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Government Plans Nationwide Dam Construction to Combat Drought

In a bid to address the recurring challenge of drought and bolster water resilience, the UPND government has announced plans to embark on the construction of dams across the country. Collins Nzovu, Minister of Green Economy and Environment, revealed the initiative during a courtesy call by a delegation from the Catholic Relief Services at his office.

Minister Nzovu emphasized the importance of constructing dams to harvest rainwater, which will not only mitigate the impact of drought but also facilitate irrigation and domestic water usage. The ambitious project aims to enhance water security and ensure sustainable access to water resources for communities across Zambia.

The announcement comes as Zambia grapples with the adverse effects of climate change, including erratic rainfall patterns and prolonged dry spells, which have significantly impacted agricultural productivity and livelihoods.

Minister Nzovu also called on developed countries to ease accessibility to the Loss and Damage Fund, enabling Zambia to invest in projects that will benefit its people. The Loss and Damage Fund, established to support countries affected by climate-related disasters, plays a crucial role in assisting vulnerable nations in adapting to and mitigating the impacts of climate change.

By harnessing rainwater through dam construction, Zambia aims to reduce its vulnerability to drought and ensure sustainable water management practices.

Zambia Air Force to Engage in Agriculture to Tackle Food Insecurity

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In response to President Hakainde Hichilema’s directive to address food security challenges in Zambia, the Zambia Air Force (ZAF) has announced plans to venture into agriculture. ZAF Commander, Lieutenant General Oscar Nyoni, revealed the initiative aimed at combating hunger during a visit to the Zambia National Service (ZNS) Headquarters in Lusaka.

General Nyoni outlined the ZAF’s commitment to contribute to the national food basket by utilizing agricultural resources. He emphasized the importance of this effort in aligning with President Hichilema’s vision to address food insecurity across the country.

During the visit, General Nyoni enlisted the support of the Zambia National Service to assist ZAF in clearing land for agricultural purposes. This collaboration aims to maximize the Air Force’s contributions to agricultural production, thereby bolstering food security efforts nationwide.

In response, Zambia National Service Commander, Lieutenant General Maliti Solochi, pledged support for ZAF’s agricultural endeavors by providing land clearing equipment. This assistance underscores the spirit of cooperation among various branches of Zambia’s defense and security apparatus in addressing pressing national issues.

The joint efforts between ZAF and ZNS signify a proactive approach to tackling food insecurity in Zambia. By leveraging their resources and expertise, these institutions aim to make significant strides in agricultural production, ultimately contributing to the nation’s efforts to ensure food availability and accessibility for all citizens.

As Zambia grapples with food security challenges exacerbated by factors such as climate change and economic instability, initiatives like these highlight the importance of innovative and collaborative solutions. The commitment of the Zambia Air Force and the Zambia National Service to engage in agriculture underscores the government’s determination to address food insecurity comprehensively, reflecting a collective resolve to improve the livelihoods of all Zambians.

ZAF Commander, Lieutenant General Oscar Nyoni and Zambia National Service Commander, Lieutenant General Maliti Solochi

Government Commits to Ensuring Mutual Benefit for Zambians in Mining Sector

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The UPND government has reaffirmed its dedication to ensuring that the country’s mining sector delivers tangible benefits to its citizens. This commitment was emphasized by Mines Minister, Paul Kabuswe, during the launch of the Strategic Plan and Balanced Scorecard for the Ministry held in Lusaka.

Minister Kabuswe highlighted that the strategic plan aims to guarantee that Zambians derive a fair and equitable share of the benefits from the nation’s mineral resources. The implementation of this strategy is expected to foster a mutually beneficial relationship between the mining industry and local communities.

In response to the government’s initiative, Nsama Chikwanka, the National Coordinator of Publish What You Pay Zambia, emphasized the importance of allocating more resources to the mining sector. Chikwanka underscored the need for increased investment in the industry to maximize its potential to contribute to national development and improve the livelihoods of Zambians.

Furthermore, Namakau Kaingu, President of the Association of Zambian Women in Mining (AZWIM), commended the government for its efforts in regulating the mining sector. Kaingu applauded the introduction of regulations aimed at promoting transparency and accountability in the industry. Additionally, she encouraged women miners to form cooperatives to enhance their participation and representation in the sector.

By implementing strategic measures and fostering collaboration with stakeholders, the government aims to create an enabling environment that maximizes the socio-economic contributions of the mining industry while safeguarding the interests of local communities and vulnerable groups, including women.

Mubanga Kalimamukwento becomes first African recipient of the Drue Heinz Prize

Mubanga Kalimamukwento of Mounds View, Minnesota, was named the winner of the 2024 Drue Heinz Literature Prize, selected by Pitt Writing Program Director Angie Cruz. The University of Pittsburgh Press will publish Kalimamukwento’s collection of short stories, “Obligations to the Wounded,” on Oct. 8.

“These thematically linked stories deliver an intricate study of Zambian women living in both Zambia and abroad who are weighing their options of who to love, where to live, where to work,” said Cruz, associate professor and author of “How Not to Drown in a Glass of Water.” “The author, with a poet’s restraint, has written stories that deftly negotiate the challenges and tribulations women face when they feel the pressure and duty to yield to the will of family, community, customs, country and spiritual beliefs.”

“Obligations to the Wounded” employs proverbs and short stories rooted in Zambian languages, culture and place to examine the cost of womanhood through the voices of 12 women and girls The stories illustrate women’s burdens through the lens of religious expectation, migration, loss of language, death, intimate partner violence and racial discrimination.

“This is a prize I have been reading and entering for years, so a win is a kind of ‘Finally’ and ‘Thank you, thank you, thank you’ moment for me,” said Kalimamukwento.

A Zambian attorney and writer, Kalimamukwento is the winner the 2022 Tusculum Review Poetry Chapbook Contest (2022) selected by Carmen Giménez, the 2019 Dinaane Debut Fiction Award and the 2019 Kalemba Short Story Prize. Her work has also appeared or is forthcoming in adda, Aster(ix), Overland, the Red Rock Review, Menelique, on and elsewhere.

The Drue Heinz Literature Prize recognizes and supports writers of short fiction. The award is open to authors who have published a book-length collection of fiction or at least three short stories or novellas in commercial magazines or literary journals. Past winners include Stewart O’Nan, Elizabeth Graver, Caroline Kim, Leslie Pietrzyk, and Ramona Reeves.

Manuscripts are judged anonymously by nationally known writers. Past judges have included Robert Penn Warren, Joyce Carol Oates, Raymond Carver, Margaret Atwood, Russell Banks, Deesha Philyaw, and Joan Didion. Jane McCafferty is the managing editor for the Drue Heinz Prize.

Winners receive a cash prize of $15,000, publication by the University of Pittsburgh Press and support in the nationwide promotion of their book.

Source: Pittwire

The need to reform the global financial system that must treat Africa fairly.

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By Presidents Nana Akufo-Addo, William Samoei Ruto and Halainde Hichilema

The conversation on reforming the global financial architecture has often felt more like Africa against the rest of the world, but the tide is turning. Governments north and south agree that there is something fundamentally wrong with the system and it must be fixed. As the leaders of Ghana, Kenya and Zambia, we have first-hand experience of the precarious financial situation facing many African countries, especially when it comes to debt and development finance. And we are all too familiar with the flaws in the system that is in place to confront these challenges.

The current system needs more than just adjustment—it needs an overhaul. Africa must be at the centre of these reforms, but our criticisms have for too long fallen on deaf ears. Now that the world is beginning to listen, we must go beyond criticism and do what is needed for our economic development and emancipation. Several things are critical to this agenda.

First, African leaders must be bold in promoting their ideas and participating when decisions are being made that affect the continent. The three of us have made it clear that we will not sign on to global regulations and agreements that are not shaped with our input.

We are committed to being a strong voice for Africa. We need to ensure that lower-income countries have sufficient access to concessional finance through the World Bank’s International Development Association (ida).

To that end, Kenya has agreed to host the ida21 conference in April and we are working hard to drive the fundraising for this critical form of finance. Kenya has also agreed to co-lead two bodies to tackle the climate challenge in developing countries. The first, in conjunction with the African Union (au), Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Colombia, the European Commission, France and Spain, looks at opportunities to tax sectors, activities and transactions that could yield billions in climate finance for the countries most affected by climate change, many of which are in Africa. The second is a coalition of experts convened with Colombia, France and Germany, looking at how unsustainable debt is keeping many developing countries from investing in climate and conservation, and what can be done about it, including innovations like “debt-for-nature swaps”: debt relief in exchange for green initiatives.

Second, Africa must look within for solutions. We must invest our borrowing in the continent’s growth, job creation and revenue generation rather than in consumption that will not pay us back in the long run; make sure development projects are high-quality, priced correctly and finished on time; and start looking to each other as major trading partners rather than overseas.

It is time for a serious conversation about the high cost of capital that burdens Africa, which is based on unfair risk premiums and inaccurate valuation of our economies. Many African countries have assets that are not reflected on our balance-sheets. We have to strengthen African institutions, and we expect those strengthened institutions to assist in valuing our economies correctly, working with international financial institutions to get this right.

The three of us recently helped to launch the Africa Club, an alliance of African multilateral financial institutions that will serve as a powerful negotiator on behalf of the continent, co-ordinate with global financial institutions and leverage African countries’ balance-sheets to increase investment and jobs. It is critical that these institutions have the full weight of au member states behind them and the appropriate capital to continue serving Africa’s development. To this end, Ghana has proposed that each African country go beyond its existing paid-in capital and invest a minimum of 30% of its sovereign reserves in African multilateral institutions.

Third, we must bring the world to Africa. We have spent the past few years attending summits in a variety of countries that want to do business with our continent. Now it is time for our fellow world leaders to come to us. In that spirit, Ghana has proposed, and we all support, an annual African Economic Summit involving heads of state and government from around the world. Our hope is that this becomes the fulcrum around which we will deal with our major growth-and-development issues. Kenya will host the first summit in 2025, then Zambia in 2026 and Ghana in 2027.

Finally, we must speak with one voice on our reform agenda. Over the past three years a coalition of African policy institutes, the au, the un, finance ministers and civil society have been working together to define and advocate a collective African agenda for improving the global financial architecture. This coalition has identified key areas for action. They include charting a green growth-and-investment path for the continent; increasing concessional finance; channelling special drawing rights currently held at the imf to African financial institutions so they can be leveraged for development finance; finding a robust solution to the debt crisis, which will require overhauling the Common Framework, a debt-restructuring blueprint introduced by the g20 in 2020; and increasing Africa’s role in global decision-making.

These are ambitious but achievable targets. We have already seen progress, for example in gaining a seat for the au at the g20, making it the g21. It is up to Africa to use that seat wisely and present a clear vision for global reform.

There is a line in scripture: “Faith without works is dead.” You cannot believe in something and do nothing about it. 2024 is the year to move from talk to action, and to insist on a fairer global system that works for Africa.

Nana Akufo-Addo is the President of Ghana. William Samoei Ruto is the President of Kenya. Hakainde Hichilema is the President of Zambia.

Take up insurance cover, we are tired of contributing to buy coffins when you die, ZAM President tells Musicians

The Zambia Association of Musicians has urged Musicians to take up insurance policies to avoid destitution upon retirement.

Association President Davison Musanda said Musicians must ensure that they secure themselves financially by signing up to insurance policies and other financial products.

Mr. Musanda said the music fraternity is now tired of soliciting for donations from well-wishers when burying some of their departed colleagues who may have died in poverty.

“The K200,000 you are making today because you a star will not be there forever, invest and use it wisely so that when that time comes, your family does not start asking your fans to donate to buy your coffin,” Mr. Musanda said.

He was speaking in Lusaka yesterday when ZAM, Bestlife Insurance and Norwich Insurance Brokers signed a tripartite Memorandum of Understanding to provide affordable insurance policies to fully paid-up members of ZAM.

“This is a great opportunity for us Musicians to start preparing for our future. If I invest that K200, 000 I am making very weekend because I have some hits that are playing everywhere, I can look my income for the next five to ten years to allow me to take care of my family,” he said.

And officiating at the signing ceremony, Ministry of Youth and Arts Permanent Secretary Fumba Chama said government wants to transform the arts sector from a social sector to an economic sector with increased GDP contribution.

Mr. Fumba commended Bestlife Insurance and Norwich to taking up the challenge of providing insurance services to Musicians saying this is a great step towards formalising the arts sector.

He said recognises the immense potential that the creative sector has in transforming lives especially for young people.

Mr. Fumba said he is impressed that Bestlife and Norwich worked closely with ZAM to actualise the MoU that will serve the broader interests of musicians.

“When we talk of transforming the industry, this is what we mean. Government does not have the monopoly of wisdom, we need ideas from the private sector and ordinary citizens and Bestlife and Norwich have stepped up to offer a real solution to a real problem. As artistes, it’s not good that we are known to be beggars, we need to change how we are perceived,” Mr Fumba said.

Meanwhile, Bestlife Insurance Zambia Chief Executive Officer Christabel Michel said her firm will continue developing tailor made insurance products in order to increase the penetrative rate of insurance in the current from the current 6%.

She said, “As Bestlife, we believe that life insurance should not be complicated. As a nation, we have struggled with low insurance penetrative levels for years. According to the last Finscope survey, only 6% of Zambians have insurance cover. As a matter of fact, the penetrative rate for life insurance is even lower at less than 2%.”

“For us at Bestlife, we believe that the way insurance is accessed is a key component in bridging the penetration gap. Access to insurance products should be simple and affordable to increase penetration. We are determined to make it easier for Zambians to access this important service. It is for this reason that we have come up with a lot of innovative products that are simple and affordable for all Zambia. Our ability to tailor make products to suit the Zambian public remains our greatest strength.”

And in a vote of thanks, Brian Bwembya aka B-Flow described the move as a cure for depression which had affected many musicians when they are no longer able to earn a decent income.

“As Musicians, we are very egoistic and sometimes we fail to open up when we are going through a life patch and in the end, we suffer depression and we die. Now we are saying, insurance tailor made for us is here and we should all sign up,” Bwembya said.

Over six million people face hunger, malnutrition and water scarcity in Zambia, Oxfam warns

Oxfam has warned that over six million people from farming families in Zambia are facing acute food shortages and malnutrition until next growing season, which is twelve months away, due to a severe drought, exacerbated by climate change and El Nino, which has caused massive crop failures for half of the nation’s “planted area.”

The drought has forced the Zambian government to declare a national disaster and emergency.

President Hakainde Hichilema said last week Thursday that the country had gone without rain for five weeks at a time when farmers needed it the most.

The drought had hit 84 of the country’s 116 districts, affecting more than a million farming households.

Ezra Banda, Director at Keepers Zambia Foundation, a partner organisation that works with Oxfam, says this crisis is coming at the time when the country is still recovering from the worst cholera outbreak that has claimed more than 700 lives, on top of another dry spell and last year’s flooding.

“Urgent support in form of food and clean water is what people need the most now,” said Banda.

“Many have no food left because they did not harvest enough last year, and this El Nino-induced weather phenomenon has killed the slightest hope they had to feed themselves”.

He added that water shortages that are likely to ensue because of low rainfall this year could spark yet another cholera outbreak.

Mainza Muchindu, a smallholder farmer from Lusaka, Zambia, told Oxfam: “I have a family of ten people and I depend on farming to support them. I support my children’s education through agriculture and my little children need food the most, for their nutrition. With this crop failure, I am really in trouble.”

Standing by his drying maize crop, he said: “I don’t know what else to do because I invested all my money into this two-hectare maize crop and as you can see there is nothing that will come from here. I don’t know where else I will get food from. I can only hope that there will be food relief from the government, otherwise we are facing a big problem.”

Oxfam in Southern Africa Programme Director, Machinda Marongwe, says it is times like when climate financing is most needed, to build up practical and accessible solutions for vulnerable smallholder farmers like Mainza. However, commitment by rich countries remains an unfulfilled one.”

“As long as rich countries don’t lower their carbon emissions, we know that climate shocks will be frequent and more severe. Smallholder farmers need to be insulated from this and must be adequately supported to transform their agriculture so that they can still grow food for their families amidst this climate change reality.”

“Sadly, they are not getting support to solve problems they didn’t cause, none is coming their way because rich nations are offering nothing but lip service. Countries like Zambia and many others in Southern Africa need this climate financing to help them build up the resilience of their smallholder farmers, because that is wearing out.”

Yvonne Chibiya, Oxfam in Zambia Country Representative, says Oxfam and partners are doing further assessments in the targeted districts to inform the humanitarian response.

Oxfam urgently needs 6 million Euros to provide 600,000 people with cash transfers and clean water, help with winter cropping, and improving local sanitation and hygiene services to prevent a resurgence of cholera outbreak.

Zambia Rugby Mourns Veteran Francis Mwila

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The local rugby fraternity is mourning former Diggers Rugby Club chairman and captain Francis Mwila who died in Kitwe after an illness.

Mwila died on Monday evening.

Diggers last August honoured Mwila for his contribution to the club by organizing a tournament in his name.

Commenting on his death, Diggers Life President Boniface Mutale declared that Mwila has left a good legacy at the club.

He described Mwila’s death as a great loss to Zambian rugby.

“It is a great loss. It is a big loss because in rugby we make a lot of friends and if one dies a big hole remains in the house,” Mutale told Radio Icengelo Sports.

“He has left a legacy at Diggers. He was the captain and later chairman,” he said.

University of Zambia Degrees Are Inferior Says UK Home Office

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By Field Ruwe EdD

UNZA Investment and the Mineral Resource Curse

The United Kingdom Home Office has excluded University of Zambia graduates from the High Potential Individuals (HPI) visa due to the perceived inferiority of their degrees. The HPI visa is designed to attract “highly skilled graduates” from international universities outside of the UK to contribute to a range of sectors, such as science and technology. According to the UK-NARIC [National Academic Recognition Information Centre] comparability, UNZA bachelor’s degree in humanities is equivalent to the British two-year Higher National Diploma, and bachelor’s degrees in medicine, engineering, and law are comparable to the three-year British Bachelor (Ordinary) Degree standard.

Apparently, the South African-NARIC keeps yielding a similar result. In 2020, a social media posted by Dr. Sam Phiri titled “South African University ‘Junks’ UNZA Degrees” infuriated many students and alumni of the university. At the heart of the story was a letter by the University of Cape Town (UCT) Humanities Postgraduate Administrative Officer Kerewin Parfitt to a Zambian Bachelor’s degree graduate applicant. It read as follows:

Dear…Thank you for your application to study at the University of Cape Town in 2021. We conducted a NARIC [National Academic Recognition Information Centre] equivalency check on your degree from Zambia. The NARIC check indicated that your degree is equivalent to a Diploma of Higher Education in South Africa and, therefore, inadequate for entrance into the Master’s program.”

The illusion of academic pride quickly masked the reality when most UNZA students and alums took deep offense and resorted to social media to insinuate the applicant was a product of not UNZA but one of the local “inferior” private universities. Although the letter did not spark a national discourse about the quality of tertiary education in Zambia, it highlighted the pervasive discernible bane that has kept UNZA at the totem pole of global university rankings.

What the NARIC check means is that Zambia’s citadel and cauldron of intellectualism, an institution created to enhance intellectual sovereignty and foster the development of Zambia’s human capital, is a miscarriage of vocation. If indeed this is the case, then it explains why Zambian political scientists, economists, metallurgists, and pedagogues have contributed negligibly to the socio-economic growth of Zambia. Above all, it explains why Zambia has failed to embark on a paradigm shift that lifts the mineral resource curse.

Understanding Mineral Resource Curse

Coined by economist Richard Auty of Lancaster University, the term “resource curse,” also known as the “paradox of plenty,” or “poverty paradox,” describes a scenario in which a country abundant in natural resources encounters persistent issues of economic stagnation and political turmoil due to foreign exploitation. Renaissance thinkers such as Bodin and Machiavelli posited that nations with abundant resources tended to have citizens prone to lack of intellectual sight and indolence.

In Zambia, it is evident the curse is prominently manifested through the copper mining sector, which, being the bedrock of the economy, has been unsuccessful in establishing enduring welfare systems, infrastructure, and economic growth. Despite President Kaunda ensuring national control by nationalizing 51% of the equity shares in the copper industry on August 1, 1969, the aftermath has witnessed an upsurge in corrupt practices and the plunder of mineral resources by foreign investors.

Cecil John Rhodes and Zambia’s Mineral Resource Curse

Early this month ZCCM sold a 51% stake in Mopani Copper Mines to Delta Mining Limited, retaining the remainder, and creating the potential for substantial kickbacks. Furthermore, the recent discovery via Artificial Intelligence (AI) of the largest copper deposit in Zambia by KoBold, a company backed by billionaires Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos, evoked the ghost of Cecil John Rhodes.

Rhodes’s conquest of Zambesia led to the discovery of large copper deposits in the land he named Northern Rhodesia (Zambia). In 1890, Rhodes’s British South African Company (BSA) acquired mining rights from King Lewanika of the Lozi people without him fully comprehending the implications of the agreement. Henceforth, Zambia fell victim to the mineral resource curse.

Rhodes, deeply entrenched in the ideology of white supremacy, understood education investment to be a crucial component of the mineral resource curse. Having received his education at Oriel College, Oxford, he was aware that the convergence of political ideology and academic thought served to strengthen one another.

In 1891, he proposed a university system that fostered unity between the British and Boers, and enacted measures that denied the indigenous natives access to intellectual sovereignty essential for managing their own assets and attaining global recognition. To this he affirmed, “the native is to be treated as a child and denied the franchise.”

Kenneth Kaunda’s Dilemma

Rhodes’s discriminatory measures effectively marginalized a vast majority of the indigenous population, branding them as uncivilized. Throughout the British colonial era, the number of educated natives remained significantly low. By 1960, Northern Rhodesia could only boast eight indigenous individuals who had completed their education, a number that grew to 100 at independence time.

Consequently, Kaunda faced a challenge in developing a political ideology that embodied intellectual sovereignty due to the dearth of highly skilled graduates. Natives lacked self-efficacy—the ability to exert control over their own motivation, behavior, and social environment. The indigenous population was deficient in self-efficacy, which refers to the capacity to regulate own drive, actions, and surroundings. Understanding the significance of education in mitigating the negative effects of the mineral resource curse, Kaunda proactively spearheaded the building of the University of Zambia, which opened its doors on March 17, 1966.

Half-baked Graduates

The first graduates of the university encountered notable obstacles in addressing the natural resource curse, despite dedicated attempts to implement impactful measures and assist the government in forming robust institutions. This inadequacy holds true to this day. According to the 2019 publication titled “Creating Decent Jobs: Strategies, Policies, and Instruments” by the African Development Bank, the University of Zambia still produces too many undergraduate degrees that do not equip students with the essential proficiency required in the 21st century labor market.

Professor Emmanuel Ngara of the African Association of Universities concurs and adds; “Many African tertiary institutions produce half-baked graduates that aren’t fit for the world of work mainly because of the way they are taught and the absence of curricular reviews that should respond to the calls of industry’s contemporary needs.”

UNZA graduates and students may be fervently eager to criticize Professor Ngara’s remarks and cast doubt on the UK and South African NARIC results. Before you do that, bear in mind the wide gap that exists in the world university rankings between Oxford University (1), the University of Cape Town (167), and the University of Zambia (1,578). Whenever such rankings are made public, Zambian graduates are left feeling undervalued in their professional pursuits, while students become demoralized in their academic endeavors.

Moreover, the decline in rankings undermines the fundamental aspects of analytical thinking, finding solutions to problems, and fostering inventive abilities, which are essential for Zambian graduates to effectively address the obstacles presented by the mineral resource curse. Ultimately, such rankings inadvertently provide UCT and the UK Home Office with a rationale to exclude Zambians from the pool of highly skilled graduates.

The Ball is in Hichilema’s Court

The overarching question is; Can the University of Zambia execute a dramatic turnaround and meet the demands of a world class university? Undoubtedly, such a feat is feasible, only if UNZA emulates the University of Ghana and the University of Dar es Salaam who have integrated extensive World-Class University (WCU) goals into their mission declarations and are determined to deliver world-class academic standards. President Hichilema, revered by UNZA students for providing complimentary meals and promoting access to basic education, possesses the capability to introduce a novel and creative perspective to the university, placing a strong focus on intellectual sovereignty.

Hichilema, in collaboration with the Chancellor, should embark on establishing a superior higher education system. This system must encompass three essential elements that are generally observed in top-tier universities worldwide: (1) a notable assemblage of skilled instructors and learners, (2) ample financial means, and (3) a clearly defined strategic vision supported by capable leadership. To achieve this goal, it is crucial for the Chancellor to establish the Office of Strategic and Academic Quality (OSAQ) with the primary objective of enhancing academic excellence.

It is also imperative for the Chancellor to investigate strategies that can incentivize a greater number of undergraduate students to engage in research-based programs at the postgraduate and postdoctoral stages. OSAQ should reward such students with fully funded internships at prestigious institutions in the United States and Europe, to enable them to enhance their professional expertise.

There is no doubt that embarking on this project will have financial implications. The creation of a world class university requires a significant amount of money. Luckily, Hichilema is well-known for his ability to secure financial resources. Hakainde and his administration must establish reserve funds to boost investments in the university and foster social capital to back this effort.

Otherwise, Zambia’s potential to break the mineral resource curse and actively participate in the free flow of 21st century ideas across different fields, including the economy, and politics, as well as its reputation in disseminating and advancing accumulated knowledge and research findings, will be mediocre at most and its degrees desecrated at worst.

The rights to this article belong to ZDI (Zambia Development Institute), a proposed US-based Zambian think tank. On May 19, 2022, a comprehensive proposal was delivered to President Hichilema through Principal Private Secretary Bradford Machila. Author, Dr. Field Ruwe holds a Doctor of Education in Organizational Leadership. He is affiliated with Northeastern University, Boston, MA. US. Email: [email protected].

Government Takes Former President Lungu’s Statement Seriously – Mwiimbu

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The UPND government has declared that it will not dismiss lightly the recent statement made by former President Edgar Lungu regarding potential unrest that could lead to the ousting of President Hakainde Hichilema before 2026. Jack Mwiimbu, Minister of Home Affairs and Internal Security, emphasized the significance of Lungu’s remarks, citing his former position as head of state.

In a ministerial statement delivered in the National Assembly, Minister Mwiimbu addressed concerns raised by Bweengwa Member of Parliament, Kasautu Michel, regarding the nation’s security. Mwiimbu highlighted the government’s apprehension over similar statements made by certain politicians and senior clergymen in the past, further emphasizing the seriousness with which such remarks are taken.

Mwiimbu’s remarks serve as a reminder of the importance of responsible leadership and the need for constructive dialogue and engagement to address political tensions and ensure the country’s continued progress and prosperity.

DMMU Provides Relief to 2.4 Million Amid Drought Crisis-Vice President Nalumango

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The Disaster Management and Mitigation Unit (DMMU) has extended support to approximately 2.4 million individuals with relief food from October 2023 to March 2024, according to Vice President Mutale Nalumango. The aid comes amidst a significant drought affecting agriculture households across Zambia, with an estimated six million people grappling with its impacts as of February 15, 2024.

Vice President Nalumango addressed the dire situation in a Ministerial statement delivered in the National Assembly, responding to concerns raised by Kasenengwa Member of Parliament, Philimon Twasa, regarding the hunger crisis in his constituency. Prompted by Twasa’s urgent appeal, the Speaker requested the Vice President to provide an official statement on the hunger situation in the country.

In her address, Vice President Nalumango reiterated the government’s commitment to providing relief to those affected by the drought. The DMMU will continue to distribute relief food to impacted communities, prioritizing the most vulnerable segments of the population.

Furthermore, Vice President Nalumango assured that social protection measures administered by the Ministry of Community Development and Social Services will be sustained to support vulnerable individuals and households. These measures aim to mitigate the socio-economic impacts of the drought and ensure that the most marginalized members of society receive the necessary assistance.

As Zambia confronts the challenges posed by climate-related disasters, Vice President Nalumango reaffirmed the government’s unwavering commitment to providing relief and support to those in need, ensuring that no one is left behind during these challenging times.

Zambia Calls for Removal of Sanctions on Zimbabwe, Urges Global Cooperation

Zambia has urged the United States of America and other nations to lift sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe, citing the need for progress in implementing shared ideals such as inclusive democratic governance and institutional reform. Acting Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Minister, Mulambo Haimbe, emphasized the importance of promoting stability, peace, and security in the region and beyond.

In an exclusive interview with ZNBC News in Lusaka, Mr. Haimbe underscored Zambia’s unwavering commitment to supporting efforts aimed at addressing broader societal impacts affecting not only the region but also the continent and the global community as a whole. He stressed the critical role of cooperation and integration among countries in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and beyond.

The call for the removal of sanctions on Zimbabwe comes amidst ongoing efforts to foster democratic governance and promote socio-economic development in the region. Zambia stands firmly in support of initiatives aimed at addressing the challenges facing Zimbabwe and other nations in the SADC region.

Mr. Haimbe’s remarks reflect Zambia’s commitment to advocating for collective action and international cooperation to address complex challenges and promote peace, stability, and prosperity across Africa. As a staunch proponent of regional integration and collaboration, Zambia reaffirms its commitment to working closely with its neighbors and the international community to achieve common goals and aspirations.

The call to lift sanctions on Zimbabwe echoes broader sentiments within the African continent, highlighting the need for inclusive dialogue and constructive engagement to resolve political and economic challenges facing the region.

On 4th March the US Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) designated 11 individuals, including Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa, and three entities for their involvement in corruption or serious human rights abuse pursuant to E.O. 13818, which builds upon and implements the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act.

Concurrently, President Biden signed an Executive Order (E.O.) terminating the national emergency with respect to Zimbabwe and revoking the E.O.s that have authorized Zimbabwe-specific sanctions. As a result, the economic sanctions administered by OFAC pursuant to the Zimbabwe sanctions program are no longer in effect.

Wife Finds Husband Defiling Their Daughter

A 39 Year-old Man of Luanshya’s Kapepa Farming area has been arrested for allegedly defiling his 12 year-old daughter.

The suspect has since been identified as Cephas Ngosa, a Farmer.

In a statement issued to ZNBC News in Kitwe, Copperbelt Police Commissioner Peacewell Mweemba said the incident is said to have occurred on March 3, 2024 at around 24:00 hours in Kapepa Farming area of Luanshya.

He explained that on Sunday around 19:00 hours, the family went to sleep and around midnight, the suspect’s wife identified as Fridah Chilambe woke up and discovered that her husband was not in the bedroom.

She later decided to check her daughter’s bedroom and found her husband having canal knowledge of their child.

He said that the victim was rushed to the hospital for medical examination and the matter was reported to the police.

ZESCO Clarifies Electricity Tariff Adjustment Status Amid Speculation

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Zambia’s power utility company, ZESCO, has moved to clarify recent speculation regarding the adjustment of electricity tariffs, asserting that no decision has been made thus far. In a statement released to the public, ZESCO explained that any tariff adjustments are contingent upon the determination of the 2024 tariff by the Energy Regulation Board (ERB), expected to be finalized by May 2024.

While ZESCO was granted a Multi-Year tariff adjustment spanning from 2023 to 2027, the tariffs for the period of 2024 to 2027 were conditionally pre-approved by the ERB. This conditional approval hinges on the ERB’s annual True-Up review, which evaluates ZESCO’s performance against agreed-upon performance indicators and the effectiveness of the 2023 tariffs.

Key performance indicators assessed during the True-Up review encompass various aspects, including energy sales projections, revenue sales, cost of sales, operational and maintenance expenses, and capital expenditure.

ZESCO outlined three potential scenarios resulting from the ERB’s True-Up review. Firstly, maintaining the pre-approved tariffs could occur if ZESCO demonstrates optimal performance across all performance indicators. Alternatively, an increase in pre-approved tariffs might be necessary to offset uncontrollable costs incurred by the utility during the review period. Conversely, a reduction in pre-approved tariffs could be implemented if unplanned revenue gains are observed.

The statement reiterated that tariff adjustments by ZESCO are independently determined by the ERB in accordance with the Multi-Year Tariff Framework. This framework ensures a transparent and systematic approach to tariff adjustments, governed by regulatory oversight.

As stakeholders await the ERB’s decision, ZESCO emphasized its commitment to providing reliable and affordable electricity services to consumers across Zambia. The clarification aims to dispel any uncertainty surrounding tariff adjustments and reaffirm the adherence to regulatory processes in the determination of electricity tariffs.

ZESCO encouraged customers and stakeholders to remain vigilant for updates on the tariff determination process, underscoring the importance of transparency and regulatory compliance in maintaining trust and confidence in the electricity sector.

The utility company’s proactive communication serves to foster transparency and accountability, ensuring that stakeholders are informed and engaged throughout the regulatory process.

Increased defilement cases in Luwingu District worrying

Northern Province Police Commanding Officer Lucky Munkondya has expressed concern over the increased cases of defilements being recorded in Luwingu District.

Mrs Munkondya told Zambia News and Information Services (ZANIS) in an interview that defilement cases are increasing in the province particularly in Luwingu district.

She said the scourge can only be eliminated if authorities at the district level embark on an awareness program to sensitise the community about the dangers of having sexual intercourse with children under the age of 16.

Mrs Munkondya said it is disheartening that men have continued with such impunity, despite the massive sensitisation against the scourge.

She said perpetrators must be informed about the harsh punishment of the scourge which carries a minimum of 15 years imprisonment with hard labour.

Mrs Munkondya has since urged the Ministry of Education and the District Administration to find time and explain to children the need to report such cases.

She said it is also imperative for the community to learn the importance of reporting sexual abuse cases adding that failure to report such scourge puts the abused girl at risk.

Mrs Munkonya was reacting to two defilement cases which happened over the weekend in Mumba village in Senior Chieftainess Chungu’s Chiefdom of Lupososhi District and Masala village in Chief Chipalo of Luwingu District respectively.