Monday, June 23, 2025
Home Blog Page 1999

Wada wins first SA PSL match

4

Wedson Nyirenda delivered at home on Wednesday night after Baroka FC beat Cape Town FC 2-1 in Polokwane.

The win comes five days after Nyirenda began his South African PSL debut with a 1-0 away loss at Amazulu in Durban.

Mpho Kgaswane and Matoe Kgoetyane’s goals in the 6th and 20th minutes respectively were enough to seal the three points for Baroka.

Siphele Mthembu scored Cape Town City’s consolation goal in the 49th minute to see Benni McCarthy suffer his first loss of the season after kicking off the season with a 2-0 home win over SuperSport United on Saturday.

The victory gives Nyirenda a boost ahead of the big August 14 home date against his ex-club Kaizer Chiefs who lost 3-1 on Tuesday at home to 2016/2017 champions Bidvest Wits.

Baroka are 8th with 3 points after the home win, three behind Wits.

Violet Kafula, God Mother of Zambian music dies

15
Late Violet Kafula
Late Violet Kafula

Songstress Violet Kafula has died.

Aunty Violet as she was fondly called by her fans is considered by many followers of Zambian music as the Godmother of Zambian pop music.

Aunty Violet died Wednesday morning at around 03 Hours.

She is well known for her hit song “Imwe Mwebalume Bandi” kicked off her music career around the 70s after leaving her job at Mwaiseni Stores to join the Crossbones who later became Amayenge.

In one of her rare interviews, Aunty Violet told Zamrock.org that she enjoyed her time in music.

“I came up with ‘Mwebalume Bandi’ and in two weeks, it sold about 14 000 copies. Up to now, it’s still a hit. That’s what made me the first female artist in Zambia because there were no female musicians on the scene.”

The news of Aunty Violet’s death has gripped the local music industry.

James Chamanyazi said the death of Aunty Violet is saddening.

“It’s with this heavy heart that am relaying the sad news of the death of Aunty Violet Barbara Kafula the godmother of Zambian music and singer of ‘imwe mwebalume bandi’. She passed away this morning at about 03 Hours. MHSRIP,” Chamanyazi said.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa to visit Zambia on Thursday

9
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa. having a light moment with Zambian President Edgar Lungu
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa. having a light moment with Zambian President Edgar Lungu

Foreign Affairs Minister Joe Malanji has announced that South African President Cyril Ramaphosa will on Thursday be in Zambia for a working visit.

Ambassador Malanji said this in a statement today that this would be President Ramaphosa’s first visit to Zambia since he assumed office in February this year.

“I wish to inform the nation that his Excellency Mr Edgar Chagwa Lungu, President of the Republic of Zambia, will receive the President of South Africa, His Excellency Mr Cyril Ramaphosa on August 9, 2018 for a working visit in order to hold consultations. This marks the first visit to Zambia since His Excellency Ramaphosa assumed office in February, 2018,” Ambassador Malanji stated.

Ambassador Malanji stated that the visit by President Ramaphosa was significant as it would provide an opportunity for the two Heads of State to discuss regional peace and security issues.

“The nation may wish to note that this visit is significant as it will provide an opportunity for the two Heads of State to discuss regional peace and security issues, as South Africa is the chair of SADC and Zambia will assume chair of the SADC Organ on Politics Defence and Security Cooperation, during the 38th SADC summit scheduled to be held in Namibia from August 17 to 18, 2018,” he stated.

Malanji stated that during the visit, the two Heads of State would witness the signing of an agreement to establish a Bi-National Commission (BNC) between the two countries.

Local Government Clerical Officer convicted

5
ACC Public Relations Manager Timothy Moono
ACC Public Relations Manager Timothy Moono

The Mongu Magistrate Court has convicted a Clerical Officer in the Ministry of Local Government and Housing to three years simple imprisonment for corrupt practices involving K1, 000.

This is contained in a statement made available to ZANIS in Lusaka today by Anti-Corruption Commission Public Relations Manager Timothy Moono.

Mr. Moono said in this matter, Naomi Mutesi of Mongu district was arrested by the Commission this year and is charged with one count of corrupt practices by a Public Officer contrary to Section 19 sub section 1 of the Anti-Corruption Act No. 3 of 2012.

Details are that Naomi Mutesi on April 28, 2016, being a public officer the Ministry of Local Government and Housing, Provincial Administration in Mongu district solicited K1, 000 from a Mr. Mupo Simenda.

Mr Moono said this was cash gratification as an inducement to facilitate employment in the government of the Republic of Zambia, a matter or transaction which concerned the Provincial Administration Office.

Zambia assumes Chair for AU Peace and Security Council

4

Zambia’s Ambassador to Ethiopia, Susan Sikaneta
Zambia’s Ambassador to Ethiopia, Susan Sikaneta

Zambia has assumed the Chairmanship for the African Union Peace and Security Council for the month of August.

This is the second time that Zambia will be chairing the Peace and Security Council, organ of the African Union in charge of peace and security, since becoming a member of the council three years ago.

Following consultations and green light from government, the Zambia Mission presented the items on the agenda in July this year, which have since been approved for discussion in the month of August by the Peace and Security Council.

Zambia’s Ambassador to Ethiopia, Susan Sikaneta who is chairing the meetings on behalf of Zambia said some of the items on the agenda, to be discussed include the preparation for the Amnesty Month in relation to silencing the guns on the continent by 2020, and embracing the values of governance and democracy through the review of the AU Charter on Democracy, elections and Human Rights.

On the preparation for the Amnesty Month, Ms. Sikaneta said this was an important programme because there are many illegal weapons and arms that were in circulation on the African continent.

‘’These are weapons that are used by terrorists groups, and weapons that are used in all manner of conflicts on the continent. Our heads of States and Governments decided that the month of September should be observed as a month for surrendering illegal weapons. ‘’Ms. Sikaneta said.

The Zambian Ambassador to Ethiopia also noted that Zambia has taken the surrendering of weapons seriously, owing to the fact that the AU Roadmap on Silencing the Guns was crafted in Zambia in 2016, guided by President Edgar Lungu.

She said time has come for the continent to resolve their differences through dialogue and not through the use of weapons.

Ms. Sikaneta who is also Zambia’s Permanent Representative to the AU said the Peace and Security Council will further consider suggestions for the standardization of legislation, for owning weapons on the continent.

She said Zambia was doing well in eliminating child marriages under President Edgar Lungu who was the AU Champion on ending child marriages in Africa.

She noted that this should continue to be enhanced so that Zambia continues to be a model of peace, democracy and good governance that the country is admired for.

The Ambassador also commended President Lungu for allowing Peace to thrive in Zambia.

Other Members of the Peace and Security Council took turns in congratulating Zambia for assuming the chairmanship of the council.

This is contained in a statement made available to ZANIS in Lusaka today by First Secretary-Press & Tourism at the Zambian Embassy, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Inutu Mwanza.

Cause of Bobton Chella death revealed

6

The family of former Nkana and Zambia midfielder Bobton Chella say he suffered from kidney failure prior to his death.

Chella died at the age of 50 on Tuesday at Malcolm Watson Hospital in Mufulira.

The retired prolific midfielder starred for Nkana and Mufulira Wanderers in the 1990s.

His young brother John Chella has since announced that Chella will be buried on Friday at Chingola Road Cemetery in Kitwe.

“Cause of death his kidney failure,” he said.

And funeral gathering has been shifted from Mufulira to his home in Chachacha, Kitwe.

“Funeral gathering is on Mboloma Street in Chachacha, Kitwe and burial will take place on Friday at Chingola Road Cemetery in Kitwe.

Chella is survived by a wife and three children – two girls and one boy.

Fwayo trashes Lusaka Dynamos

4

Talented but controversial footballer Fwayo Tembo has taken to Facebook to discuss his status at FAZ Super Division side Lusaka Dynamos.

Dynamos on Tuesday accused Tembo of leaving the club without informing them of his whereabouts saying the players has not been reporting for training for three months now.

But responding to followers on his Facebook account named Mbuzi Zagwa, Tembo said he had terminated his contract with the club over nonpayment of wages.

“I am around am home! Don’t mind these bosses for nothing; they just boast they can’t even afford to pay the players,” Tembo responded to one of the comments.

“No one has given me any letter. I gave them termination letter,” he said.

He joined the Lusaka side last season after his acrimonious departure from Power Dynamos.

Tembo hinted that he would bounce back in action soon.

He has previously played for National Assembly, Tunisia’s Etoile du Sahel, Basel in Switzerland and FC Astra of Romania.

Zeddy Saileti and Hector Chilombo leave crisis clubs

2

The nasty and bruising battle for survival continues to claim its managerial casualties in the second and final phase of the 2018 FAZ Super Division this season with two coaches departing in one day.

Lumwana Radiants and Nchanga Rangers have both parted company with Zeddy Saileti and Hector Chilombo respectively.

Saileti, who has been in charge at Lumwana since June, 2017 left on Tuesday, after the club declined to renew his contract following a poor run this season.

His contract expired on June 30 and has been working without a substantive deal since then and leaves the club on the back of four successive league defeats.

Under him Lumwana attained their best finish since they were promoted in 2016 when they finished 8th in 2017.

Lumwana are also sandwiched between two other demotion candidates who are gaining momentum while they are in free-fall.

Napsa, who are just below Lumwana in 17th place on 21 points are unbeaten in their last five games.

National Assembly, who are just above Lumwana at number 15 on 28 points, one point ahead of them, have not lost their last four games that included a 2-1 away win over Saileti’s team on July 14.

Assistant coach Gift Kampamba and John Munkonje will be in interim charge as Lumwana face Zanaco away this Saturday in Lusaka.

Meanwhile, Chilombo’s three month reign at second from bottom Nchanga also ended on Tuesday.

Chilombo leaves after mustering just one win and three draws from fifteen games in charge since taking over from Evans Sakala on May 19.

Nchanga are second from bottom on 17 points from 26 games with a match in hand.

Dean Mwiinde is believed to be finally on his way up on a miracle trip to Chingola.

Other coaches to have made way in the bottom half of the table are Honour Janza who has been suspended by Red Arrows and have risen four places from 16th to 14 with two successive wins under interim coach Chisi Mbewe since his departure on July 23.

Fewdays Musonda who threw in the towel at last placed Monze Swallows a week ago.

TAZAMA dividends impress Magufuli

7
Tanzania’s President elect John Pombe Magufuli addresses members of the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi Party (CCM) at the party’s sub-head office on Lumumba road in Dar es Salaam, October 30, 2015. REUTERS/Emmanuel Herman

Tanzanian President Joseph Magufuli has praised the Tanzania Zambia Mafuta (TAZAMA) pipelines for declaring dividends to the two governments.

President Magufuli is impressed that TAZAMA declared dividends at a time when jointly owned firms and many parastatal companies have failed to do so.

ZANIS reports that Zambia’s High Commissioner to Tanzania Benson Chali disclosed this when TAZAMA officials from Zambia paid a courtesy call on him at the Zambian Chancery.

Mr Chali said President Magufuli, who recently received the dividend at a state function, urged state firms including the Tanzania Zambia Railways (TAZARA) to emulate TAZAMA and step up their operations as they risk being probed and penalised by state authorities for failure to declare dividends.

Recently, TAZAMA declared dividends amounting to K9 million with Zambia that holds two thirds majority ownership raking in K6 million while Tanzania got K3 million.

And High Commissioner Chali has described TAZAMA as a great success story of the continued warm bilateral relations between Tanzania and Zambia that date back to over 50 years.

Mr Chali said TAZAMA has and continues to play a critical role in Zambia’s socio-economic development through the supply of petroleum products needed to drive the country’s economic sectors.

He said Zambians should be proud of TAZAMA as it is an important and integral part in the country’s economic transformation agenda.

Tanzania Zambia Mafuta (TAZAMA) pipelines Regional Manager for Tanzania Abraham Saunyama attributed the exceptional performance of TAZAMA to the continued good cooperation between Tanzania and Zambia and the spirit of hard work and unity among the employees.

TAZAMA Senior Public Relations Officer Kenneth Kalunga is leading a team from Ndola to Dar es Salaam inspecting the company’s infrastructure that comprises a 1, 710 km pipeline and seven pump stations that pump crude oil from Dar es Salaam to Ndola ahead of the company’s 50thanniversary this September.

TAZAMA pipeline was birthed in 1968 from the visionary efforts of founding Presidents of Tanzania and Zambia, Julius Nyerere and Kenneth Kaunda to supply petroleum products to Zambia following the Unilateral Declaration of Independence in 1965 by Ian Smiths’s Southern Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe, which blocked the country’s import route of fuel from the south.

Zambia’s refined fuel stocks import stocks dock at Dar es Salaam

7

The first consignment of imported refined fuel stocks procured by government independently and directly from Saudi Arabia has arrived at Dar es Salaam Port awaiting decantation.

ZANIS reports that Tanzania Zambia Mafuta (TAZAMA) pipelines Regional Manager for Tanzania Abraham Saunyama disclosed that the ship from Saudi Arabia will soon start decanting the diesel and petrol stocks at the Single Point Moring once docking fees and other formalities have been processed by the Tanzania Port Authorities.

Mr Saunyama said the ship is carrying already purified fuel products comprising 13 million litres of diesel and over 18 million litres of petrol for the local market.

He said the development is a milestone achievement as this is the first time in the history of the country that government has procured refined petroleum products directly from the source without engaging third party agents and other middlemen .

Mr Saunyama said government has since appointed TAZAMA as its agent to manage the processing and transportation of the refined fuel stocks to Ndola for sale and distribution to Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) in Zambia and ultimately the general public.

The development is expected to stabilise and reduce prices of petroleum products on the market as well as cement their availability.

Meanwhile, TAZAMA has commenced the construction of a container terminal at its abandoned premises in Dar es Salaam as part of its diversification efforts.

Pipeline Engineer Max Ilunda said TAZAMA will spend about US$730, 000 to set up the terminal that will increase the revenue of the firm for investment in other company ventures.

Zambia to hand over Tendai Biti to Zimbabwean Authorities after Denying him Asylum

74
FOREIGN Affirs Minister,Joseph Malanji briefing the media
FOREIGN Affirs Minister,Joseph Malanji briefing the media

Foreign Affairs Minister Joe Malanji has confirmed that opposition leader Tendai Biti is in Lusaka after he attempted to seek asylum.

Ambassador Malanji said Mr Biti’s asylum request was unsuccessful because but his grounds were not sufficient.

He said Mr. Biti is being kept for safe “custody” awaiting his return to Harare.

Ambassador Malanji said Mr. Biti had not been arrested but was rather detained in safe custody as the Zambian authorities awaited communication from the Zimbabwean government before he could be deported.

“He was attempting to seek asylum in Zambia but the grounds under which he would want to seek asylum are not meritorious. So basically he has not been arrested, all we are doing is keeping him in safe custody and waiting for the Zimbabwean authority to help him get back to Harare. The grounds do not merit asylum. He is not in danger. He is only going to answer charges to legitimate courts of law,” Ambassador Malanji said.

Mr. Biti, who was finance minister in the coalition government from 2009 to 2013, is a leading member of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change party, which denounced Emerson Mnangagwa’s July 30 election victory as fraudulent and vowed to challenge it in court this week.

Mr. Biti had declared before official election results were announced Friday that opposition leader Nelson Chamisa had won, a claim also made by Mr. Chamisa himself.

“In a normal country, Chamisa would be sworn in right now,” Mr. Biti told reporters a day after the election.

The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission has said it is illegal to release results before its own official announcement.

Zimbabwean opposition leader Tendai Biti arrested at Zambian border

34
Mr Tendai Biti
Mr Tendai Biti

Zimbabwean opposition leader Tendai Biti’s lawyer says he was arrested on Wednesday morning by the country’s police while trying to seek political asylum in Zambia.

Attorney Nqobizitha Mlilio told Journalists that Mr. Biti was arrested “on Zambian soil” at the border between Zimbabwe and Zambia.

As yet‚ there is no confirmation of the arrest‚ nor its basis‚ by the Zimbabwean police.

Police documents supplied by Mlilo‚ however‚ suggest that authorities were investigating Mr. Biti for “unofficially and unlawfully” declaring MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa the duly elected president of Zimbabwe‚ in alleged violation of Zimbabwean electoral law.

He also stands accused of public violence for “acting in consent with his accomplices still at large while armed with firearms‚ ammunition‚ stones‚ alleged to have committed act of violence and proceeded to burn various vehicles and one bus at the ZANU-PF provincial headquarters”.

Mr. Mlilo said Mr Biti was “in hiding”‚ but that he had been assured that he was not wanted by the police

Mr. Biti’s attempt to seek political asylum in Zambia came after an alleged attempt on his life on Monday‚ during which Mr. Mlilo says a gunman in an unmarked silver Mercedes Benz opened fire on Biti’s car.

That incident occurred after the home of Mr. Biti’s elderly mother was repeatedly surrounded by unknown men‚ and his younger brother was allegedly abducted after dropping his wife and children at an undisclosed location.

Zimbabwe police picking up Tendai Biti at Chirundu border post
Zimbabwe police picking up Tendai Biti at Chirundu border post

Movie review: Ant-man and the Wasp

In the aftermath of “Captain America: Civil War,” Scott Lang (Rudd) grapples with the consequences of his choices as both a Super Hero and a father. As he struggles to rebalance his home life with his responsibilities as Ant-Man, he’s confronted by Hope van Dyne (Lilly) and Dr. Hank Pym (Douglas) with an urgent new mission. Scott must once again put on the suit and learn to fight alongside The Wasp as the team works together to uncover secrets from their past.

PROS

  • Good comedy throughout the movie.

CONS

  • Thin , predictable story line.
  • If you have not watched the first Ant-man movie , you may not understand the character dynamics.
  • The villains in this movie didn’t pose enough of a tangible threat. The stakes could have, and should have, been much higher.

FAVORITE QUOTE

Cassie:  “You can do it. You can do anything. You’re the world’s greatest grandma”.

CONCLUSION

First off all i cant take Paul Rudd seriously as a superhero , he just doesn’t fit the part. But Ant-Man is not your typical “Tough guy” kind of hero. It is more of a comedy than an action packed super-hero movie, and that is not necessarily a bad thing. “Ant-Man and the Wasp” is a lighthearted, optimistic sequel that provides the laughs Marvel fans may have been craving after the heartbreaking intensity of Avengers: Infinity War. 

There’s no getting away from the fact that Ant-Man And The Wasp, as fun as it is, lacks the sheer, mind-blowing intensity of Infinity War. Or, for that matter, the scope and thematic muscle of Black Panther. In this new era of Marvel over-achievement, the movie really does feel like a let down, and definitely will not live long in the memory.

RATING

2 out of 5

 

BY KAPA KAUMBA

 

 

Copperbelt: The Emergence of a tribe – Chitimukulu

21
File:Youth conducting business at Mwaisen shopping centre in Chingola township

By Henry Kanyanta Sosala

PART I

Preamble

Sociologists explain the underlying role of culture, family, history etc., in society and although I cannot claim to conform to this discipline, I have, however, attempted to establish that over 91 years (.e., 1927- 2018), at least a social pattern has emerged which for lack of a better name, I am referring to as the ‘’copper-belt tribe.’’
In 1927 shafts of mines were sunk on the copper-belt and which marked the beginning of great industrial expansion in this country. And between 1927- 1929, 22,341 Africans were employed. And in 1935, the tribal composition working on the mines and related industries was as follows: Bemba 26.5%; Barotse and Western 15.4%; Bisa 8.4%; Chishinga 7.0%; Nsenga and Chewa 6.5%; Lala 5.8%; Lamba 2.8%; Lenje 2.1%; Others 12.5% and from the neighbouring territories 13.0%.
Actually to be a member of a tribe means to be involved in a complex set of social relations which centre on the social personalities of chief, hereditary councilors, village headmen, elders etc. In addition, it means, at least that a man’s behavior will tend to conform to certain type-patterns which are prescribed by the custom and norms of the tribe. These provide a mechanism whereby young people cannot be brought up in a higgledy-piggledy manner and in the general African context, fear of disapproval of the community affected the way people behaved i.e., the power of the social restraint was used as a motivation for right conduct. The parents would warn their children, ‘’the people of the village will say bad things about you.’’ The total body of customs and norms provide the basis of mutual expectations which are necessary to social intercourse. In this sense a tribe is a social, economic and political unit.
In this respect, the then Secretary for African Affairs, R.S. Hudson, distressingly noted in the 1930s that ‘’When an African settled in town, he ultimately ceased to belong to a tribe and no longer fitted into the native authority system.’’ In 1932, Orde-Brown sadly wrote:

‘’A disquieting feature of compounds of all kinds is the large juvenile population without occupation or control. Children and adolescents of all ages throng the vicinity, finding amusements as they can and devoid of training or teaching. In native villages this would not be the case, since almost all the tribes have very definite arrangements for training the young people according to their ideas.’’

In the conditions of those days there were undoubtedly hostilities between tribal groups, marked by brawls and fights between individuals which developed into serious affrays as tribesmen came to the support of their fellows. Tribal stereotypes developed around the unusual customs or alleged practices of other groups.
The logic of the colonial government rested upon the common assumption that the social ties, the norms and the values which had served to regulate behavior in the tribal societies from which all the new urban dwellers had come, could continue to operate in the different conditions of the industrial community. Implicit in the employment of Tribal Elders and importing of urban court justices from villages, was the view that the dominant ties between Africans in towns were still the ties of the village and the tribe.
In the work situations, people of various tribes were brought together in the common task and through the wage-economy, they were linked with whites who employed them. They were also bound together with their fellow-workers of various tribes by their common interest in the joint productive tasks in which they were involved and consequently personal friendships developed between people of different tribes. In that new scenario various tribesmen could no longer live and work together on the basis of kinship and affinity as they did in their rural villages and so many of the customs and features of the tribal system fell into desuetude.
The growth of large, modern towns in Zambia represents one of the major aspects of the revolutionary social changes now taking place in this country. And in speaking about organization I refer here to the pattern of observable regularities of bahaviour by reference to which people are seen to order their social relationships among themselves. The urban community has its own form of social organization and this organization provides general framework for the understanding of a good deal of the behavior of its inhabitants.
The first stirrings that gave an indication of a new community can be drawn from the disturbances at Luanshya in 1935 when the authority of the Tribal Elders was rejected. And since the disturbances and lootings were attributed to have been instigated and carried out by the Bemba, the government brought Senior Chief Mwamba Mubanga and his son Chief Munkonge Chilekwa (the father of Professor Lupando Munkonge and others), since the events had brought the name of the tribe into disrepute. The evidence of Chief Munkonge to the Commission of Inquiry was illuminating: ‘’We chiefs lose power over these people because they are not under our direct jurisdiction….All I would say is that the matter rests in the hands of Europeans. It is entirely a European concern.’’
In fact the disturbances were an indication of a ‘’closed’’ system since it did not provide for the avenue for internal development and change. In antithesis to this, an ‘’open’’ system is one in which fresh sources of conflict are continually generated in the development process itself and it is here where conflict and its resolution provide part of the momentum to further social adjustment and change. And it was after then that the Colonial Office in London sent Mr. W. Comrie to come and help organize the African trade union movements.

Eventually the social system presented an appearance of continuous flux in which new groups were constantly springing up. They were ephemeral and quickly died away. The social system appeared as a kind of ‘’endless becoming.’’ i.e., despite the fluid and ephemeral quality, they did not emerge without leaving some trace upon the social fabric. Each left behind some deposit upon which the current social pattern of the ‘’copper-belt tribe’’ has gradually been built.

A.P. Epstein, an anthropologist who carried out a research in Luanshya in the 1950s wrote in

‘’Politics in an Urban African Community’’: ‘’Over the years there has developed amongst Africans on the mine an increasingly complex pattern of social differentiation which is based on such factors as differences in their productive roles, their standards of living, their education and relative degree of sophistication. In general, the process of differentiation has been marked by the emergence of new social groupings and associations which express the nature of the divisions operating within the social system of the mine’’

In this respect, I’ll state that the new bodies represented interests which were essentially different from those of the body from which they had split off. The major cleavages operating within the copper-belt community to-day express conflicts of interest which can no longer be resolved in terms of a framework of norms and values commonly accepted as binding on the tribal communities as in the already cited case of the disturbances at Luanshya.

The copper-belt community is not a formidable mass of confusion or a social chaos as was expressed by most people I talked to. Certain ‘’chaoses’’ form a coherent ideological system, perfectly intelligible once its basic premises and inner logic have been gasped. As Evans-Pritchard points out in ‘’Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic among the Azande’’: ‘’it is only when the beliefs are presented as a conceptual system that their insufficiencies and contradictions become apparent, because in real life the beliefs function in ‘bits’ rather than as a ‘whole.’ It has been shown how contradictions are ‘contained’ by the system through the principle of situational selection. In any given situation a single event may evoke a number of different and contradictory beliefs among different persons: each selects what is most relevant from his particular standpoint. In this way the possibility of situational selection serves to reinforce the system of belief as a whole.’’

I believe that the deeper understanding of the copper-belt social process requires a formulation in which inconsistency and disharmony are recognized not only as an integral part of the nascent social system, but also as an important source of its dynamic. The notion of inconsistency or contradiction may form an integral part of a system is not novel in anthropological literature.

Some anthropologists like E. Evans-Pritchard, Max Gluckman or Peter Lloyd have sought to substitute a dynamic, diachronic perspective for the static, synchronic perspectives of formal structural-functional analysis. Indeed it is precisely a more refined approach to the analysis of how social structures function that has prompted some anthropologists to look to history for guidance. It is considered that social structures must be studied in action through time in order to assess the relative interdependence of the components. It is also argued that sociological understanding may be advanced by comparing the divergences within related and similar systems.

TO BE CONTINUED

NDC welcomes dismissal of ZAF Commander General Chimese

89
-President Edgar Lungu confers with Zambia Air Force Commander Lt. Gen. Eric Chimese shortly after his arrival from Muchinga Province at ZAF Lusaka Airport
FILE: President Edgar Lungu confers with Zambia Air Force Commander Lt. Gen. Eric Chimese shortly after his arrival from Muchinga Province at ZAF Lusaka Airport

ZAMBIA Air Force (ZAF) Commander Eric Chimese has been relieved of his duties, Minister of Defence Davies Chama has confirmed.

“Yes, I can confirm that General Chimese is no longer the ZAF Commander. It is only the President [Edgar Lungu] who can remove him,” Mr Chama said in an interview yesterday.

Asked why Lieutenant General Chimese has been fired, Mr Chama said the Constitution allows the head of State to appoint or dismiss anyone without giving reasons.

Meanwhile, the National Democratic Congress NDC has welcomed the decision by President Edgar Lungu to dismiss Zambia Air Force ZAF commander General Eric Chimese.

NDC Secretary General Mwenya Musenge has since urged the Anti Corruption Commission ACC to immediately probe General Chimese.

“We have credible information that Gen. Chimese might have been involved in a number of corrupt activities during his seven year stay as ZAF commander,” Mr Musenge said.

“We have in mind the 62 million United States dollars contract for the supply of military uniforms that Gen. Chimese single sourced on 11 August 2017. As NDC we have information that Gen. Chimese single sourced a local firm BHB contractors to supply uniforms to ZAF at an inflated price.”

He said BHB is a local company situated at plot number 407 Independence Avenue Lusaka.

Mr Musenge also alleged that Gen. Chimese single sourced this firm to supply expensive military regalia when a Kenyan firm, PURMA was ready to supply the same uniforms at 14 million U. S dollars.

“We urge the ACC to go further and probe all the civil servants including a Permanent Secretary who are linked to the 62 million dollars scandal. Brigadier General Wilfred Mbewe was Chief of Supply at ZAF when this deal was dubiously signed,” he said.

He claimed that Gen. Mbewe and others opposed this deal but was removed from his office by Gen. Chimese.

Mr Musenge said a number of officers such as Brigadier General Chibesa who was in charge of Finance were unceremoniously retired for opposing this deal.

“Gen. Chimese has left ZAF in a mess and should be probed immediately so that his name is cleared. The NDC further urges President Lungu to fire Zambia Army Commander Paul Mihova,” he said.

Mr Musenge alleged that Gen. Mihova is involved in a lot of dubious activities at the army.

“As NDC, we have the full details of the proxy that Gen. Mihova is using in South Africa to loot Zambia Army resources,” he said.