices of fuel, mealie meal, hours of loadshedding, for loadsheddng you are even allowed to use your dubai formula and also bring the exchange rate to beat PF stats. Ati the economy is improving, how and where? The usual daily self praise totally detached from the reality on the ground
Alterations and changes in the constitution are only a political expedient. That’s why even an instruction from the court can be seen as an advice. The laws broken to make other laws as cited by the concourt judgement is basically an instruction that must be followed. Will Mwanza’s petition have been concluded by September? If it was merely an advisory judgement, why must Mwanza even bother seeking redress? How sure are UPND that by that time the hurdles would have been cleared and ready to debate the Bill?
nonsense
He is not a very good spin Dr.
Wait for 2026 most Zambians will respond to your arrogance
Haters of the party in Govt
Government must make it policy to be intervening in the market for essential goods and services like it did in the mealie meal market to restore equilibrium.There will always be cartels engaging in secret agreements to hold prices and distort the market forces
PF had no direction and it has no direction and it will never have any direction.
@ Angoni
Wait for 2026 most Zambians will respond to your arrogance
Whether you like it or not us the 2.8 million voters are working silent and then we will show you that big vote to UPND in 2026 , Imagine, No more pangas , free education, napsa partial, ndola kitwe dual carriage way now it will even go up to Livingstone , mines opening, kwacha appreciating , fuel coming down and there is 26% shareholding for Zambia in aongola fuel. What more do you want , Muzakafa nechikonko baba in 2026.