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ZCS backs Govt food security drive

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Zambia Correctional Service Commission Chairperson Evaristo Kalonga says the Service remains committed to supporting President Hakainde Hichilema’s vision of strengthening national food security through expanded agricultural production.

Mr Kalonga said the Correctional Service continues to play a key role in food production across the country, noting that Northern Province alone has cultivated 181 hectares of maize for the 2026/2027 farming season.

Mr Kalonga said that all correctional facilities in the province are food self‑sufficient due to consistent annual maize production.

“As you may be aware, all correctional facilities in the province feed themselves; they do not buy mealie meal because of the production that is taking place,” Mr Kalonga said.

He explained that the Service’s productivity is also contributing to stabilising the economy, citing its role in helping reduce inflation from 22 percent in 2021 to 7.5 percent in 2026.

During a courtesy call on Northern Province Permanent Secretary Bernard Mpundu, Mr Kalonga urged officers to remain loyal to the government and ensure humane treatment of inmates, including maintaining clean facilities with running water to prevent disease outbreaks.

“The correctional service is highly productive, and I would like to believe that it has contributed to the lowering of inflation from 22 per cent in 2021 to 7.5 per cent in 2026,” Mr Kalonga explained.

And Northern Province Permanent Secretary Bernard Mpundu acknowledged the Service’s efforts but highlighted challenges such as dilapidated infrastructure and inadequate staff accommodation.

Mr Mpundu noted that many correctional facilities were built for smaller populations and now require expansion.

He also appealed for the construction of a correctional facility in Kaputa District, which currently has none.

Iran oil shock sparks inflation alarm

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Oil prices surging due to the Iran strikes risks reigniting global inflation, warns the CEO of global financial advisory giant deVere Group.

The stark warning from Nigel Green follows oil’s sharp rally as escalating US military action against Iran has injected fresh volatility into global markets, with Brent crude briefly pushing above $82 a barrel in Asian trading before settling near $78, up roughly 7% on the session.

He says: “Investors are now confronting a renewed inflation threat at a moment when price growth in major economies remains above or only just approaching central bank targets.

“When Brent jumps at this speed, inflation arithmetic changes quickly across developed economies.”

The Bank of England estimates that a 10% increase in the price of Brent crude typically adds around 0.2 to 0.3 percentage points to UK inflation.

The deVere CEO argues the significance of that multiplier is being underestimated.

“A sustained move of this magnitude would materially lift headline CPI in the UK.

“Policymakers who believed inflation was moving steadily back toward target would face renewed pressure.”

UK inflation recently stood above the Bank’s 2% objective, with services inflation proving persistent. An additional energy impulse would risk embedding higher expectations among households and businesses.

He extends the warning to the United States.

“US inflation remains sensitive to fuel costs. Gas prices feed directly into consumer sentiment and inflation expectations. If crude pushes toward $90 or $100, the pass-through into CPI becomes unavoidable.”

The Federal Reserve targets 2% inflation and has spent several years combating post-pandemic price acceleration, but energy shocks complicate that effort.

“Even if core measures exclude food and fuel, sustained oil increases tend to bleed into transportation, logistics, manufacturing input costs and ultimately consumer prices.

“Oil does not operate in isolation. Higher freight costs, higher airline fuel bills, higher distribution expenses. Corporate margins tighten or prices rise. Often both.”

In the euro area, recent moderation in headline inflation has been partly supported by softer energy costs.

A reversal would challenge the European Central Bank’s (ECB) easing assumptions.

“Europe is structurally more exposed to imported energy volatility. Any disruption to Middle Eastern supply routes tightens the supply-demand balance and amplifies price swings. Inflation progress across the bloc could stall.”

Australia faces similar sensitivity. With inflation running above the Reserve Bank of Australia’s 2-3% target band, additional energy pressure risks delaying policy relief.

“Australian households are already managing elevated living costs. Fuel and transport are highly visible expenses. A prolonged crude rally would filter quickly into domestic inflation data,” notes Nigel Green.

Beyond direct CPI mechanics, the deVere chief executive also stresses the behavioral dimension.

“If businesses anticipate persistent input cost increases, pricing decisions adjust pre-emptively. If workers expect higher living costs, wage demands strengthen.”

Geopolitical escalation heightens the probability of supply disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, a corridor that handles roughly a fifth of globally traded crude. Even without physical blockage, risk premiums expand when military tensions intensify.

“History teaches us that markets price risk before barrels disappear.

“Insurance costs rise, shipping routes shift, futures curves steepen. Volatility alone can sustain higher benchmark prices.”

Energy-driven inflation also narrows central bank flexibility.

“Rate-cut expectations would weaken under sustained oil pressure,” says Nigel Green.

“Central banks can’t overlook an externally generated price surge. Policy would remain tighter for longer, weighing on growth.”

Financial markets, in his view, are beginning to incorporate that scenario.

“Equities can absorb temporary spikes,” he says. “Extended conflict changes the calculus. Earnings forecasts assume stable input costs. If crude remains elevated, revisions will follow.”

The deVere CEO concludes: “If oil keeps climbing, inflation will climb with it, and central banks are forced back onto the defensive.”

America in Dark Tunnel

By Mwizenge S. Tembo, Ph. D.

Emeritus Professor of Sociology

When I taught college for 41 years, I heavily depended on the metaphor of the dark tunnel for my graduating seniors. At the beginning of the 16-week Spring semester, I would tell the class they better be ready because we were about to enter a long dark tunnel at the end of which they would emerge to graduate. The tunnel had ten to fifteen course assignments that included tests, ten quizzes, papers, class group discussions, exams, research semester project papers, and numerous oral presentations. Besides my class, the graduating seniors had 4 or 5 other equally demanding classes they had to pass.

During the middle of the semester when all the heavy assignments were keeping them busy, I would ask the class if they could see the light at the end of the dark tunnel. There was a serious slow shaking of heads that conveyed “Are you kidding me?” If you enjoy teaching, there is always banter between students and the professor. In one class of graduating seniors during one Spring, I had a graduating senior, Jane, with whom I had banter back and forth with in class during the semester. All the assignments including the major research project were behind us. All that remained were the final exam and then the graduation ceremony. I asked the class if they could see light at the end of the dark tunnel yet. There were unanimous yesses with smiles. Jane raised her hand.

“Prof. Tembo, I still cannot see the light at the end of the tunnel!” she said with a straight face. The class roared with laughter.

“Jane,” I said, shaking my head slowly and feigning disappointment. “I am really disappointed in you. If you cannot see the light, I will give you my glasses,” I said, taking reading glasses off my nose holding them toward her. There was more laughter.

America is in the middle of a dark tunnel. Durin the 250 years since its birth, the country has lived through numerous dark tunnels which included major wars. President Lincoln would not have known that the union would still hold after the Civil War. Americans could not have known that they would succeed on D- Day in Europe perhaps during one of the darkest moments during World War II during the Allied fight against NAZI Germany and the American fight against Japan. There were the tumultuous Civil Rights era and the Vietnam War.

If you are not aware today that we are living in a dark tunnel, you might be among the 39% Americans polls suggest still support this President and this administration inspite all the terrible things they have instigated the last year. Harris won 74,470,093 votes (48.25%), Trump won 76,957,993 votes which is 49.87% of the voting total of 154,330,46348. Trump won only by 1.62% contrary to his hoopla that he won by a landslide mandate that empowers him and his administration to do anything they want.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is causing violations of the constitution and civil rights abuses, widespread violence, racial profiling, and ICE agents shooting to deaths of 2 innocent American citizens in Minneapolis in Nicole Goode and Alex Pruitt. These are the martyrs of this American resistance to this fascist and authoritarian government. None of us voted for this chaos and cruelty of the mass deportations. What happened to affordability and lowering of the price of eggs?

When I first heard on the news that morning about the decisive 6-3 Supreme Court ruling striking down the Trump Tariffs, millions of Americans and I were overjoyed. We thought we could see a small light at the end of the dark American tunnel we are living in. Two major small distant lights at the end of this dark tunnel may be the November 2026 mid-term elections and the 2028 Presidential elections. Alas, that small light was snuffed out. Trump held a press conference three hours later in which the small light was blown out; he was going to maintain the chaotic tariffs which you and I pay when we buy imported consumer goods.

There was one very vital lesson I learned during those three short hours when I was happy the tariffs would be eliminated; when you live through this American dark tunnel, you have to learn to enjoy, cherish, and celebrate small victories along the way. This is how Americans have survived the dark tunnels during the growing of the American nation. These small moments of victory do not necessarily have to do with politics. They may be small victories in your personal life. It could be a birthday celebration, a newborn, a potluck dinner or lunch at church, talking and laughing with friends, success in school, work, sports, participating in No Kings demonstrations and other protests of resistance. It occurred to me that this is how individuals in particular and America in general have lived through dark tunnels of personal lives as well as the collective life of the nation.

There’s no ‘ICIMWELA’ for the opposition; it’s HH Mpaka 2031!

The other week, Citizens First party leader, Harry Kalaba featured on Lusaka’s Hot FM phone in programme in Long Acres where he was of course rumbling on a number of issues. As we crossed the road to grab some lunch from Longacres matebeto, we expected multitudes to have besieged the double-storied building where the popular radio station is domiciled to hobnob or at least catch a glimpse of the opposition leader.

But what did we see instead? A handful of hangers-on and people minding their own business as if Kalaba wasn’t in town – taxi drivers dangling car keys or restaurant owners waving mouth watering T/bone at you! Kalaba briskly emerged from the building and jumped into his not so impressive black Hammer and sped off as a few vehicles followed suit.

When John Sangwa, who’s notorious for bragging he’d recruit 1 million members before the elections, ‘stormed’ Chisokone market to fetch ‘imilonge and chiyonge’ expecting an electrifying and frenzied response from the marketeers, they went about their chores oblivious of him.

We’ve seen a similar trend obtaining when other opposition leaders such as Fred M’membe, Makebi Zulu, Saboi Imboela, Sakwiba Sikota, Chishala Kateka, Kasonde Mwenda, Sean Tembo, Brian Mundubile, Kelvin Bwafya Fube, Binwell Mpundu and Given Lubinda etc have ventured in public spaces…..no one seems to seems to care much about their presence.

Now contrast this with the “icimwela” of 2021 that brought President Hichilema in power or indeed the wind of change of 2011 that ushered the King Cobra into office. Activities would virtually be brought to a standstill as people abandoned whatever they were doing to catch a glimpse or shake hands with the then opposition leaders.

What do we make of this?

It’s a done deal for President Hichilema! At the rate things are going , no one will manage to extract from the throne even if they came with a front-end loader. It’s definitely HH Mpaka 2031; stop wasting your time and precious resources ba opposition, maybe try 2091!

Mulekutika?

Prince Bill M. Kaping’a
National Coordinator
HH Mpaka 2031 People’s Alliance
Zambezi

The Opposition Void: Fitting Into President Hichilema’s Big Shoes

By Dr. Martin Mushumba
Public Policy Analyst

President Hakainde Hichilema is the current president of the Republic of Zambia. He spent 23 years as an opposition leader. His experience in politics and indeed leading a successful opposition party is unmatched. Over his 23 years as an opposition leader, he did not merely participate in our politics, he defined an era of principled opposition.

President Hichilema stood tall in Zambia’s democratic landscape. His influence was loud, not through noise, not through spectacle, but through quiet strength, strategic clarity, and unwavering conviction. At a time when opposition politics required uncommon courage, he provided direction with steadiness and dignity.

His strategic discipline, ethical posture, and belief in democratic governance profoundly shaped the political culture of the United Party for National Development (UPND).

He taught us that leadership is not measured by the office one occupies, but by the values one refuses to surrender. He kept on to his values, even when his closest confidants succumbed to pressure. He taught the world that modern politics was about the message that resonates with the people and not character assassination.

With calm resolve and intellectual depth, President Hichilema transformed the UPND into a formidable democratic force that eventually wrestled power from the Patriotic Front. He demonstrated that opposition is not obstruction but guardianship of national conscience. In moments of uncertainty, he offered vision. In moments of pressure, he displayed composure. In moments of hostility, he chose principle and restraint.

Surely, President Hichilema has mentored a generation of leaders who will carry his leadership going forward. The victory of democratic ideals we witness today is, in many ways, a continuation of the foundation he laid. His greatness as an opposition leader was not mere loudness: it was anchored in character. His legacy stands not to be personal but national.

In every way, as an opposition leader, President Hichilema bestrode our politics with dignity and foresight. His principles continue to breathe through the leadership he inspired and the democratic path he charted. His ascension to Presidency has today left a serious vacuum whose depth is clear. You can only pretend not to feel this emptiness when you see the disorganisation in today’s the opposition parties.

Today, I urge the opposition leadership to draw lessons from his resilience, organisational focus, and unshakeable belief that Zambia deserved better.

For those, aspiring to succeed President Hichilema, both within and outside the ruling UPND, begin to learn and practice his politics. You might not like him, but he has raised the bar and that is clear. The benefit to Zambia is that it has managed to expose and eliminate political jokers who for a long time received attention from the masses.

The 2026 general election is around the corner, we seek to witness issue based politics. President Hichilema showed the nation in 2021 that you cannot actually win an election without mudslinging your opponents. Let’s debate ideas and bring to light the vision you have for your wards, constituencies, councils and Zambia as a whole. All the best Zambia.

Nevers Mumba Warns Politicians Against Seeking Juju for Electoral Victory

New Nation Party (NNP) president Nevers Mumba says some desperate politicians are seeking supernatural powers from witch doctors to win the upcoming August general elections.

Dr Mumba warned that power obtained through witchcraft is unsustainable and should not be entertained in Zambia’s political space.

Speaking when he addressed NNP members in Choma before holding a town hall meeting, Dr Mumba said he is aware that some politicians are approaching witch doctors in an attempt to secure victory in the forthcoming polls.

“Now, as we are going towards the elections, witch doctors and wizards have become the richest because politicians are rushing to them to seek power so that they can win,” he said.

“Every day, as I speak, there are some politicians who are kneeling before a witch doctor asking for power to win the election,” Dr Mumba said.

“Let me talk to you as a pastor. If you go to a witch doctor to win an election, he will give you that power, but it belongs to him. So whenever he comes, he will be demanding a sacrifice, and sometimes it will be the blood of your loved one.”

Dr Mumba said Zambians should vote for people who are genuine Christians and not those who have no respect for God. He added that citizens should guard against vulgar and insulting leaders who are full of hatred.

He said there should be no room for criminals to dominate the political space, stating that doing so would misrepresent Zambia’s declaration as a Christian nation.

“Do not test God by calling yourselves a Christian nation and then populating politics with unchristian people who have no respect for God Himself,” he said.

Dr Mumba further stated that the NNP is in an alliance with the UPND because it is the best course of action for the country.

“Let us campaign for President Hichilema because he has done what Zambia needs for the next five years,” he said.

Dr Mumba also announced that he will not contest in the August general elections, saying President Hichilema deserves support for continued stability and economic transformation.

He said the work done by the Head of State within a short period was significant, adding that the previous regime had left the economy in a damaged state.

President Hakainde Hichilema Condemns US–Iran Conflict

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President Hakainde Hichilema has condemned the ongoing conflict involving the United States and Iran.

President Hichilema said Zambia does not support war and expressed hope that the hostilities will come to an end soon.

He stated that the major geopolitical crisis carries significant risks, warning that it could affect global fuel prices and, in turn, impact Zambia’s economy.

Speaking in Lusaka today when he addressed councillors from across the country, President Hichilema said the situation could influence local fuel prices, which have recently been declining.

He, however, noted that government is making every effort to ensure the economy remains on the right path.

Elijah Tana Named Nkana Coach

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Nkana have sent head coach Mwenya Chipepo and his assistant Christopher Katongo on forced leave.

‎Nkana have lost their last three Super League matches.

‎Club Chief Executive Officer Mwansa Kapyanga announced adjustments within the club’s technical structure on Monday evening.

‎”Head Coach Mwenya Chipepo and First Assistant Coach Christopher Katongo have been placed on administrative leave with full pay and benefits, pending the conclusion of internal processes,” a statement from the club read.

‎Nkana are number 12 on the table with 25 points in 22 matches.

‎”These measures are procedural in nature and are intended to allow the club to address internal matters without disruption.”

‎Nkana confirmed that Elijah Tana has been appointed Interim Head Coach.

‎He will be assisted by Josephat Nkhoma as First Assistant Coach and Donashano Malama as Second Assistant Coach. Michael Poto will retain his role as Goalkeeper Coach.

‎Young Nkana Head Coach Simon Bwalya will take on an additional role as Senior Team Physical Trainer while Kelvin Chabala will head Young Nkana.

‎Laston Kangwa will continue as Nkana Girls Head Coach, assisted by Esther Mulenga.

‎“Management believes the changes are necessary at this time and are in the best interests of the club to ensure it remains competitive. The technical bench has been assured of full support,” Kapyanga said.

Godfridah Sumaili Says She Saw Edgar Lungu’s Body in South Africa

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Former Religious and National Guidance Minister Godfridah Sumaili says she personally saw the body of late former President Edgar Lungu in South Africa and has urged the nation to stop spreading rumours that he is still alive.

Sumaili described claims that the former Head of State is still living as inhumane and embarrassing, stating that his remains are still in a morgue in South Africa.

She said that nearly nine months after Lungu’s death, rumours have continued circulating suggesting that he did not die.

Appearing on Crown TV, Sumaili dismissed assertions from some sections of society that the former President is alive.

“Saying that nobody from the party saw the body is a total lie. I traveled to South Africa the day after he died and I’m speaking from my heart, truthfully that I have had an opportunity to see his body,” she said.

Sumaili warned that keeping the body unburied has serious implications for the nation, adding that, in her view, the country remains in mourning as long as the former President remains unburied.

She further called on President Hakainde Hichilema to allow the family to bury the former President according to their wishes.

“It is shameful, embarrassing, uncultural and unchristian to keep the body of a former President unburied for nine months. Let President Hichilema do the right thing and allow the family to bury their loved one according to his and their wishes,” she said.

Sumaili also condemned what she described as unfair treatment of the former First Family by the state, saying the family deserves space to mourn in a respectful manner.

“Asking certain individuals to stay away from the funeral is not keeping grudges, but simply fair that the wishes of the late are respected. It will not be the first time after all, we have seen this happen around the SADC region. What is pushing him to see the body? What does he want to see?” she said.

DEC heighten enforcement

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The Drug Enforcement Commission says it has heightened enforcement operations across the country to disrupt drug trafficking networks aimed at reducing the availability of illegal substances on the market.

The Drug Enforcement Commission, Public Relations Officer, Allan Tamba says the Commission has intensified nationwide sensitisation campaigns targeting schools, communities and workplaces to raise awareness on the dangers of drug and substance abuse.

Mr Tamba highlighted that the initiatives focus mainly on young people, who remain the most vulnerable group affected by illicit drug use.

Responding to President Hakainde Hichilema’s recent State of the Nation Address to uphold national values, Mr Tamba revealed that education and counselling services have since been expanded through community outreach activities conducted in partnership with local authorities, faith-based organisations and civil society groups.

Mr Tamba also noted that the initiative aims to prevent early exposure to drugs while encouraging affected individuals to seek professional help.

The media reports that members of the public have since been urged to support government efforts by reporting drug related activities, stating that community participation remains critical in promoting positive social values and protecting families from the effects of substance abuse in Zambia.

Economists urge stronger push to market Zambia’s National Identity

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Economist Kelvin Chisanga says Zambia must intensify efforts to market its national identity and locally produced goods to strengthen the country’s presence in the Southern African region and beyond.

Mr Chisanga said Zambia possesses abundant natural resources that can drive its economic aspirations if supported by a coordinated, multi-sectoral approach involving manufacturers, tourism operators, government agencies and other key players.

He noted that aligning these sectors with strategies such as the recently approved Brand Zambia Initiative would help position the country more competitively.

Speaking in an interview with the media, Mr Chisanga said the initiative, approved by Cabinet last month, creates an opportunity for all Zambians to participate in shaping a unified national brand that promotes economic growth, attracts investment and builds national pride.

Mr Chisanga emphasized the need for Zambian products to carry a strong national identity when exported to neighbouring countries such as Malawi, Zimbabwe and the Democratic Republic of Congo, stressing that this would help stimulate interest in Zambia’s tourism and other services.

Mr Chisanga urged the Zambia Tourism Agency and the Proudly Zambian Campaign to intensify promotion of local products and strengthen content integration to support industrial growth.

Meanwhile, Economics Association of Zambia President Oswald Mungule highlighted the importance of maintaining peace as a foundation for economic progress.

Dr Mungule added that Zambian products must consistently meet international standards if they are to compete effectively in global markets.

Labour Commissioner probes assault at Zamfresh

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The Ministry of Labour and Social Security has launched investigations into alleged labour law violations at Zamfresh and Sunshare following the circulation of a social media video showing a female employee allegedly being assaulted at the workplace.

Labour Commissioner Givens Muntengwa paid an impromptu visit to the two companies after the video emerged, reportedly depicting a 23-year-old cashier, Ruth Banda, being assaulted by a Chinese national after she was questioned for forging company invoices and stealing K14, 000.

Speaking during the visit, Mr Muntengwa condemned the alleged assault, stating that the Ministry does not tolerate any form of violence or abuse in the workplace.

He emphasised that allegations of misconduct or theft must be addressed through lawful and established procedures and not through acts that infringe on workers’ rights.

Mr Muntengwa further expressed concern over a number of labour irregularities observed at the companies, including the absence of proper protective work suits, failure to issue employment contracts and the payment of uniform wages to workers despite them performing different roles.

He disclosed that the companies have been fined K160, 000 for administrative noncompliance, citing the failure to issue payslips and place workers on formal contracts.

He also directed management to settle all outstanding arrears owed to employees, including overtime payments and wage adjustments to meet the statutory minimum wage.

Meanwhile, Zamfresh General Consultant, Karen Kayuni, acknowledged that workers should not be subjected to assault while on duty and assured the Ministry of cooperation.

Mr Muntengwa has since reaffirmed that investigations will continue.

Government receives vehicles to boost health service delivery

Ministry of Health has received 31 motor vehicles from Global Fund worth K 27,625,344.61 to strengthen health service delivery across the country.

Acting Minister of Health, Cornelius Mweetwa, who received on behalf of the government, handed over the vehicles to Provincial and District Health Offices.

Mr Mweetwa noted that the donated vehicles will enhance the delivery of life saving interventions, including laboratory services, malaria elimination, disease surveillance, and health insurance management among others.

He explained that the vehicles were procured with support from the Global Fund under the Resilient and Sustainable Systems for Health component.

Mr Mweetwa emphasised the importance of accountability and prudent stewardship of the resources, saying the vehicles are a public trust and must be managed responsibly.

“The vehicles will improve diagnostic turnaround times, enhance quality assurance oversight, and support maintenance of critical laboratory infrastructure, among other benefits,” he said

Mr Mweetwa added that the handover is part of Zambia’s commitment to Universal Health Coverage and the objectives of the Eighth National Development Plan.

“The Global Fund’s continued partnership and support have been instrumental in strengthening Zambia’s health system,” Mr Mweetwa said.

He indicated that the vehicles have been registered, branded, insured, asset tagged, and formally assigned to their respective institutions, and are ready for immediate deployment.

Speaking at the same handover, Global Health Country Coordinating Mechanism Chairperson Professor Joshua Banda has hailed the handover of 31 vehicles to the Ministry of Health as a significant milestone in strengthening Zambia’s health system.

Prof Banda, said the vehicles, procured under the Global Fund Grant Cycle 7, will enhance service delivery across HIV, TB, Malaria, and public health surveillance programmes.

“The vehicles represent a tangible commitment to improving health outcomes for all Zambians and they will support integrated service delivery, improve efficiency, and reduce duplication,” he said.

Prof Banda added that the vehicles will be distributed to various institutions, including the National Malaria Elimination Centre, the Zambia National Public Health Institute, and the University Teaching Hospital HIV programme.

He emphasised the importance of accountability and stewardship, urging stakeholders to deploy the vehicles strategically and maintain them properly.

“The CCM will continue to work with the Ministry of Health and implementing stakeholders to ensure the assets are used effectively,” he said.

He further added that the Global Fund has invested approximately 2 Billion United States Dollars in Zambia’s health sector since 2002, leading to significant improvements in HIV, TB, and malaria programmes.

Meanwhile, Lusaka Provincial Health Director, Simulyamana Choonga has expressed gratitude to the government for the 31 vehicles handed over to the Ministry of Health.

In a vote of thanks, he said the vehicles will greatly enhance health service delivery in the province.

“We are thankful for the government’s support in strengthening our health system because the vehicles will improve our outreach services and emergency response capabilities,” he said.

Dr Choonga assured the government that the vehicles will be used efficiently and effectively, adhering to the transport policy.

“We will ensure maximum utilisation of the assets for the benefit of the people of Lusaka,” Dr Choonga said.

94 officers trained for voters register inspection

A total of 94 officers have been trained in Isoka District in Muchinga Province ahead of the physical inspection of the Provisional Register of Voters scheduled to commence on Monday, March 2, 2026.

The briefing which was held at Isoka Town Council Chamber, was conducted by the Electoral Commission of Zambia (ECZ) for 18 Police Officers and 76 Inspection Officers who will be deployed across all polling stations in the district during the exercise.

Speaking during the session on behalf of the District Electoral Officer, Isoka Constituency Assistant Registration Officer–Field (ARO-F) Belvin Mwale described the inspection exercise as a critical stage in the electoral process.

Mr Mwale explained that the exercise is a vital component of the electoral process that safeguards the credibility of elections, while urging Inspection Officers to ensure that citizens are fully assisted when verifying their voter details.

“As officers on the ground, you must ensure that every eligible voter is given the necessary support to confirm their details and that any errors identified are corrected within the inspection period.

As failure to verify details may disadvantage voters,” he said.

He further stressed the need for professionalism and diligence among officers.

“You must not undermine this exercise. The integrity of the voter register is fundamental to the transparency and credibility of the electoral process,” Mr Mwale added.

The ECZ has since encouraged all eligible voters in Isoka District to take part in the physical inspection of the Provisional Register of Voters in order to safeguard their right to vote.

18-year-old Kasama man jailed five months for theft

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The Kasama Magistrate Court has sentenced an 18-year-old man of Kalafya area in Chief Mwamba area in Kasama district to five months imprisonment with hard labour for stealing five boxes of tomatoes.

Before Senior Resident Magistrate, Willie Banda, was Bright Mwamba, who was facing one count of theft contrary to sections 301(b) and 272 of the Penal Code, Chapter 87 of the Laws of Zambia.

During the presentation of facts, Senior Public Prosecutor, Aaron Kuyeli, told the court that on January 10, 2026, around 10:30 hours, the complainant, Boyd Bwalya, a farmer and resident of Malama Compound in Kasama, lost five boxes of tomatoes.

Mr Kuyeli said the complainant reported the matter to Kasama Police Station and valued the stolen property at K2, 500.

He said the now convict was identified as the prime suspect, adding that he pleaded guilty to the charge.

In mitigation, Mwamba pleaded for leniency, saying he had learnt his lesson during the time he spent in custody.

He further acknowledged that he had gone against the laws of Zambia and promised not to repeat the offence.

In passing sentence, Magistrate Banda said he had considered the mitigation and the fact that the convict was a first offender.

He however noted that theft is a serious offence which carries a maximum penalty of up to five years’ imprisonment.

The court subsequently sentenced Mwamba to five months imprisonment with hard labour.