Tuesday, June 17, 2025
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Nyondo reflects on Chipolopolo debut

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Nkana and U23 defender Moses Nyondo has described his Chipolopolo debut over the weekend as memorable despite being on the losing side.

Nyondo was one of two debutants together with Nkwazi defender Kebson Kamanga who started in the June 8 friendly against Cameroon that Zambia lost 2-1 in Madrid, Spain.

“I felt great after making my senior debut against after playing at Under-20 and Under 23 level. It was a totally difference experience,” Nyondo said.

“It is normal for one to be nervous being the first game at senior level but after the getting a couple of touches on the ball I was at ease.

“Everything is going smoothly , especially for us the new guys, it is a great experience learning from the seniors and we are looking forward to the next game on Sunday against Morocco.”

Nyondo could just start again on June 16 against hosts Morocco in Marrakech with doubts for experienced defenders Donashano Malama and Ziyo Tembo who are sidelined with injuries.

Zambia has no plans to take over Quantum Minerals Ltd, Reuters reports

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FILE: Mr Matt Pascal First Quantum Minerals Director of Operation with President Edgar Lungu during the Tour of Kansanshi Mine PLC in Solwezi on Friday 15-05-2015 Picture EDDIE MWANALEZA /STATE HOUSE.

Reuters reports that, according to government and industry sources, Zambia has no plans to seize the assets of Quantum Minerals Ltd and the copper producer intends to stay in the country despite the government’s move to wrest control of a rival miner.

Canadian-listed First Quantum has looked on nervously as the Zambian government appointed a provisional liquidator to run Vedanta’s Konkola Copper Mines (KCM), claiming KCM has breached the terms of its license.

The move has unnerved international miners concerned about rising resource nationalism in Zambia and neighboring countries.

First Quantum, scarred by having its operations in Democratic Republic of Congo seized in 2010, is embroiled in a dispute with the Zambian government after being handed a $5.8 billion bill last year for unpaid import duties.

“The government will not touch First Quantum,” one source close to the government said. “Vedanta is very different from First Quantum.”

Among the international miners, First Quantum has the most to lose in Zambia, which accounts for 83% of production from the company’s operating assets this year, excluding a new project in Panama.

But the company also has bargaining power as the most profitable miner in Zambia and the biggest tax payer.

In 2018, it said it paid more than $533 million in taxes to the Zambian government, including royalties, income and corporate tax.

Two sources close to the company, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of negotiations, said First Quantum would stay, but would freeze investment and might put operations on hold.

“They’ll not go. They are here for the long term,” one of the sources said.

Still, the company cannot mine at a loss, and, if necessary, would suspend production and cut jobs, shrinking the tax revenues Zambia desperately needs as its debts mount, one source said.

A First Quantum spokesman declined requests for comment.

No one from the Zambian government was immediately available for fresh comment.

The Zambian government has increased taxes and said it will switch to a non-refundable sales tax, from a refundable value-added tax.

First Quantum has said the tax changes will add about 10 cents per pound of copper in 2019 to its costs and between 15 cents to 18 cents per pound in following years.

At the time of its first quarter results in April, First Quantum CEO Philip Pascall said the company would be “very cautious” about capital expenditure in Zambia.

Pascall, who attended boarding school in Zimbabwe, has weathered previous changes in the Zambian tax regime and the sources say he will do so again.

“That’s the smart thing to do to wait for relations to be less toxic,” another of the sources said.

So far First Quantum has retreated from threats to shut in production in favor of negotiations.

First Quantum’s open-pit Zambian operations, Kansanshi and Sentinel, are projected to produce 235,000 tonnes and 250,000 tonnes of copper annually, respectively. The company expects an all-in sustaining cost of $1.70-$1.85 per pound, excluding the planned Zambian sales tax.

This is profitable even with copper prices currently around $2.65 per pound or roughly $5,900 per tonne.

‘CASH COW’

Analysts say First Quantum is undervalued. Its shares have fallen 35% from a peak in April, nearly double the loss on the benchmark Solative Global Copper Mines index.

“The shares have fallen because of a total misunderstanding of the situation,” said Charl Malan, an analyst at VanEck Global Investors, one of the company’s top 10 shareholders.

“First Quantum is not going to lose its assets. It is profitable, it is paying salaries and paying taxes… First Quantum won’t sell the Zambia assets. Zambia is their cash cow.”

The sources and the industry as a whole, however, acknowledge Zambia is high-risk as it grapples with mounting debts and as politicians are already positioning ahead of elections scheduled for 2021.

Vedanta has said its KCM unit is “largely unprofitable”, although it has paid taxes through its payroll and says it has invested in the business.

Vedanta Resources, part-owner of the Mumbai-listed Vedanta group of companies, has also said it will vigorously defend itself and has threatened international arbitration in response to the Zambian government’s intervention in KCM.

Mining Minister Richard Musukwa has said the Vedanta case is “a signal to other mining companies not complying with the law to put their houses in order.” He has not explicitly said any miners are safe from government intervention.

Government wants to use Social Media Profiles to Scrutinize Future Job Applicants

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Dora Siliya
Dora Siliya

Government has proposed to put up a strong system that will curb social media abuse among young people. Minister Information and Broadcasting Services, Dora Siliya has said that the system will ensure that people are judged on what they post on social media even when they apply for jobs in various sectors.

Ms. Siliya said that social media abuse has become a threat to society and that the system will curb the vice of fake news especially among citizen journalists.

Ms. Siliya was speaking during completion ceremony of the Access to Satellite Television for Ten Thousand African Villages in Zambia.

The Minister also thanked the Chinese Government for setting the satellite TVs saying they will improve dissemination of first-hand information to people in villages.

And Chinese Ambassador to Zambia Li Jie said the setting of the satellite Televisions will enable people acquire skill through various programmes.

Mr. Li said China will continue to support programs that aim at developing the country.

Chieftainess Nkomesha Mukamambo the Second of Chongwe District said the satellite Televisions will change the lives of people in her district.

The Traditional Leader said this in a speech read for her by Senior Headman Chisholeka at the same event.

Meanwhile, Information and Broadcasting Services Minister Dora Siliya has re-affirmed government’s commitment to Electoral Reforms in the country.

Ms. Siliya says this is evidenced by the recent National Dialogue Forum -NDF that deliberated on the amendment of the Constitution, Electoral process Act and Public Order Act.

She said this when the European Union Electoral Observation Mission Delegation called on her at the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Services in Lusaka.

Later the delegation held a closed-door meeting with Ms. Siliya .

Electoral Commission of Zambia Public Relations Manager Margaret Chimanse also attended the meeting.

The European Union Electoral Observation Mission was among international stakeholders that monitored Zambia ‘s 2016 General Elections.

Movie Review : US

Haunted by an explainable and unresolved trauma from her past and compounded by a string of eerie coincidences, Adelaide Wilson feels her paranoia elevate to high-alert as she grows increasingly certain that something bad is going to befall her family. Her worst fears soon become a reality when four masked strangers descend upon the house, forcing the Wilsons into a fight for survival. When the masks come off, the family is horrified to learn that each attacker takes the appearance of one of them.

PROS

  • Interesting, original, unpredictable story line.
  • Each of the doppelgangers (a non-biologically related look-alike or double of a living person) allowed the characters to play ‘Evil twin’ versions of themselves. Which was done perfectly. Lupita N’yongo was fantastic in her dual roles. She made it feel like they were two different people.
  • The interaction between the characters and their evil doppelgangers gave us some really intense  ,harrowing moments.

CONS 

  • There were many key parts of the plot that were never explained to the viewer. This can be a good thing as it leave you with something to think about after the movie is over , but it also makes the movie feel incomplete.

FAVORITE QUOTES

Jason Wilson: “There is a family in our drive way.”

Gabe Wilson: “If you wanna get crazy, we can get crazy!”

Adelaide Wilson: “They look exactly like us. They think like us. They know where we are. We need to move and keep moving. They won’t stop until they kill us… or we kill them.”

CONCLUSION

After director/writer Jordan Peele’s highly successful movie “Get Out” , many ,including myself, were eagerly awaiting his next project to see if it will be on par with its predecessor. ‘US‘ does not disappoint, it is a horror movie that keeps you on your toes as you don’t know what will happen next.

US‘ is not your typical horror movie that is there just to provide a few ‘jump-out-of-your-seat’ moments. The movie digs a little deeper and touches on topics such as family dynamics , race, psychological trauma. The story may seem simple at first glance , but as it unravels you notice the complex metaphors and you realize, though it is a horror, that you can relate to some of the situations the characters are in.

US can be summed up in the phrase “We are our own worst enemy” i.e the things that harm us are sometimes our own doing.

RATING

3 out of 5

 

BY KAPA KAUMBA

Donald Siwale Technical School to be completed this year

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Minister of General Education David Mabumba
Minister of General Education David Mabumba

Minister of General Education David Mabumba has assured the people of Nakonde district in Muchinga Province that Donald Siwale Technical School will be partially handed over to his ministry by December this year.

Mr Mabumba said that the move will help to decongestant other secondary schools within the district were the teacher pupil ratio does match the required standards.

Mr Mabumba disclosed this yesterday during a meeting with pupils, parents and teachers from different schools from within the district.

The Minister who is on a tour of Muchinga Province to check on school infrastructure and also to interact with pupils, teachers and parents, is also taking time to inform and educate the public on some of the education reforms that have been introduced in his ministry.

Mr Mabumba said government will not terminate the contract of Savenda, a contractor who has been contracted to do the works but it will take up the task of buying the remaining building materials through the office of the Provincial Education Office in order to facilitate the completion of the project.

Speaking at the same occasion Nakonde District Education Board Secretary Stanley Mwambazi said the completion of the education facility will be a very remarkable development because currently Nakonde district does not have enough education infrastructure to cater for the increasing number of pupils per school.

And one of the parents, Queen Mwansa thanked government for the reducing school user fees. Mrs Mwansa said the move to reduce school user fees has enabled most parents to send their children to school.

People of Nakonde District have been waiting for the completion of Donald Siwale Technical School whose construction started in 2011.

Dates set for Lwiindi Gonde ceremony

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People at the Gonde Lwiindi ceremony
People at the Gonde Lwiindi ceremony

The Lwiindi Gonde Organising Committee has set the dates for the Lwiindi Gonde traditional ceremony to take place in Monze district, Southern Province.

ZANIS reports that the Lwiindi Gonde Traditional Ceremony of the Tonga speaking people will take place from June 29 to July 2nd, 2019.

Lwiindi Gonde Organising Committee Publicity Secretary Yvonne Ndaba, says the Tonga traditional ceremony will take place despite the hunger situation that had earlier hit the district.

She said the 45th Traditional ceremony will be held as per traditional custom whether there is a drought or not, adding that the committee has already written to President Edgar Lungu to officiate at the event.

“I want to confirm to you that the Lwiindi Gonde Traditional ceremony will take place from June 29 to July 2nd, 2019 and I must emphasise that the event will go ahead in respect of our rich tradition that allows us to hold the event whether there is a drought or not,” said Ms Ndaba.

Mrs Ndaba said the preparations were going on well and expressed hope that this year’s traditional ceremony will be a huge success, following support rendered to the committee so far.

And Mrs Ndaba has revealed that no political attire will be tolerated at this year’s traditional ceremony and has since advised political parties to respect traditional ceremonies and avoid diluting them with politics.

She explained that it was important for every Zambian to support and respect all traditional ceremonies in order to help sustain the country’s rich traditional heritage.

“It must be made clear that we shall not tolerate any political attire or political activities of any nature during this year’s Lwiindi Gonde ceremony,” said Mrs Ndaba.

Southern Province has been hit with hunger due to the poor crop harvest fueling strong rumours of the cancellation of some traditional ceremonies like the Lwiindi Gonde.

President Lungu confident that Chipampe will deliver as State House Spokesman

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Isaac Chipampe at State House with President Lungu and Vice President Inonge Wina after being Sworn in
Isaac Chipampe at State House with President Lungu and Vice President Inonge Wina after being Sworn in

President Edgar Lungu is confident that newly appointed State House Special Assistant for Press and Public Relations will deliver.

Speaking when he swore in Mr. Chipampe at State House this morning, President Lungu said he believes Mr Chipampe is the right man for the job.

“This job that requires one to go an extra mile, including sacrificing their time, to get the work done. I have no doubt that with Mr. Chipampe’s 24 years of professional experience in the media, he is equal to the task,” President Lungu said.

“To Mr. Chipempe, I urge you to bring sanity in the media fraternity by finding solutions to end the unbecoming trend of journalists thriving on publishing fake news especially in the wake of social media,” he said.

President Lungu said this type of journalism is retrogressive and negatively impacts the development of our country.

“This position is a very senior one in the civil service and comes with immense responsibilities. You will soon get to know that your new office is demanding, often requiring that you go an extra mile to serve”

“As I conclude, I urge you to quickly settle down in your new position. Let me encourage you to continue exhibiting professionalism, loyalty, trust and commitment to duty which I must say has earned you this deserved promotion.”

“May the Almighty God bless and guide you as you serve the Presidency and the people of Zambia,” President Lungu said.

Isaac Chipampe at State House being Sworn in
Isaac Chipampe at State House being Sworn in

Woman Made me Love Zambia: PART NINETEEN

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I insulted the President of Zambia

By Mwizenge S. Tembo, Ph. D.

Professor of Sociology

 

My sweet Linda Jitanda chipesha mano (one who kills my brain), chipha dzuwa (the sun killer) was gone on the fish truck back to Mwinilunga. I was now singing my painful personal national anthem of a broken heart: “Linda Jitanda is gone!!” “Wayenda sure!!” (She is gone sure!!) I began to whisper under my breath as I wandered aimlessly along the shops and the corridors of the Kamwala Shopping center. The ache in my heart was building steam of heat in my heavy chest. I had to do something or anything to seek some relief from the profound and deep sorrow that Linda Jitanda had left in her wake. I wandered into Bula Bupo Bar to some Rhumba Juke Box music. Suddenly I wanted to not just drown but kill my sorrows. I was angry and heart broken, and it was the early months of 1977.

I ordered a mosi and furiously gulped half of it down in 30 seconds. I placed the half empty bottle on the counter. I slowly rotated the moist cold bottle of Mosi on the counter and began twirling it around slowly. I was waiting for my sorrows to begin choking and eventually drown. Since it was midafternoon, the afterwork crowd had not yet walked into Bula Bupo bar. The Juke Box was sometimes quiet. I put in ten ngwee and selected 3 Rhumba songs including Adza by Franco.

Into the nearly empty bar walked a young man my age carrying a box. He plopped the small brown carton box on the bar counter almost next to me and ordered a coke. I knew exactly what he was doing because I had done it so many times before whenever I was broke as a student at the University of Zambia. I had become expert at it. You walk into a bar, look for a man who is alone drinking. You go next to him when there is a whole empty bar counter and loudly order a coke. Your hope is either the man is bored and lonely, knows you from somewhere or he is too drunk and he might just order you a beer even by mistake.

“Hey! Ba Barman!” I shouted. “Mubapaseko one Mosi aba! “(Give him one mosi)

I slapped the 25 ngwee coins on the counter and the bar man scooped them up.

“Thank you, Mwana” he said as he began to swig the Mosi.

“Ine ndine Mwizenge,” I introduced myself as I shook the young man’s hand. “Imwe ndimwe ba ndani?” (Who are you?)

“Neo George Mukasa”. We shook hands. “Ninkala pa Chawama apa ndine mechanic” (I live in Chawama nearby and I work as a mechanic assistant.)

“Mungakambe mu ChiBemba nimvera,” (You can speak in Bemba because I understand Bemba.) I said this because I noticed he was speaking Nyanja with a strained strong Bemba accent.

We spoke in Nyanja mixing with Bemba words and a mix of English as we Zambians do. George and I laughed as I ordered a third round of beer.

“Mwana, Mwizenge you look sad, what is wrong,” George asked.

“It’s a beautiful woman Linda Jitanda, she just left me!!”

“I knew right away, Abanakashi baliyafya!!!(Women are trouble some)

“Just Imagine! I met Linda Jitanda at Sinjonjo bar in Mongu. She is not even Lozi. She is Kaonde from North Western Province and I am Tumbuka from the Eastern Province. Some idiot man in her village impregnated her!”

“Ah! Sure!!!” George reacted in disbelief.

“She came to say bye to me at NAMBOARD. Now she just left me on the fish truck!! This is all the President’s fault!!”

“Mwana how can that be the President’s fault?”

“I don’t care. I have a degree but no house no car and me and her can’t even talk! What kind of One Zambia One Nation is that? Ha!!!”

George knew when to leave. He said he had to take the spare parts for the car which was being fixed at his Chawama Compound street makeshift garage.

“Mwana Mwizenge meet me here at Bula Bupo bar on  Saturday at 10:00hours. I will have money then to buy you beer,” George said as we shook hands and he walked out of the bar.

I kept on downing Mosi beers and buying random men a beer so I could rant to them about my sweetheart chipesha mano Linda Jitanda leaving me.

I had lost count of how many beers I drunk. I told the last man I ranted to that I was going to the State House to tell the President. I half staggered out of the bar and began to walk along Independence Avenue toward the State House. I muttered under my breath that I was going to tell off the President. This is a one-party dictatorship. As I crossed many side streets on Independence Avenue I heard a lot of hooting of cars but did not know why.

When I arrived at the gate entrance  to State House, I saw two soldiers standing rigidly eyes up front into the air. I walked to the small booth.

The soldier who checked Ids for people who go into State House could see I was drunk. He came out of his booth.

“I want to see the President!!” I shouted. “Linda Jitanda is gone! I am Tumbuka and she is Kaonde. I love her but an idiot man impregnated her! Now she is gone! The President is to blame!!! How can we have One Zambia One Nation like this!! The President is stupid!!!”

The soldier leaped toward me like lightening as I instinctively ducked back as his open palm missed the side of my cheek and his fingers hit my upper lip and the tip of my nose. A civilian man suddenly grabbed me from behind pinning both of my arms back together dragging me away.

“Uyu mufana wanga wamwa maningi akolewa!!” (My young man drunk too much beer) “Musiyeni nizamumemnay ni ine. (Leave him alone I will beat him myself). He was pretending to be dragging me away forcefully.

“I have a degree is psychology,” I protested. “I know Marxism!! The President is a bourgeoisie, I am a working class!! A peasant!! Linda Jitanda is gone!! Life is not fair!!”

After 50 meters of pretending to be dragging me away as his younger brother, the man rebuked me. Telling me to stop shouting insults otherwise I was going to end up in police cells or worse. A few passers-by gathered to watch the spectacle. A car stopped. The man who had rescued me talked to the driver.

“Young man where do you live?” the man who had rescued me asked me.

“Northmead Supermarket, Northmead Supermarket!!” I repeatedly ranted in my drunken stupor.

The driver opened the back door of his car and the 2 men dumped me in the back seat. I must have half passed out because I felt the car move for what felt to be about a hundred meters then it stopped.

The driver came out, Dragged me out of the back seat by my legs. Lifted me out. Pulled my left hand over his should and his other hand around my waist and propped me up in front of the Northmead Super Market.

The driver went back to his car and slammed the car door shut and he started his car.

“Ba Malonda!! (Security Gurad!!)  the driver shouted from his open car window. “Mumuuze uyunayende kunyumba kwake ngati moba wasila.”(Tell him to go to his home once his head is clear of beer).

There was a little cake of dried blood on the side of my nose. Other than that I was alright and my head was very clear. It was dark and late.May be 22 hours. I walked to my aunt and uncle’s house praying that they would still not be up that late. They were asleep and their bedroom lights were off. Indeed, I used my key to open the side door and quietly slipped into my bedroom as I had done so many times late at night. Sometime at 4:00am.

To my huge relief, as always, my aunt had left nshima  for me with meat as ndiwo or relish. I was starving from all the drinking without eating. I ate the whole  nshima with the soup and the meat.

 

*Dispatch from Mika Lodge, Jesmondine, Lusaka, Zambia

Chanda Mbao Premieres Music Video for Number 1 Record

Chanda Mbao recently announced that he will be premiering the long-awaited music video for his number 1 international hit, Money Gang, which features Malawian super-producer and artist, Gemini Major. The premiere will be screened on the international TV station Trace Urban, making Chanda the first Zambian artist to premiere a video with the station. Trace Urban airs internationally in Africa and Europe and is considered the bigger sister to Trace’s ‘Trace Africa’ channel.

The big news of the premiere comes fresh after Mbao premiered the video for a private audience in South Africa where industry professionals and artists were in attendance to support an initiative he created and funded alongside head of 16 Bars Reloaded front woman Spoken Priestess. Dubbed the ‘SADC Money Gang Link-up,’ the event aimed to further regional integration in the areas of music and entertainment, allowing artists from all parts of the region to share their talent and collaborate. Apart from using the platform to promote his hit single, the initiative was about embracing the richness of Southern Africa’s artists and embarking upon a journey to collaborate and create a larger regional block for music as has been done in other sectors. Chanda remarked at the event how banking, retail and other corporate industries have already taking a regional and continental view but for some reason music continues to be very siloed.

Held at the J&B Hive in Braamfontein Johannesburg, the ‘SADC Money Gang Link up’ represented a melting pot of young African talent. It was a showcase of artists from genres including Hip-Hop and Reggae/Dancehall who showcased their talent via displays and performances; participating artists included Kid X (South Africa), Buffalo Souljah (Zimbabwe), Ason (Mozambique) and, of course, our very own Chanda Mbao.

To catch Chanda Mbao’s latest video, tune into Trace Urban (DSTV Channel 325) today June 13th at the following times: 08:48 , 11:54, 12:55 , 15:10 ,19:47

Subscribe to his Youtube channel to catch it when it drops digitally.

Chanda’s YouTube channel
https://www.youtube.com/chandambao

Chanda Mbao’s Social Media
http://www.chandambao.com/
http://www.facebook.com/chandambao
http://www.twitter.com/chandambao
http://www.soundcloud.com/chandambao

Chanda Mbao and Kid X, South African artist at the #SADCMoneyGang event

Ziyo and Malama doubts for Morocco friendly

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Zambia coach Beston Chambeshi concedes injured defenders Ziyo Tembo and Donashano Malama are doubts for this Sunday’s penultimate friendly date Morocco in Marrakech.

Malama and Ziyo also sat out last Sunday’s 2-1 friendly loss against Cameroon in Madrid, Spain.

Ziyo has an ankle injury while Malawi has a back problem and the duo has been restricted to light training after sustaining the injuries during the current eleven –day friendly tour camp in Morocco.

Chambeshi said he may again have to fall back again on the Zambia Under32 defensive trio of Moses Nyondo , Kebson Kamanga and Shemmy Mayembe after they started against Cameroon.

“You know, these are our key players our in defence and if you miss players like this, it is a worry,” Chambeshi said.

“But we have all the confidence in the young boys who are here Nyondo, Shemmy and Kebson.

“I think they are gelling well in the team and doing fine. We hope and trust they can withstand the pressure against Morocco but we have confidence in them.”

African Teachers Receive Supplementary salaries through Development Channel

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Teachers in Africa are evidently the most economically disempowered of all professions despite being the greatest contributors to the development of the continent. African teachers trained the politicians who tell them their salaries cannot be increased, train the doctors who tell them they can’t afford the healthcare they need, train the bankers who deny them of loans, train the business men who ridicule them of their poverty and train the various government technocrats who deny them of their pensions and gratuity.

Teachers in Africa are synonymous with poverty and according to more than 90% of African governments, there are no funds to increase the much needed salaries for teachers and even if the funds were there, increasing salaries for teachers will only lead to inflation and further agitation by other civil servants. This is the long held position of African governments and institution while those of the private school proprietors is that they are struggling and have at least managed to do better than the meagre wages paid by the public schools.

This current statuesque has gone on for decades forcing teachers to abandon the profession leading to loss of quality and skilled educators which then downgrades the quality of the education in Africa. It has also led to teachers skipping classes in pursuit of economic gains also leading to lack of importation of knowledge to the students. In some other cases, teachers now take bribes from parents and students to give them pass marks which accounts for the reason why Africa is now full of “educated” illiterates with many having certificates let lacking any academic depth. It is now a known fact in Africa that a primary school educated person a few decades ago is far more literate than today’s university graduate.

Development Channel, the crier and advocate of Africa’s first economic war has however come to the rescue. Development Channel who believes that the funds for Africa’s development lies first in the $203 billion dollars capital flight that leaves the continent yearly says that salaries of teachers can be doubled without it causing any inflation or leading to any further agitation by other civil servants. The organization led by the visionary Charles N Lambert says its new unprecedented initiative, the Teachers Revenue Source(TRS) will put African teachers exactly where they should be through daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly and annual salaries earned by the teachers participation part time in the patriotic duty of being a public enlightenment officer in Africa’s first economic war.

Teachers are expected to earn a minimum of $200 in basic monthly salary from their participation in TRS with very committed ones earning up to $1,000 per month. It should be noted that teachers in Africa currently earn an average of $100 per month. The Teachers Revenue Source (TRS) initiative also helps teachers get many need based products for free and high expensive items such as vehicles on credit terms with deductions from the TRS salary and not the primary salary of the teacher. As at the time of this report, thousands of teachers are flocking to be trained on how to use the Development Channel Mother App and work from their various individual locations for the economic war which empowers them yet empowers the continent.

Isaac Chipampe is the new State House Press Aide to replace Amos Chanda

Isaac Chipampe (center)
Isaac Chipampe (center)

President Edgar Lungu has appointed Mr Isaac Chipampe as as State House Press Aide to replace Amos Chanda.

He was until his appointment, Director for Press and Media Development at the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting.

He also previously served as Managing Editor of the government owned Daily Mail.

He is due to be sworn in this morning at State House.

National Development banks deserve increased support to speed up SDGs implementation

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Hon. Alexander Chiteme, Minister of National Development Planning, delivering a keynote at SDGs in Rwanda 12-06-2019
Hon. Alexander Chiteme, Minister of National Development Planning, delivering a keynote at SDGs in Rwanda 12-06-2019

The Minister of National Development Planning Honourable Alexander Chiteme has called on African leaders, multi-lateral development finance institutions and other key development partners to increase their support to national development banks in the continent to enable the banks effectively contribute to the speedy implementation Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Mr. Chiteme was speaking when he delivered a keynote address themed: “the unique and important role of national development banks in Africa” at the conference organised by the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Centre for Africa conference on ‘SDGs Implementation in Africa – Reflections on a Three-Year Journey’ taking place in Kigali, Rwanda.

“National development banks are hugely important to sustainable development in Africa. They must now receive the attention they deserve from all stakeholders including regulators, larger multi-lateral development finance institutions and other key development partners in order to enable them to realise their full potential,” said Mr. Chiteme at the continental meeting that attracted government officials, development partners, private sector and civil society leaders. The Conference will serve as a prelude to the 7th Board Meeting of SDGs Centre for Africa on Friday when Heads of State and Government are expected to deliberate on the SDGs implementation.

Mr. Chiteme expressed Zambia’s support to the SDG Centre for Africa’s continent-wide programme to support the reform of national development banks for the achievement of the SDGs. “I am in full agreement with the objective of this initiative:  national development banks do, in fact, have a very important and necessary role in financing sustainable development across Africa,” he said. “The development bank of Zambia and the SDG Center will be entering into a Memorandum of Understanding through which they will work together to strengthen the capacity of the Development Bank of Zambia to identify, develop and finance SDGs-related Projects in Zambia.” 

Audience listening to Hon. Alexander Chiteme, Minister of National Development Planning, delivering a keynote at SDGs in Rwanda 12-06-2019
Audience listening to Hon. Alexander Chiteme, Minister of National Development Planning, delivering a keynote at SDGs in Rwanda 12-06-2019

He observed that though development banks play a key role in national development, there were still areas where improvements needed to be made to effectively contribute to Zambia’s sustainable development. 

“We must improve the risk profile of the bank’s financing so that there is increased investment in key development sectors, such infrastructure, energy, industrialization, agricultural and related sectors.  We must determine different and better options for fundraising and long-term capitalization which will enable the bank to access affordable sources of funding to finance projects contained in national development plans and the SDGs,” Mr. Chiteme said.  
He told the delegates that Zambia’s Seventh National Development Planning (7NDP) has successfully integrated 86 percent of the SDGs targets and indicators, with the help of the United Nations Development Programme.

The Minister said Zambia had recorded strong economic growth over the last 15 years despite some deceleration of growth in 2015 and 2016, growth was on the recovery and was expected to reach satisfactory levels in the medium-term. 

“The Minister observed that Zambia, like most African countries had a challenge in translating economic growth into improvements in the livelihoods of the citizens. Poverty remains our greatest challenge,” said Mr. Chiteme. “Our growth has not resulted in the requisite job creation to significantly reduce the poverty levels.  We face an unemployment rate in the double digits, with nearly one in four youth unemployed.  We must do much more if we are to lift all people out of poverty and achieve the SDGs by 2030.”  

Zambia will host the SDGs Centre for Southern African region. 

How Ex BOZ Governor Michael Gondwe’s niece Pamela stole US$400,000 from Barclays

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The Drug Enforcement Commission is investigating the theft of over US$400,000 from Barclays Bank Zambia by one of its employees identified as Pamela Gondwe.

Family sources have told Lusaka Times that Pamela who is a niece to immediate past Bank of Zambia Governor Michael Gondwe has shocked the entire family.

“We are all very shocked because it is not like she was broke. She actually grew up in Dr Gondwe’s home. Pamela had money and we are just shocked that she could do such a thing, it is shocking,” a family member said.

The family source added that as Premier Retail Support Staff at the Bank, Pamela was getting about K20,000 a month as salary.

“You can see that this is not someone desperately in need of cash, she probably just wanted to go away and start a new life,” the source added.

And about four of Pamela’s close friends were summoned at DEC Headquarters in Lusaka for questioning.

The Commission is tying to piece together a puzzle of how Pamela single handily stole and concealed US$ 400,000 from Barclays Bank Longacres Branch.

It was discovered that Pamela who is single and without children paid rent in advance last week for her Sisters and Dependents to cover a period of ten months.

And some bank insiders have revealed that two Managers at the Bank have since been suspended following the heist.

“It’s simply procedural. You know the Bank has got systems and if those systems are breached, someone has to pay and unfortunately the Managers are taking the heat. From the way it appears, they could even lose their jobs,” a bank employee said.

“Longacres Branch feels like a funeral today,” he added.

DEC offices also took away a number of bank employees from Risk Department for questioning to help with investigations.

All those questioned were later released.

The Bank on Monday afternoon reported the case to Longacres Police after it noticed that $400,000 had vanished from its US dollar vault.

Since Monday, the Bank Management wanted to keep the story a secret fearing it might harm the bank’s credibility and have a run.

When reached for a comment, Barclays Bank Communications Manager Banji Lufungulo confirmed the incident but declined to comment further for fear of jeopardizing investigations.

But Police Spokesperson Esther Katongo expressed ignorance on the matter stating that no such case has been reported to the police

“Check with other law enforcement agencies,” she said before quickly cutting the line.

And there are reports that Pamela Gondwe’s friends are currently in custody to help with investigations while the Barclays Bank premises in Long Acres are being manned by DEC officials.

Pamela is also author of a book titled ‘Tears in a suitcase’.

A check on her social media profile showed yet she loved traveling and maintained an expensive lifestyle.

She was in a relationship with a Ugandan man and recently returned from a trip to West Africa.

Pamela was one of the people entrusted with the Vault.

It is believed that about two weeks ago, Pamela went to work carrying an empty bag and claimed that she had just bought it from a vendor at Longacres.

She left the bag in the vault room and on Monday, Pamela told a workmate at the Vault section that she had received instructions from the Head Office to get the serial numbers for all the US Dollars in the Vault.

The two then entered the Vault and started serializing the batches of US dollars in the Vault.

Midway, Pamela offered her female colleague a Sausage which was cold and the colleague decided to go and warm it from the Staff Canteen and eat it from there.

Pamela then quickly loaded all the US Dollars in the bag and hid the bag within the banking premises.

When her colleague returned, Pamela had already locked her part and told her colleague that she had locked her part and was on her way to the Saloon for a quick retouch to her hair.

She then used the back door out of the bank to the alley between Puma Filling Station and the Bank through to Longacres market and disappeared, leaving behind her mobile phone.

Later Bank official became suspicious after she did not return and they managed to open the Vault using a master key only to find that US$400,000 dollars missing.

CCTV footage showed her loading the money in her bag.

The Situation at KCM is now under control-Mines Minister

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Mines Minister Richard Musukwa at the meeting with the Japanese Officials
Mines Minister Richard Musukwa at the meeting with the Japanese Officials

Mines minister Richard Musukwa has said that following the reports of sabotage at Konkola Copper Mines (KCM) which we received yesterday, a comprehensive assessment has been undertaken and that the situation is at KCM is now under control.

In a statement released to the media, the Mines Minister said that the culprits have been arrested and investigations were underway, and that Government has stepped up security especially on strategic installations.

” The smelter is intact and was not damaged in anyway. What was removed are keys to the license software. KCM has duplicate copies of the keys to the licence software which will be used in the anticipated startup of the smelter, ” the Minister said.

The Minister appealed to all the workers to be vigilant and avoid being caught up in the evil vice of stripping our own assets.

Early in the week Government said that it had unearthed a scam in which Vedanta is stripping Konkola Copper Mines (KCM) of its assets. Mines minister Richard Musukwa said Vedanta had deliberately damaged the operating system thereby crippling the KCM concentrator.

Mr. Musukwa said Vedanta was working with some Zambians and foreign contractors to ensure that the mine was flooded while the smelter remained unproductive.

He said the investor was conniving with some employees to switch off key components of the smelter.

“There was a problem purposefully created on the smelter using a computer software which is used to run and operate the smelter, it was removed by people who wanted to ground the facility.

“There was a collusion among security and laboratory personnel as well as smelter staff to steal diesel and in the recess supplied a water solvent in the form which if it went to the smelter, would have generated a problem,” Mr. Musukwa said.

Meanwhile, police on the Copperbelt are investigating the theft of a flash disc at the mine which has left operations at the smelter paralysed.

Copperbelt Police Commissioner Charity Katanga yesterday said police had identified a Zambian and his Indian counterpart who were prime suspects in the theft of flash discs which contained the software.

Ms. Katanga said investigations into the matter have been launched and that the Indian was helping police with investigations.

She also said police discovered contaminated fuel at the KCM premises.