Join our community of SUBSCRIBERS and be part of the conversation.
To subscribe, simply enter your email address on our website or click the subscribe button below. Don't worry, we respect your privacy and won't spam your inbox. Your information is safe with us.
Transport and Communication Minister Brain Mushimba
Government says it has no plans of introducing a levy on cyber space on social media.
Transport and Communication Minister Brain Mushimba said Zambia has adequate laws binding the cyber space to benefit the Zambian people.
In a ministerial statement in parliament today, the Minister said that Zambia is and will not copy from neigbouring Uganda that has introduced a levy on social media abusers.
Mr. Mushimba said government notes that the communication sector is making a positive contribution to the nation’s economic development from both the private and public sector investing on the electronic ticket.
He said government will not infringe the rights of people, individuals, public and private sector using social platforms.
And Mr. Mushimba has warned individuals and people abusing social media for selfish gains as the law will catch up with them.
He disclosed that his Ministry is working in conjunction with the Zambia Information and Communication Authority (ZICTA) and will continue sensitizing the people on productive usage of the platform.
Facebook, what’s up, Twitter are the common electronic platforms used by people to communicate not only in Zambia but globally.
Ministry of National Development Planning Director for Population and Development, Charles Banda, has indicated that accessibility to modern contraceptives by all married women in Zambia is at the moment standing at about 45 percent.
Reverend Banda has further noted that access to family planning has generally continued to improve owing to the many infrastructure development programmes that government is implementing countrywide.
He observed that government is constructing health posts and hospitals to enable easy access to health services including family planning services to enhance the practice by many households and individuals.
In an interview with ZANIS, Reverend Banda added that government is further recruiting more health personnel, community health assistants as well as community distributors of family planning methods to take the services closer to the people.
He has stated that the use of family planning especially condoms is a vital human right that should be embraced by everyone as it also protects people from contracting sexually transmitted diseases including HIV hence promoting a healthy society.
Meanwhile, Young Women Christian Association (YWCA) Programmes Officer Chongo Mwila has indicated that her organisation is working with government to ensure that family planning services are accessed especially by the young generation.
Ms. Mwila noted that YWCA has engaged a number of health institutions in the areas of its operation where information on family planning methods and services are encouraged.
She however, regretted to note that family planning services are not found in remote areas across the country, while noting that issues of age and access to family planning products hinder a lot of girls from accessing the service.
Ms. Mwila stated that currently in Zambia, the accepted age to access family planning services is 16 and above adding that anyone below the age of 16 must have the consent from either a parent or guardian.
Minister of National Development Planning Hon. Alexander Chiteme presenting the 7th National Development Plan and Implementation Plan to China’s new Ambassador to Zambia Li Jie during the latter’s courtesy call on Thursday 5 June 2018. PHOTO | CHIBAULA D. SILWAMBA | MNDP
The Minister of National Development Planning Honourable Alexander Chiteme, MP, has urged new Ambassador of China to Zambia, His Excellency Mr. Li Jie, to implore Chinese companies operating here to transfer skills to Zambians.
The Minister said this when Ambassador Li paid a courtesy call on him at the Ministry of National Development Planning on Thursday.
Hon. Chiteme noted Chinese investment in various sectors in Zambia, and assured the Ambassador of the Government’s continued cooperation with China to achieve a win-win outcome.
“What we want to see as Zambians is skills being transfers from the Chinese nationals and imparted into our people so that we can learn and enrich our skills to do the things that the Chinese companies are doing in various sectors here in Zambia,” Mr. Chiteme said.
The Minister explained to Ambassador Li about Zambia’s Seventh National Development Plan (7NDP), its Implementation Plan, and handed over the copies to the new envoy for him to understand and appreciate the country’s development trajectory.
He said Zambian provincial ministers’ visit to China to woo investors and seek possible twinning of their provinces and Chinese provinces was now bearing fruits.
Hon. Chiteme therefore encouraged the Chinese Ambassador to support the initiative of twinning the provinces as that will have direct benefit to the people.
On the scheduled bilateral meeting between the Presidents of Zambia and China, Hon. Chiteme expressed optimism that the two leaders’ meeting would yield positive bilateral agreements that would contribute to the development of the two countries.
Minister of National Development Planning Hon. Alexander Chiteme and China’s new Ambassador to Zambia Li Jie during the latter’s courtesy call on Thursday 5 June 2018. PHOTO | CHIBAULA D. SILWAMBA | MNDP
And Ambassador Li said Zambia was the second largest destination for Chinese investment.He said Zambia’s favourable and attractive investment environment was the major attraction to Chinese investor as their destination of investments.
He commended the continued bilateral relations between the two countries and Zambia’s support to China at multilateral level including at the United Nations.
Ambassador Li said His Excellency Mr. Edgar Chagwa Lungu, President of the Republic of Zambia, will hold a bilateral meeting with his Chinese counterpart His Excellency Xi Jinping in September this year to chart the blueprint of the next steps of bilateral developments between the two friendly countries.
Ambassador Li said he was excited about the upcoming bilateral meeting between Presidents Lungu and Li in September this year.
“In September this year, His Excellency President Edgar Lungu will go to China to attend the Forum on China Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) Summit in Beijing. I am very excited because that would be another opportunity for President Lungu to have a bilateral meeting with President Xi Jinping of China to chart the blueprint of the next steps of bilateral developments of our two countries,” Ambassador Li said. “This will be the second trip of President Lungu after his first one in 2015. We hope this will be another momentum of the development of the relations of our two countries.”
Mr. Li presented his credentials to President Lungu last week on 29 June, 2018 to commence his duties as China’s Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Zambia.
The Ambassador told the Minister and his technocrats that Zambia’s political and security stability, government and private sector responsiveness to work with foreign investors was the major attraction to the Chinese investors.
“In China we have a very strong Ministry of Development and Planning; they make significant proposals for social economic development. They are also interested in having international co-operations. At your convenient time, we would like to facilitate exchange programmes between your colleagues in the Ministry of Development and Planning your ministry,” said Ambassador Li.
The Ambassador expressed his commitment to support the twinning of Zambian and Chinese provinces.
Ambassador Li further expressed commitment to help channel Chinese tourists to visit Zambia.
The Chinese Ambassador Commended the Zambian Government for its commitment to sustainably manage its debt stock.
“Zambia has a lot of similarities with China …you have the Seventh National Development Plan, we in China are now implementing the 13th national plan…,” said Ambassador Li.
Meanwhile, Ministry of National Development Planning (Permanent Secretary for Development Cooperation, Monitoring and Evaluation) Mr. Mushuma Mulenga said the ministry will work closely with the Chinese Embassy as the Zambia implements the 7NDP.
“We know that China will be a very valuable partner in implementing the projects in the Seventh National Development Plan, which is our blueprint for the next five years,” said Mr. Mulenga.
Issued by
Chibaula D. Silwamba (Mr.)
Spokesperson
MINISTRY OF NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLANNING
Tourism and Arts Minister Hon. Charles Banda has said he will study and get a good understanding of the 50 percent partnership offer by Mushingashi Game Farm to the Department of National Parks and Wildlife (DNPW).
Speaking during a meeting at his office this morning, the Minister stated that the Government’s position is to step up wildlife conservation through partnerships with other stakeholders who bring on board, capacity, knowledge, skill and technical know-how.
He said this would be the best way to reduce poaching, as community will find themselves partners in the ownership of the wildlife resources.
Hon. Banda said it is for this reason that the government is engaging traditional leaders to get involved in initiatives like game ranching.
And Paul Jones, Chairman of Tudor Investment Corporation, who is owner of Mushinganshi said the partnership will come with great benefits to the entire Kafue Ecosystem.
He said once concluded, the partnership will be the signature of Zambia’s tourism and the restart of game ranching in the country.
Mr. Jones said his vision is to restore and enhance Mushingashi’s biodiversity and cooperate with its neighbours and partners to enhance the development and long-term integrity of the greater Kafue National Park ecosystem.
And former Secretary to the Cabinet Mr. Evans Chibiliti who is partner in the initiative said the partnership will assure government of continuous revenue in that whatever activities involved there will be an equal share.
According Mushingashi prospectus, the project is expected to see the procurement of vehicles, heavy equipment, road, power lines, fencing and other construction projects that are expected to generate Value Added Tax contribution of over USD 1miliion within 2018.
Patriotic Front (PF) Member of Parliament for Bwana Mkubwa Constituency Dr. Jonas Chanda has has strongly condemned the dispossession and displacement of over 800 Zambians from land they have lived and farmed on for over 26 years in Ndola’s Chichele area.
He was speaking when he addressed the aggrieved families in Chichele area of Bwana Mkubwa Constituency in Ndola. Dr Chanda said the indiscriminate land displacements of Zambians to accommodate foreigners in Chichele and other parts of the country is the reason the PF government has developed the National Land Policy which will be finalised soon, and which must state that Land Ownership is a Sovereign Right of Zambians, not of Foreigners. Zambia has had no land policy since 1964.
[pullquote]Zambians can not be displaced like animals in their own country to accommodate a foreign investor[/pullquote]
Chairperson for the displaced families Mr Abraham Manda explained that the contested land in Chichele was a State Farm under the Dairy Produce Board in the UNIP government in the 1970s and 1980s where cattle were reared and milk was being produced. The displaced people are former casual workers and their families at the State Farm. When the MMD government came to power in the 1990s the Dairy Produce Board collapsed under the Privatization program, and a former DPB Farm Manager a Mr Mutambo was given 300 of the 3,000 hectares of land as his retrenchment package since the company had no money. The farm casual workers continued living on the rest of the farm cultivating with their families.
Mr Manda further said that when Mr Mutambo sold the land to a South African company Golden Lay who deal in chicken eggs some years back, the original land title he had was only for 300 hectares of land. Under unclear circumstances the 300 hectares land title was later changed to 3,000 hectares at Ministry of Lands offices in Ndola and then Mr Mutambo sold the entire 3,000 hectares to Golden Lay and relocated to live in the UK.
Mr Manda says thereafter the farm casual workers and their families were forcefully chased from their small farms by individuals hired by Golden Lay with support of some Police officers. Only 47 former farm workers were compensated with 200 hectares of land while the rest are still stranded. The matter has been in court several times, with the last ruling being in favour of Golden Lay Company.
In response, Dr Chanda says displacement of Zambians without compensation or alternative land is a MORAL issue, not a LEGAL issue, as Zambians can NOT be displaced like animals in their own country to accommodate a foreign investor. He says it is totally unacceptable that 800 plus Zambians are now landless in their own country when Zambia has plenty of land of 752,618 square kilometres, the 39th largest country in the world in terms of land mass with a relatively small population of about 15 million people.
He has promised the affected families that he is taking up the matter urgently with Minister of Lands Hon Jean Kapata and other Land management bodies in Lusaka as well as tabling it in Parliament until JUSTICE is done. He says there should be no displacement from land without compensation or alternative land, and condemned sale of huge tracts of land to foreigners by some unpatriotic Zambians at the expense of fellow Zambians.
Issued by:
Hon. Dr. Jonas Chanda
Member of Parliament,
Bwana Mkubwa Constituency,
Ndola
I recently attended a social occasion in Lusaka. The event, not unusual in the capital city, brought together Zambians from disparate ethnic groups such as Kaonde, Lunda, Tonga, Bemba, Chewa/Nyanja and Lozi speakers. It was a diversity that gave meaning to the slogan ‘One Zambia One Nation’. Yet, as one Tonga guest arrived, they were greeted in the Tonga language by another Tonga, a cousin whom they had not seen for a long time and who had arrived at the party much earlier. Both Tongas were swiftly reprimanded by a Bemba speaker who told them ‘Mwatampako…mwalitemwa icitundu cenu’, literally translated as ‘You are at it again. You love your language too much!’ The Bemba guest was of course speaking in Bemba and saw no contradiction in his attempts to marginalise the Tonga guests in this way.
Sadly, what I witnessed that day is not an isolated incident but a microcosm of what is happening in Zambia at present. In places like urban Lusaka, it is somehow regarded as acceptable to communicate in Bemba and Nyanja languages, while those conversing in Tonga are frowned upon or treated with disdain. Language has been retooled to primarily function as an instrument that fosters exclusion or belonging, especially in public spaces. More importantly, those with Tonga names are being victimised and marginalised in workplaces, especially in the civil service, parastatals and security wings. I know of many Tongas working in these sectors who have been removed from their positions over the last year or retired in ‘national interest’. One recent and troubling example is the unexpected dismissal of Richard Mwiinga, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Public Service Pensions Fund (PSPF) in December 2017.
By all accounts, Mwiinga was an exemplary public servant. His achievements over the last three years include stabilising the Fund, initiating progressive pension reforms and embarking on sustainable investments such as the US$72 million Longacres Mall Project that has reached an advanced stage. When his contract came up for renewal, the feedback on his performance was sought from both the board and management of the PSPF. Procedurally, the task of evaluating the performance of the CEO rests with the chairperson of the Fund’s board, a position that until recently was occupied by Moses Banda. Perhaps under pressure from State House and some members of the board not to renew Mwiinga’s contract, Banda informed the board that he wished to constitute a Select Committee to guide him in assessing the CEO’s performance, arguing that the Fund’s different committees know his performance better than him. The board approved Banda’s suggestion and a Select Committee comprising the chairpersons of its different committees was subsequently constituted under his leadership.
Using the standard template approved by the board over a year ago under its Performance Based Management Guidelines for senior personnel, the Select Committee met to evaluate Mwiinga’s performance as CEO. The PSPF Management, in line with the Fund’s evaluation guidelines, also assessed Mwiinga’s performance separately. According to well-placed sources from Cabinet Office and State House, both the Select Committee and Management recommended that Mwiinga’s contract be renewed, and separately communicated their respective positions to Banda, the PSPF board chairperson. In the unanimous judgement of the Select Committee, Mwiinga had discharged his duties effectively, and his performance was rated at 86 per cent, four per cent less than the score (90) that he received from the PSPF Management. At a full board meeting called by the chairperson to consider the recommendation for the renewal of the CEO’s contract, two board members however deemed it necessary to consult other unspecified powers beyond the board about Mwiinga’s performance. The proposal by the two, Barnaby Mulenga, Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Labour, and Boniface Chimbwali, who is Public Service and Management Division Permanent Secretary, was opposed by the board chairperson, Banda, and another board member Oliver Saasa, on grounds that the law relating to the renewal of contract of the Fund’s CEO does not provide for a consultation process that involves actors external to the board. The protesting officials however defended their position, prompting the rest of the board members to grant them their wish. Mulenga and Chimbwali were given a week to carry out their consultations before reporting their findings to the full board. Significantly, one of those consulted was President Edgar Lungu.
At a subsequent meeting called on 8 December 2017 to conclude the process of renewing Mwiinga’s contract, Lungu then quickly acted to dismiss the board chairperson and Saasa, both of whom had earlier insisted on acting in accordance with the law. Tellingly, Banda and Saasa were handed their letters of dismissal, which were dated 8 December 2017 but backdated to 4 December 2017, by Mulenga just before the meeting commenced. The Ministry of Labour PS further revealed that President Lungu had also appointed him as the interim chairperson of the board and, using his new position, proceeded to inform Saasa that he could no longer take part in any activities of the board since his dismissal was instant. As for Banda, he was told that, to ensure a smooth handover to the new chairperson, his complete removal from the board would only take effect after a month, on 3 January 2018.
When the meeting finally started, Mulenga informed the remaining board members that President Lungu had decreed that Mwiinga’s contract be terminated on 28 February 2018, when it expires. A dissenting member who attempted to deliberate further on the issue was curtailed on grounds that the presidential directive was final. Mwiinga was then called back into the boardroom and informed that “the board” had decided not to renew his contract when it ends. This is a troubling episode, one that must have been very humiliating for Mwiinga, and it illustrates two broader points.
The first is that the unpleasant manner in which Mwiinga was removed from his position underlines the wider and continuing ill-treatment of Tongas or those with Tonga identities under President Lungu’s Zambia. Unfortunately for these fellow citizens, the very person who should guarantee them protection, the President of the Republic of Zambia, appears to be an active participant in their mistreatment. I do not know if, in dismissing Mwiinga, Chimbwali was merely acting as Lungu’s agent or if he was taking advantage of Lungu’s apparent distaste for Tongas to advance his own – possibly ethnic – agenda. What I know is that the President’s action towards Mwiinga reinforces the perception that he retains a deep-seated antipathy towards Tongas and regards them as less Zambian. Is it a sin to be a Tonga in Lungu’s (Christian) Zambia? Of Zambia’s four major ethnic groups, it is only Tongas who are not represented in his Cabinet. Of Zambia’s ten provinces, only Southern lacks representation. Lungu may argue that the ruling party did not win any parliamentary seats there, but the Constitution allows the President to nominate up to 8 Zambians to Parliament to address such electoral imbalances and other special interests. Lungu therefore has no excuse for his continued marginalisation of Tonga speakers other than that he is unhappy that Tongas in Southern Province have the temerity to reject him at the polls and he is consequently punishing them for their support for the opposition United Party for National Development (UPND) and its leader Hakainde Hichilema.
When a Republican President in a constitutional democracy begins to imagine himself primarily as a leader of those who voted for him and to treat citizens who support the opposition as his adversaries, then he becomes, in that moment, a danger to national peace, security and unity. The earlier Lungu realises that he is presiding over a deeply fractured society and takes corrective measures, the better. Left unchecked, the continued victimisation and marginalisation of Tongas will end in grief, great grief, for the country. One potential outcome is that the long cherished slogan, ‘One Zambia One Nation’, will start to ring hollow and may as well be modified to read as ‘One Zambia, Two Nations’, with one nation, the PF one, reserved for supporters of the ruling party and the other, the UPND nation, reserved for the opposition.
Ironically, Lungu’s efforts to exclude Tongas from Cabinet and wider public life, alongside the failure of his administration to devise specific policies that appeal to their economic way of life, represent the very factors that have driven Tonga nationalism since independence. Tongas, rightly or wrongly, feel excluded from political power and this latest campaign by Lungu will only strengthen this perception. Unfortunately, Lungu appears to have no interest in winning the Tongas over; he seeks only to push them out. Like many other Zambians, the President seems to have taken an easy way out, believing that the support that Hichilema and the UPND enjoy in Southern Province is a result of ethnic particularism. The question that Lungu needs to ask himself and answer is: ‘What is it that Tongas believe Hichilema and the UPND will do for them that I am not doing?’ In my view, ethnicity is not the answer; it is that which needs to be explained.
I know that what I have said above may not sit easily on the minds of some of my fellow citizens, who may even accuse me of fanning ethnic divisions, but my pen, as does my voice, runs on with my truth. I must either say what is in me or remain silent. I am an advocate of freely sharing views and ideas, without any inhibitions or hierarchies. I acknowledge that Tongas who are working in the civil service, parastatals and defence forces do not deserve any special treatment and should be removed from their positions when their performance or conduct merits it, but even then, they should be treated fairly and subjected to the same procedures and standards as other government or parastatal employees belonging to other ethnic groups. Most importantly, I raise these concerns in the hope that the hard reality of ethnicity, mostly deployed by our political class, can be ventilated, openly debated, so that we may uncover the real reasons behind all the ‘national divisions’ and that those of us who are not Tongas can hear the cry of our fellow citizens who are. Although it has intensified under late President Michael Sata and now Lungu’s rule, the ethnic problem in our country is historical and much deeper. In fact, I have a very uncomfortable feeling that Zambia may be paying for the sins of our ‘nationalists’ – founding president Kenneth Kaunda and his friends – who never resolved the ‘ethnic question’ in favour of the ‘national question’. They papered over the obvious cracks, but failed to create a nation (consummation of the struggle for national emancipation entails securing full economic and social sovereignty for ALL the people in a ‘nation’).
Resolving the complex ethnic question properly calls, among other things, for a mature and well-informed national conversation on ethnic oppression, discrimination and exclusion. One of the potentially effective ways of dismantling our ethnically coloured political system is by working for increased understanding in the society of the insidious and pervasive ways in which ethnic exclusion functions. This requires a willingness to re-examine what would be regarded as normal and everyday. It presupposes opening up the subject of ethnic marginalisation – no longer isolating and alienating those who dare to raise it. It involves listening and creating the spaces to hear the hurt, anger and aspirations of those expressing ethnic oppression. It means dragging the subject of ethnic exclusion from the hushed conversations and murmurs and silences into the arena of public discussion. The question is: who will lead that national conversation?
The second point is that the removal of Mwiinga, who by all accounts was professional and competent, underlines the political interference that undermine the effective functioning of regulatory authorities in Lungu’s Zambia. It also demonstrates the vulnerability of public servants who carry out their responsibilities with the required levels of professionalism, independence and integrity in a political climate that rewards bootlicking and overlooks talent and ability. How else does one explain Lungu’s unexplained refusal to renew Mwiinga’s contract if not for his preference for sycophants who do as he pleases? In this vein, we may understand the dismissal of Banda, who is from the same ethnic-language group as Lungu, as a consequence of fractional elite struggle over ‘accumulation’, the underlying driving energy. In Lungu’s world, ethnicity is important only as a social platform for organising ‘accumulation’. Banda’s removal derived from his ‘failure’ to recognise this principle and consequently deliver a favourable outcome for Lungu and his accumulation-seeking friends. It is worth noting that the Pensions Fund is responsible for administering and investing the incomes of millions of working Zambians. This asset probably represents a lucrative prize for Lungu and the businessmen in his inner circle, who are seeking nothing but ownership, control, distribution and consumption of wealth and human labour power. By removing Mwiinga, Lungu may have sought to achieve a double objective: further marginalising Tongas in public life and removing a potential obstacle to the looting of public resources. Just what kind of Zambia does Lungu seek to construct and leave behind?
A Civic Leader in Kapiri Mposhi district has observed that excessive alcohol consumption is hindering development in his ward.
Kakwelesa Ward Councilor Ben Chiboni has since called on government to expedite the enactment of the National Alcohol Policy to regulate beer consumption which he said has become alarming in the area.
Mr. Chiboni said people in his ward were involved in excessive beer consumption daily at the expense of development adding that, the trend has also led to increased levels of assaults and Gender Based Violence (GBV) in the area.
In a statement to ZANIS Mr. Chiboni disclosed that the scourge has been compounded by bar owners who are not observing time to operate as they are opening their outlets as early as 06:00 hours and closing as late as 04:00hours the next day.
“Some people are sleeping in these taverns drinking beer because taverns are not closing at all so most people do not have time to do productive work such as farming,” Mr. Chiboni said.
Mr. Chiboni noted that because of the profitability of bars in his area, some grocery shops are now also partially trading as bars and operating outside the prescribed time.
“When you come to Kakwelesa market you will find that almost all the groceries are trading in alcohol and playing loud music just like taverns,” Mr. Chiboni said.
Mr. Chiboni noted that the enactment of the National Alcohol Policy to regulate beer consumption will help root-out excessive beer drinking in his ward and the country at large.
Meanwhile, Mr. Chiboni has called on the authorities to move in his ward and enforce the existing legal framework such as the Liquor licensing Act regarding regulation of alcohol consumption and trade.
Zambia is in the process of enacting the National Alcohol Policy (NAP) to regulate the increase alcohol consumption in the country.
Sanitation and Water for All (SWA), the global multi-stakeholder alliance working to increase political leadership and improve accountability in the area of water, sanitation and hygiene has commended the Zambian government for demonstrating political will to improve the sector.
S.W.A. Executive Chair Catarina de Albuquerque said that the willingness by the Zambian government to join a global and mutually accountability mechanism to tackling the lack of water and sanitation demonstrates its strong commitment to the water and sanitation sector.
Ms. De Albuquerque was speaking in an interview in Lusaka recently that becoming a pioneer country will accord a chance to several stakeholders in Zambia to track commitments by government and its partners in addressing water and sanitation challenges in a transparent manner.
She said the Sanitation and Water for All works on creation or promotion of political will around water and sanitation.
“Sanitation is important because it enables countries to save money and improves efficiency and promotes the right to education, the right to work because people are not sick, the financial impact is more indirect so we have to analyse it a bit more for partners to understand,” Ms. De Albuquerque.
She added, “What I see is a significant political will and determination to tackling issues of lack of water and sanitation and as S.W.A, one of the things we have put together is the global accountability mechanism which is a mutual accountability mechanism that will call on countries and our partners to table commitments and to commit to making improvements in this field.”
Ms. De Albuquerque said the Zambian government has demonstrated willingness to ascend to a mutual accountability mechanism which confirms its commitment to improvement the water and sanitation situation.
“Yesterday, the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Water and Sanitation and Environment, came to our meeting and I challenged them whether Zambia would like to be a pioneer country and he said yes, so this is a kind of political will engagement and political vision and the political support to the support that we would like to see,” Ms. De Albuquerque said.
“It means the Zambian will be called upon to table commitments at our upcoming High-level Ministerial meeting in 2019, we would also engage other partners in the country both civil society, bilateral and multilateral partners to show how they would want to support the government and they we would like to record everything that is being done and how government is working with other partners in order to be able to share with other countries that are our partners, we currently have 71 partner countries, we would want to use the Zambia example to share with other partner countries.”
She continued, “The commitments must be aligned with the SDGs as in universal access by 2030, its obvious I don’t expect the 2019 commitments by Zambia to be talking about universal access already. We would have to have milestone by 2030 so that by 2030, the commitments corresponds with the SDGs.”
“There is a recipe to make this happen. The government must be in the driver’s seat because it is the government that has the legal obligation, it is the government that has been elected to make this happen but government must not be working alone, government has to engage and work with other partners and make sure that there is a long term plan, so there is the 7NDP and Vision 2030, so there must be national commitments that have to be aligned with the SDGs and there have to be ambitious but realistic milestones along the way.”
Ms. De Albuquerque added that there is also need to bring in other development partners on board.
“We also have to bring other development partners on board and we have to ask them, look we had agreed at the SWA Steering Committee to support this mutual accountability mechanism and you are supposed to table your commitments at the national level to support the government, so come forward and table your commitments and be ready to be held accountable on the commitments you are giving to the governments,” she said.
A 39 year old man of Nsansamwenje Village in Isoka District in Muchinga Province has committed suicide by taking unknown toxic substance.
Muchinga Province Police Commissioner Chola Katanga has confirmed the incident to ZANIS in Isoka today.
Mr Katanga identified the deceased as Lazerous Sichone, adding that the deceased took his life after family members quizzed him on how he sold the family land clandestinely at K800.
Mr Katanga disclosed that relatives later discovered that Sichone only used K150 out of the K800 he had sold the land.
He said Police visited the scene and carried out physical inspection on the deceased body and found no physical injuries.
The body of the deceased has since been deposited to Isoka District Hospital mortuary for post-mortem.
Isoka has recorded four suicide cases in a space of 7 days.
Government has commended Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) for partnering with the state in empowering the Zambian child with access to quality health care services, quality early childhood and primary education.
Chisamba District Commissioner, Martin Chowa has noted that CSOs are also empowering Zambian children with economic security and youth empowerment as well as child protection programs.
Mr. Chowa was speaking at Kanakantapa Primary School in Chisamba over the weekend to mark the belated commemorations of the International Day of the African Child organised by Plan International and Sishemo Foundation.
He said it is through the full implementation of the African Charter on the rights of children and involvement of CSOs that the African children shall be empowered.
Chisamba DC expressed optimism that with full partnership of CSOs, Africa will be a continent where the talent of the child will be fully developed, rewarded and protected for the benefit of society.
“The aspiration of all of us by 2063 is an African continent that is people-centred and caring as well as putting children first,” he said.
He added that to cushion the effects of poverty and other social inequalities that will promote inequalities, government will continue to expand the social cash transfer to vulnerable households to ensure equal opportunities for a better future of all the children.
Mr. Chowa called for an immediate end to early marriages and paid tribute to Chief Chamuka for spearheading a vigorous campaign against the vice.
Speaking earlier, a representative from Plan International, Margaret Nankamba, said her organisation realises that empowerment and investment in children are crucial for economic growth, the achievement if all sustainable development goals and eradication of poverty.
Ms. Nankamba said Plan International is also aware that investment in children will lead to poverty eradication as well as the meaningful participation of children in decisions that affect them.
And Sishemo Foundation Executive Director, Joseph Yowela, pledged his firm’s committiment to partnering with other CSOs in helping government in programs that promote children’s rights.
Plan International and Sishemo Foundation have partnered with government in upgrading Kanakantapa primary school from a community school and constructed a health facility in the area.
The two CSOs are engaged in programs that promote children’s rights to education, health, agriculture and community development.
This year’s theme for the International Day of the African Child is ‘Leave no child behind for Zambia’s development’.
The day is commemorated in honour of about 10,000 black school children who marched more than half a mile in the Soweto uprising on June 16, 1976 in South Africa, protesting the poor quality of education and demanding their rights to be taught in their local language.
Central Province Permanent Secretary (PS), Chanda Kabwe, says the history of Zambia cannot be complete without the mention of the region’s contribution.
Speaking when he inspected the upgrading of Dr David Livingstone Memorial Site in Chitambo district, Mr Kabwe said Zambia’s Christianity was born in Central Province apart from its contribution to the country’s political landscape.
The PS noted that both the birth of the United National Independence Party (UNIP) by the first Republican President, Dr Kenneth Kaunda and his team as well as Christianity can be traced at Dr Livingstone’s memorial site.
He said Central Province is also home to the Mulungushi Rock of Authority which has hosted many of the country’s political activities while Dr Livingstone proclaimed Zambia a Christian nation before he died about 148 years ago.
Mr. Kabwe observed that when second Republican President Fredrick Chiluba declared Zambia a Christian nation, it was merely a manifestation of Dr Livingstone’s prayer that Zambia shall be a Christian nation and a beacon of peace in the region.
And Afriwoods and Development Limited Director, Ashraf Saiyed, said the K1. 7 million upgrading of the memorial site will be completed by the end of this month.
Mr. Saiyed said the works include the construction of the ticket office, car park, pavers, ablution block and the artistic hut where Dr Livingstone died.
Government says it intends to raise US$400 million in the next three years to combat climate change effects in the country through implementation of adaptation and mitigation interventions.
National Designated Authority (NDA) National Coordinator Mainga Luwabelwa whose department is domiciled in the Ministry of National Development Planning said government is developing strategies and proposals to address the increasing frequency and intensity of climate induced hazards in the country.
ZANIS reports that Mr Luwabelwa said there is need for the private sector to get involved in the climate change agenda because the effects of weather cut across various sectors of the economy.
He said government has provided incentives for anyone especially the private sector to establish renewable energy plants that can supply electricity to citizens.
Mr Luwabelwa said Zambia is dependent on hydro power generation and that the recent power deficit experienced in the country provided lessons for diversification of energy resources.
Recently, Government accessed over US$84 million grants from the Green Climate Fund (GCF) to finance the two projects in agriculture and energy that will help 1,000,000 smallholder farmers improve and sustain their livelihoods and increase access to electricity for over 300,000 people respectively.
And the Ministry’s Director for Planning Maketo Mulele pointed out that climate change has become a socio-economic pressing issue in the country that requires people especially farmers to adapt to climate resilient farming practices.
Mr Mulele said people in flood prone areas need to start growing crops such as rice that do well in flooded areas while people in drought stricken areas need to start growing drought resistant crops such as sorghum.
Anglican Bishop of the Diocese of Central Zambia, Garry Kumukwamba has urged all Zambians to be patriotic and preach good about the nation.
In his homily during the 84th anniversary of African Martyr’s day celebrations at Masala parish in Ndola, Bishop Kamukwamba said Zambians should learn to settle their own issues through dialogue and not preaching ill about their own country using foreign and social media.
The Anglican Bishop said it was devastating to note that Zambians have now taken a stance of preaching negativities about their mother land to foreigners whom he said can offer no solution on such matters.
He observed that people from other countries have always preached good about their mother countries, a situation he described as not common among many Zambians.
Bishop Kamukwamba has since urged the general citizenry, the church inclusive to respect the leadership as they were representatives of God.
Meanwhile, Ndola District Commissioner, Canon George Chisulo who graced the celebrations said the church and Government are one, hence the need for the two institutions to work together if the nation was to address some of the challenges its faced with.
Canon Chisulo also urged the Anglican church leadership to join their counterparts and participate in the national dialogue.
Zambia Under-20 coach Charles Bwale says he has enough cover for England-based striker Mwiya Malumo who will miss next weekend’s 2019 U20 AFCON final round qualifier against Burundi.
The ex-Wigan striker will miss both home and away legs against Burundi due to an on-going two-week trial spell at English League One side Barnsley.
“No, I think we have got enough cover. He will be considered for future assignments and we know we can bank him for any future engagements,” Bwale said.
Malumo has one goal in the 2019 qualifiers that he scored in the 1-1 home draw against Rwanda in the second round, final leg match at Nkoloma Stadium in Lusaka on May 19.
Meanwhile, the Zambia U20 on Wednesday beat Zanaco 4-2 in a training game at Sunset Stadium in Lusaka.
Francesco Mwepu scored a brace while Lameck Banda and Klings Kangwa added a goal each for Zambia.
Felix Nyaende and Ben Orfoli were on target for Zanaco.
The training game came four days after Zambia lost 1-0 to Malawi in an international friendly on July 1 at Nkoloma.
Zambia will play their last official international friendly on July 8 at Nkoloma against South Africa before hosting Burundi there on July 14.
The final leg against Burundi is set for July 21 at Ngozi.
FAZ SUPER DIVISION
WEEK 22
03/07/2018
Kabwe Youth Soccer Academy 0-Nakambala Leopards 0
04/07/2018
Zesco United 2(Jesse Were 57′, Lazarus Kambole 84′)-Buildcon 0
Lumwana Radiants 1(Nawa Nawa45′)-Forest Rangers 0
2018 TOP SCORERS
LEAGUE
04/07/2018
Idris Mbombo(Nkana):12
Jesse Were (Zesco):11
Rahim Osmanu(Buildcon):10
Lazarus Kambole(Zesco):9
Tapson Kaseba(Eagles):9
Chris Mugalu(Lusaka Dynamos):9
Emmanuel Okutu(Warriors):8
Alex Ngonga(Power Dynamos):7
Emmanuel Chabula(Kitwe):7
Ronald Kampamba(Nkana):6
Spencer Sautu (Eagles):6
Peter Mwangani(National Assembly):5
Martin Phiri (Zanaco):5
George Chaloba(Assembly):5
Rogers Mukenge (Kitwe):5
Diamond Chikwekwe(Buffaloes):5
Joseph Phiri(Arrows):5
Sebastian Mwansa (Nkwazi):5
Obed Masumbuko(Lumwana):4
Lameck Kafwaya(Power):4
Gerald Chisha(Forest):4
Youremember Banda(Buffaloes):4
Kobe Chipeta (Forest):4
Patrick Kasongo(KYSA):4
John Chingandu(Zesco):4
Nelson Maziwisa (Warriors):4
John Makwatta(Buildcon):4
Alex Mwamba (Napsa):4
Hereitier Nkonko(Kabwe Warriors):4
Cletus Chama(Dynamos):3
Conlyde Luchanga(Dynamos):3
Anos Tembo(Green Eagles):3
Steward Chikandiwa (Nkwazi):3
Godfrey Ngwenya(Power):3
Clifford Saidi(KYSA):3
Hosea Silwimba(Lumwana):3
Ernest Mbewe (Zanaco):3
Rogers Kola (Zanaco):3
Austin Muwowo (Kitwe United):3
Walter Bwalya(Nkana):3
Damiano Kola (Forest):3
Peter Chinyama (KYSA):3
Joseph Ochaya(Dynamos):3
Kelvin Mubanga (Power Dynamos):3
Luka Lungu (Napsa):3
Larry Bwalya(Power Dynamos):3
Nawa Nawa (Lumwana):2
Tardelie Ilunga(Lusaka Dynamos):2
Lawrence Chabu(Swallows):2
Bibo Bindu(Warriors):2
Douglas Muwowo(Forest):2
Davy Kalandanya(Nkwazi):2
Lottie Nyimbili(Nakambala Leopards):2
Maybin Kalengo(Zesco):2
Charles Zulu(Zanaco):2
Bornwell Mwape(Nkana):2
Lawrence Chungu(Buildcon):2
Brian Mwila (Buildcon):2
Allan Kapila(Lumwana):2
Amity Shamende(Assembly):2
Justin Zulu(Arrows):2
Emmanuel Banda(Nakambala):2
Patrick Musonda(Nkwazi):2
Victor Mubanga(Lumwana):2
Joseph Mwindilila(Swallows):2
Taonga Bwembya (Zanaco):2
Felix Nyaende(Zanaco):2
William Njobvu(Assembly):2
Tchite Mweshi (Assembly):2
Gampani Lungu(Power):2
Laurent Muma(Forest):2
Maisha Chavda(Zanaco):2
Friday Samu (Buffaloes):2
Patrick Ilongo (Forest):2
Nasha Kaya(Nchanga):2
Jonathan Manongo (Eagles):2
Fackson Kapumbu (Zesco):2
Simon Nkhata(Napsa):2
Wilbroad Mutale(Monze):2
Reagan Nkuyi(Power Dynamos):2
Aubrey Chellah(Buffaloes):2
Josphat Kasusu (Arrows):2
Peter Zulu(Nchanga):2
Collins Sikombe(Dynamos):2
Zesco United beat Buildcon 2-0 in Wednesday’s Ndola derby at Levy Mwanawasa Stadium to open an eight point lead at the top of the 2018 FAZ Super Division table.
The defending champions now have 54 points and have left second placed Green Buffaloes trailing on 46 points after 22 games played.
Wednesday’s win was Zesco’s sixth straight league victory and tenth overall during their splendid twelve match unbeaten spell.
Meanwhile, the first half finished scoreless but both sides had great chances wasted with John Chinagndu,Lazarus Kambole and Jesse Were all coming close for Zesco midway through the first half.
Buildcon defender Lawrence Chungu and striker Rahim Osumanu too saw their chances go begging in the last fifteen minutes before the break.
The deadlock was broken in the 57th when Were put Zesco ahead after a fine pass from Kambole who had left Buildcon defender Isaac Shamujompa playing catch-up.
Were returned the favour in the 84th minute for Kambole to complete back-to-back wins over Buildcon whom they beat 3-1 away in the first leg on April 2 at the same venue.
Buildcon stay 10th on 31 points after suffering back-to-back defeats against Zesco this season that beat them 3-1 away on April 2.
Meanwhile, Forest Rangers suffered their fourth straight defeat following a 1-0 away loss to Lumwana Radiants who scored via a 45th minute Nawa Nawa goal.
Forest replaces Lumwana in 13th place with 29 points while the latter rise to 11th on 30 points.