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Lusaka Province Minister Bowman Lusambo on a familiarization tour of City Market Market and part of Lusaka CBD
Lusaka Province Minister Bowman Lusambo says the country has recorded a steady decrease in the maternal mortality rate in recent times.
Mr. Lusambo says following the mitigating measures such proper ways of conceiving and through improved antenatal care bookings at the health posts by the ministry of health and its cooperating partners, maternal mortality rate in the country has reduced tremendously.
The minister said this in a speech read on his behalf by the Lusaka District Commissioner Captain Davison Mulenga during the 7th edition of Maternal Death Surveillance and Response (MDSR) meeting held at Golden Peacock hotel today.
Mr. Lusambo explained that through the Safe Motherhood Action groups (SMAGS) , the ministry of health is playing a vital role in creating awareness on safe pregnancies and anti-natal care to expectant mothers in the country.
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The SMAGS are also arranging for community meetings for sensitization and awareness of danger signs in newborns and pregnant women, he said.
He further noted that the same groups are helping expectant mothers to seek for proper antenatal care as delayed treatment might led to maternal death.
Zambia has implored Least Developed Countries (LDCs) to develop and promote the use of renewable energy to safeguard their economic development from negative impact of climate change which hampers hydro-power production and supply.
Ministry of National Development Permanent Secretary (Development Planning) Chola Chabala called for investment in hydro, geothermal, wind and solar energy generation to increase and ensure reliable supply of energy to propel LDCs’ economic growth.
Mr. Chabala was speaking at World Bank Headquarters in Washington DC during a breakfast meeting for LDC Governors and their development partners, co-organized by the United Nations Office of the High Representative for the LDCs, LLDCs and SIDS (UN-OHRLLS) and the World Bank, during the 2018 IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings.
The Permanent Secretary said Climate Change affects people in LDCs because they often have limited or unreliable access to energy.
“It is for this reason that sustainable energy finance becomes critical especially in environments characterised by depleting resources and weak resilient mechanisms,” Mr. Chabala said.
“The real policy focus for Zambia and indeed most LDCs is to have a policy framework that provides for energy mix without necessarily being dependant on one source of energy or the other. This helps countries minimise shocks in an event of failure associated with vagaries of the weather when a country is predominantly dependant on hydro or solar power.”
He said the economic impacts of climate change on hydropower generation culminates in both the cost of power cuts, low industrial production and wasted investments in dams arising from inadequate water to generate electricity.
Mr. Chabala said Zambia was highly dependent on hydro power generation at 84.5 percent but that severe drought of 2015 almost crippled the economy hence re-awakened the country’s resolve to invest in alternative sources of energy.
“In addition to hydro electricity generation, we have set ourselves a target to improve alternative sources of energy. Currently our solar energy production is standing at 0.06 per cent of our energy generation and we intend to take this up to six per cent,” Mr. Chabala said. “Climate change is here, and drought will always be there and in an event that we have droughts, and hit severely, we can have alternative sources of energy to fall back on and solar offers us a very reliable source of energy as the country.”
The Permanent Secretary said between the 7th National Development Plan has desidnated four key programmes to achieve SD7 on energy and these are: (a) Appropriate policy and legal framework; (b) Renewable and alternative energy development promotion; (c) Wood fuel sub-sector management; and d) Energy efficiency and conservation promotion,” Mr. Chabala said.
He said Zambia, with support from the World Bank, is implementing a Scaling Solar Program through active promotion and increased use of renewable energy technologies.
The Permanent Secretary said the Scaling Solar Project was targeting to produce about 300 megawatts and if that was to be scaled up further solar energy would by 2030 be a viable alternative source of energy and help in meeting the SDG targets on energy.
Mr. Chabala observed that a mix of private sector and other development partners like the Green Climate Fund (GCF) can blend their financing to support huge and complex projects like hydro-power projects. He disclosed that Zambia had taken initiatives to leverage on the Green Climate Fund (GCF) to catalyse private investment in renewable energy to accelerate the attainment of the country’s electricity generation and diversification targets.”
First Republican President Kenneth Kaunda(c),his granddaughter Sonji(l) and Minister of Water and Sanitation Loyd Kaziya(r) during Zambia Association of Musician KK’s Birthday Bash in Chongwe
The family of the First President Kenneth Kaunda has distanced itself from any involvement or participation in a birthday bash intended for their Father being organised by the Zambia Association of Musicians (ZAM).
Speaking to ZANIS in a telephone interview this morning, family representative Tilyenji Kaunda said the first family did not permit nor sanction the association to hold any event in honour of President Kenneth Kaunda.
Mr Kaunda reveals that the family clearly stated that they were not taking part in the event but are surprised that the Association went ahead with the publication of the advert on the event.
“The family wonders why the association has gone ahead despite the agreed position on the matter”, he said.
This follows publication of the advert that has continued to run in the print media on the event dubbed, “the KK 94th Birthday”.
According to the media report, the event which is expected to take place tomorrow Saturday April 28th, 2018 at the Inter-Continental Hotel in Lusaka, is being organised by the Zambia Association of Musicians (ZAM).
Dr. Kaunda has today turned 94 years, and his family has wished him good health and God’s blessings for his new age.
ZESCO Muzuma substation being upgraded to KV 330 (from KV 220) in order to be connected to the national grid as soon as the Maamba coal plant station is commissioned
Zambia Electrical Supply Company ( Zesco ) Spokesperson Henry Kapata says the incidences of black outs being experienced in some parts of Lusaka City is due increased demand for power.
ZANIS reports Mr. Kapata saying in An interview today that his Utility firm is recognizant that during peak hours especially demand is so high that parts of the City is having episodes of blackouts.
“ The high demand for power during peak hours especially is what is causing black outs in some parts of the Lusaka City, “ he said.
He however disclosed that Zesco Limited has put in place projects that will help increase capacity supply so as to help meet the high demand of power supply.
Mr. Kapata also noted that the distribution projects are under away also to meet the demand to the national grid.
Most parts of the Capital City have recently been experiencing episodes, a development that has unsettled both domestic and industrial consumer.
University of Pretoria law professor Michelo Hansungule has vowed to continue speaking against human rights abuses and other malpractices in Zambia and says he won’t be silenced by Zambia’s High Commissioner to South Africa Emmanuel Mwamba.
In a lengthy post, in which he apologised for the error in judgment, Prof Hansungule said that he told Mr Mwamba that the only way to silence him is to kill his and as long as he lived, he will speak my mind and assist people regardless.
Below is the post
By Professor Michelo Hansungule
In relation to Prof. Nicholson and Prof. Frans’ questions, I aver as follows:
For reasons I shall elaborate on in more detail below, I have since withdrawn the letter from the two recipients and replaced it with one not on CHR headed paper attached herein[1].
Without prejudice to 1 above, I sincerely apologise for the use of the CHR headed paper and personally commit that it will never happen again.
As elaborated on below, in the incident aqua, it was an error of judgment that CHR letter head was used and it is regrettable.
Historical context
For a long time now, I have been participating in public discourse on human rights and governance in Zambia and Africa generally in Zambian media. I did so while I was based at the University of Zambia, Raol Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law at the University of Lund in Sweden and since I joined the Center for Human Rights, here at the University of Pretoria. At the University of Pretoria, I was inspired to take an even more active participation in canvassing public issues on learning that academics were required to engage in community service as part of their conditions of service. Besides making presentations to various stakeholders in and outside Africa including politicians, government officials, judges, lawyers, law teachers, students, non-governmental organizations, journalists, faith based organizations, women’s groups and others, I keenly wrote opinion papers making plain my views on critical social, political, economic and issues
In addition, as part of this community engagement, I represent individual victims of human rights violations before various treaty bodies including the defunct SADC Tribunal, African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Human Rights Committee at the United Nations, African Committee on the Rights of the Child, and as in the case aqua, non-conventional United Nations bodies and institutions.
For example, I have three communications before the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights I filed on instructions from Rwanda community members against Rwanda. In one such case yet to be determined by Court, several Rwandans living in South Africa had their passports arbitrarily cancelled by Rwanda government on suspicion they belonged to opposition which is a crime (divisionism) in Rwanda. Acting together with my LLM students, I was first person to bring the maiden communication (Hansungule versus Uganda) before the African Committee of Experts on the Rights of the Child seeking remedies against the child in northern Uganda which was affected by a long war in which children were forcibly recruited into armed conflict or forcible marriages both by rebel and government forces, Committee found in our favour and made a series of recommendations against Uganda. On instruction, I brought a communication before the African Commission against Swaziland (now eSwatin) in which I demanded reinstatement of a High Court judge who was arbitrarily dismissed from the bench by the King on trumped up charges by a former Chief Justice who had a born to chew with him and whom (Chief Justice) later the King dismissed.
As spirited public defender, I have submitted complaints to the Zambian Chief Justice, Zambian Director of Public Prosecutions, Speaker of the Zambian Parliament, Zambia’s Permanent Human Rights Commission, Lusaka City Council, Zambia’s Anti-Corruption Commission, Zambia’s Commission of Lands, Zambia’s Electoral Commission, Human Rights Council in Geneva, etc. These complaints raised public issues or issues affecting members of the public including tribalism in Zambia fostered by current government, alleged corruption of senior officials in government, alleged commission of treason by current president when he breached the constitution and refused to hand over power to the Speaker of Parliament after opposition filed an election petition challenging the outcome of the 2016 presidential election, as provided by the constitution, three Constitutional Court Judges repudiating their own unanimous judgment delivered in an open Court just two days earlier [without the courtesy to invite two of their colleagues including the Court president], etc.
In all these and similar cases I’ve not mentioned, I acted in my personal capacity or on behalf of clients I represented, even then in my personal capacity. Petitions filed in Zambia were widely reported in Zambian media which assisted generate wide discourses on governance, democracy, rule of law, constitutionalism and human rights. Of course government has not liked most of the discourse because my petitions and submissions either were against them, their officials or persons or questioned their decisions and in any case did not praise them.
2016 Elections
Currently, there are serious political tensions in Zambia. Only yesterday, leader of the main opposition Hakainde Hichilema (HH) called on SADC to intervene in Zambia ‘to protect people from political killings orchestrated by president Edgar Lungu’s government….’. This report is trending now at the time of writing. To cut a long story short, basis of the crisis was the 2016 elections including the period during campaigns. In Zambia, there is the Public Order Act, a colonial piece of legislation which has been widely condemned by most stakeholders. The Public Order Act regulates the holding of public assemblies, meetings and peaceful demonstrations.
While the ruling political party does not apply for ‘permission’ to meet, assemble or demonstrate, other stakeholders especially opposition cannot do so without this ‘permission’ from police the regulating authority. Previously, this statute was challenged before the Supreme Court as unconstitutional as the rights to assembly, meetings and peaceful demonstration were constitutional and the Court in both Christine Mulundika versus the Attorney General and Medical Doctors Association versus Attorney General, unanimously declared certain sections of the statute unconstitutional, and ordered that police had no right to issue or decline the permit but to protect the applicants to ensure their meetings were not disrupted by others. These rulings have never been heeded by government and police continue to declare meetings or opposition parties unlawful. During the 2016 election campaigns opposition were literary banned from campaigning or canvassing for votes in Lusaka in particular and other parts of the country. Some of opposition members such as a young lady Mapenzi Chibulo (https://www.lusakatimes.com/2016/07/09/police-shoot-dead-female-upnd-supporter-lusaka/) who tried to go ahead and campaign nevertheless were shot dead by police and ruling party members. I have written various articles condemning these barbaric acts and calling on culprits to be brought to book, all this, however, was futile.
After the 2016 elections and announcement by the Electoral Commission that current president Edgar Lungu had won the presidency, the opposition United Party for National Development (UPND) filed a petition in the Constitutional Court (CC) to challenge the declaration as mandated by the constitution. The Constitution provides that once any person files a petition to challenge the declaration of the election, the Speaker of Parliament should act in place of the immediately past incumbent head of state, a fair provision to ensure justice is seen. Current president Edgar Lungu who was declared winner of the 2016 presidential election refused to hand over power to the Speaker of Parliament.
I petitioned the Speaker demanding to know why he abrogated the constitution by not taking power as provided? Speaker responded to me saying he was constrained from commenting or responding to my question as the matter was before court. There was no matter before Court because just four days into the election petition by opposition, the CC dismissed the case saying it {the Court) had no jurisdiction to hear the matter on the grounds of rationale temporis i.e. that the fourteen days prescribed in the Constitution for a presidential election petition to be heard by Court had expired.
I wrote the media and the Chief Justice protesting this unjust decision by three of the five Court judges and demanded the Chief Justice took action. The three were part of the five judges of the Court who in the middle of the night on Friday decided that petitioners would he heard the following Monday and Tuesday and respondents Wednesday and Thursday. On Monday, just before the case started, three of the five judges who were part of the Friday night decision insisted to address the Court against the Court President’s direction that that they were ready to hear the petitioners. In their shocking address, the three judges said they met over the weekend without the President and the other judge and decided their unanimous decision on Friday was illegal for want of time and declared that since the petition is out of time, there was no petition before them to hear. I bitterly criticized this decision and also demanded the Chief Justice act in the case which to me clearly exhibited unethical and even criminal behavior. All my petitions to the Speaker and to the Chief Justice were in public media as well written opinion pieces.
After voting, I returned to South Africa three days after the August 2016 elections. At the Lusaka Airport after security check, I sat down to put on my belt, my shoes and pack my laptop. While I was doing so, two young men came to where I was seated and in English with an East African accent started chatting among themselves saying ‘we were very luck elections were declared in our favour, and there is not going to be a run off, we are lucky the money were going to use in a run off has been saved…………… this was on Sunday before all election results were announced and before the Electoral Commission declared the winner which it did the following Monday. I heard it all myself. Unfortunately, I am illiterate in the use of my phone and could not record it. On the SA aircraft from Lusaka to Johannesburg, a man greeted me in business class and introduced himself as Emmanuel Mwamba, Zambia’s High Commissioner to South Africa. He said he knew me from long time through my writings in the media which he said he thoroughly enjoyed and looked forward to. We agreed to meet in Pretoria and exchange notes on issues in Zambia.
After the declaration of results on Monday, we met the following Monday at a restaurant in East Gate. By then opposition UPND had filed its presidential election petition on Friday the week the results were declared. During our meeting, I told Mwamba that President Edgar Lungu was committing treason clinging on to power. I explained that by the Constitution, the Speaker of Parliament had to act as president immediately after any person has filed a petition challenging the declaration. Mwamba tried to argue that president Lungu’s decision to continue in office was motivated by security concerns but I reminded him that the Constitution was clear on the issue and that if security was concern in the minds of drafters, they would have reflected it.
In May last year, NOMUSA, a South African Trade Union decided to demonstrate at the Zambian High Commission here in Pretoria to protest rising dictatorship in Zambia. Before that, NOMUSA invited me to their branch meetings across Gauteng and the North West province to address their members and make them understand the political situation there. NOMUSA explained that they were acting under their constitution which provided for ‘international solidarity’ to reach out to Zambia and to Zimbabwe where regimes were reportedly oppressing their citizens including their members and their families. I duly visited NOMSA branches and made several addresses.
Specific instances had happened by that time. First, leader of the Democratic Alliance Mmusi Maimane had not only been refused entry into Zambia after he had flown there. He was prevented from coming out of the aircraft that took him to Lusaka and forced to return to Johannesburg with it. Maimane had gone to Lusaka to observe the court appearance of HH who was charged with treason. I also learnt while at these NOMUSA meetings that Secretary General of NOMUSA was also harassed by Zambian immigration officers when he had gone to Zambia to meet his counterparts, Zambian trade unions. During my briefings, I explained that Zambia was a disaster case faced with a serious case of ethnic tensions fostered by senior political leaders including the president, then Secretary General of the ruling PF party (now defence minister) and his deputy, then minister of Information, who has since been sacked from government for personal differences and is now in opposition, etc.
I said government is openly inciting Zambians to hate certain ethnic groups particularly the Tonga group perceived to support opposition and that people speak openly on radio, newspapers and television about how to deal with Tongas. I told them how government has become so dictatorial closing down independent media, listening to private communications of private citizens including social media, high levels of intolerance and open police and police brutality meted out against opposition party members hundreds of whom are languishing in jail merely for trying to organize their parties or convene peaceful meetings of their parties, impotent judiciaries intimidated by ruling party cadres and officials; that judges receive instructions on how to decide particular cases and threatened with unspecified or specified actions against them or their family members if they did not comply; that ruling party cadres and officials even camped day and night outside the High court to intimidate independent-minded judges and police would do nothing about it, etc
After these meetings, NOMUSA in their numbers held a demonstration at the Zambian High Commission premises at which they condemned the government of president Edgar Lungu and demanded unbanning of the media, release of all political prisoners including HH threatening to moblise its members across the country to not clear Zambian goods at both ports and other parts of the country. I addressed the demonstration and condemned president Edgar Lungu and his government. I repeated various acts of brutalities perpetrated against Zambian people by government simply for holding independent views. When Mr. Mwamba started speaking he claimed that Zambia was a democracy which attracted loud booing from NOMUSA members. He tried to enlist my support and said I agreed with what he said despite what I had just said. He asked me to go stand next to him but of course I refused and told him so. NOMUSA members also told him I cannot stand next to him.
I have referred to arbitrary arrests by government. UPND president HH is the most high profile individual to have suffered the fate. In the Western party of the country which traditionally votes for opposition UPND, is an annual ancient ceremony in which the local king shifts his capital from lowland to highland to escape the floods. HH and his officials decided to honour the kind’s invitation early last year. President Lungu was also invited. On the way, president Lungu’s motorcade which was coming from behind caught up with HH’s motorcade which means the two motorcades were driving towards the same direction. At one point, one of president Lungu’s escorts dangerously pushed off HH’s vehicle it came off the tar before the driver regained control. For this government charged HH with treason an unbailable capital offence which attracts death penalty. He stayed in prison including maximum prison which is used to keep death row inmates, for four months, all that time without trial. On the intervention of the Commonwealth, Edgar Lungu released HH on nolle prosequi which helped government from embarrassment had the case gone to trial. But many other UPND supporters and officials remain in prison todate others not so lucky lost their lives. Only two days ago, HH has called on the SADC especially South Africa under Ramaphosa to intervene in Zambia and prevent the slaughter of innocent citizens by president Lungu’s regime.
Two weeks ago, HH leader of opposition disclosed that United Nations Development Programme Resident Coordinator Janet Rogan had colluded with ruling party officials to rig the 2016 elections. To support this allegation, social media released an email which I still have showing how Ms. Rogan worked with the Electoral Commission to overturn the results of the 2016 popular elections. HH charged that he was aware of Ms. Rogan’s activities and her close relationships with ruling party officials in the government of president Edgar Lungu. Soon after, a group of Zambians based here in South Africa, Zambia, United Kingdom and other places drafted a letter petitioning the UNDP in New York against continued stay of Ms. Rogan in Zambia as UNDP Resident Coordinator. I have some of the names of the petitioners and their contact details. Petitioners asked me to edit the letter which I did and to send it for them to the UNDP. Because the letter revealed issues suggesting catastrophic failure of governance on an issue of paramount importance to Zambia’s democracy, and something which was at the center of current serious divisions in Zambia, I did not hesitate to look at the letter and to edit it. I then asked the individuals (still have email to that effect) under whose name and who would sign the letter to which they said they wanted it to sound as official as possible and that their chairman or other member would sign it but they preferred if I signed it. Since I could not let any of them sign the letter on a CHR letter head and because letterheads for my non-governmental organizations one is still with printers and others in Lusaka, I decided to sign it and send it. I must underline that I signed it in my individual capacity (not as Director of the Center) and this is vindicated in the letter. Also vindicated in the letter is the fact that it was not my letter. Line one clearly says ‘I was tasked with the responsibility to send the letter below….’. I sent the letter to the UNDP but did not originally author it. More importantly, I easily accepted the request to participate in the petition because upon glance, it was clear that it espoused the very issues the Center for Human Rights stands for.
Soon after the NOMUSA demonstration at the Zambian High Commission, I received a classified document from a pan Africanist with several names of both prominent Zambians and non Zambians said to have been compiled by the Zambian State Intelligence equivalent of the CIO in the United States. The document which I still have with me states that the individuals were a danger to government in Zambia. My name was prominently listed at number six. Others include some Zambian opposition leaders not least among them HH, perceived funders of opposition particularly UPND including leading executives in Anglo American empire, etc. Despite this, I continue to do my work as before ensnaring and educating especially the Zambian public of their rights and exposing government excesses. I refuse to be intimidated and silenced.
Not long ago, I received an email (still in possession) in which a man from Lusaka discloses that he was offered a job by the government Inteliigence organization in Zambia. That when he went to meet officials of that organisatiion, they offered to appoint him Third Secretary at the Zambian High Commission in Pretoria but added that his real job would be to spy on me. As indicated, I still have the email with me and even told the young man to consider accepting the offer. I asked him to not worry about me or my safety because I do what I do due to my strong convictions that what I was doing was right and for the good of Zambians. He said however poor he was, he would not take pieces of silver to harm another.
Recently, I got a whatsup message from a young man part of the group that was petitioning Ms. Janet Rogan at UNDP in which he said ruling PF members in Kasama the north of the country were planning to demonstrate against me for insulting president Edgar Liungu and for not respecting him as president. This whatsup (which I still have on my phone) came from district officials of the Kasama District who were mobilizing their members to demonstrate the following day. Indeed, the demonstration went ahead the following day.
What I found surprising is that I did not remember (and still do not) when I made those remarks which attracted the demonstration. The dates of the Globe Newspaper PF officials cited I allegedly published demeaning statements I was here in Pretoria and had not spoken to a journalist either then or prior to publication of the paper. I contacted the newspaper in question seeking clarification on when I made the statements and they did not respond. However, in keeping with my principles, I decided to not distance myself from the alleged remarks and to expose the newspaper.
This is because in the struggle for freedom I believe we need the media including fake media. Young people in the media often want to say something but do not know how and are too scared to do so. Though painful to me, I easily take responsibility and I did so in that case. Second, I found the choice of the northern town of Kasama by whoever arranged the demonstration strange to say the least. Until this free publicity of my name, hardly anyone knew me or my name in Kasama. A friend in Kasama who attended it later told me most demonstrators did not know who they were demonstrating against and the few who did had not even read the newspaper. He said I could have taken part in the demonstration against myself if I was there without any of the demonstrators identifying me as the subject of the demo. It was badly arranged. I later was told it was arranged by high officials in Lusaka who wanted to intimidate me.
On my part, I published an article admitting that I did not respect president Edgar Lungu because as far as I was concerned he was irregularly in office. I asked them to take any action they wanted to take against me. I told them failure by the Constitutional Court to her the president election petition and put the issue of the 2016 elections to rest was the reason I did not recognize the legitimacy of the election which was declared in favour of president Edgar Lungu (I have the response I penned in language not intellectual but intended for the demonstrators to understand me fully).
Recently, a friend based in Lusaka alerted me to the speech by Minister of Justice in Parliament while he was responding to questions on the amendments to the constitution government was working on. According to my friend, my name along with two other colleagues Professors Muna Ndulo and Beyani Chaloka were mentioned in an adverse way. I checked the relevant Parliamentary Hansard and indeed found the relevant parts where when after his speech, the Minister was asked whether he had consulted experts like Professor Hansungule, Professor Muna Ndulo and Professor Beyani on the amendments? He responded that he did not and would not consult us because our political affiliation was common knowledge
I must say though on the positive side that I bear neither grudge nor anger against anyone in government. All I want is good government and greater respect for human rights for citizens. Proof of this is that last year, I single handedly facilitated three workshops on state party reporting under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the Maputo Protocol. The workshops, which attracted scores of senior government and non-governmental officials were funded by the Center for human Rights and had no problem with interacting with senior politicians in negotiating relevant approvals and sanctions for the officials and events. I believe we did an excellent job finally coming up with a draft report which, however, is yet to be validated before submission to the African Commission for examination.
But according to the media, Mr. Mwamba, the Zambian High Commissioner to South Africa, is a very dangerous person. The media portrays him as one of president Edgar Lungu’s trusted allies and together with a small group is responsible for rigging the 2016 election in favour of the president. I have several times been warned to be careful about him that there wasn’t anything that he could not do. Beyond the character presented in the media, however, I don’t know him. Nevertheless, I have told myself and told him that he cannot intimidate me into silence. In my letter to him, I told him that the best he can do to silence me is to kill me. As long as I live, I will speak my mind and assist people regardless.
In the letter to the University Rector, Mr. Mwamba claimed that I continuously use my position and facilities of the University to raise things against his government suggesting that the issues I portray are personal or private. I have thought long and hard on this, and am still thinking. Besides this petition to the UNDP, I cannot remember when else I used my position and University facilities in making public my opinions? Because I am deeply troubled by this accusation, I wrote Mr. Mwamba asking him to clarify what he means?
After much thought and before he replies, I thought perhaps he is referring to CHR public statements we have made on developments in Zambia? If this is the case, then he is grossly misled. Though I agreed with them, nevertheless, I did not participate in most of the statement by the CHR issued on Zambia. The only one I participated in was when the CHR called on Zambian government to release HH from prison where as indicated he was held without trial on trumped up charges of treason. This statement was first drafted by a CHR student showed to the Director who handed it to me to edit or suggest otherwise. After my additions together with that of another of our LLD student, the statement was published to the CHR website. Because I don’t remember of any other incident, he might be referring to, I want him to assist me understand him so that I can also address it.
UK based Zambian singer Lily Mutamz released a wedding song titled I DO. The songstress, who is a gospel artist, says the song can be sang by women to men on their wedding day.
In a move that will hopefully reduce corporate tax evasion in Zambia’s mining sector, multinational companies must now document all their “related party transactions” to show they aren’t using them to reduce their tax bill.
Traffic lights and speed limits set rules for driving on the road. But traffic cameras and police radar guns can also serve as effective additional enforcement and even deterrents as drivers know they can be caught and punished if they don’t comply with the rules.
Is there a parallel lesson to be learned in combating corporate tax avoidance?
This month, Zambia’s Ministry of Finance adopted new regulations that give the government one more tool to reduce the chance that mining companies are dodging taxes. Zambia is now hoping better informed tax auditing will deter corporations from manipulating the prices at which they sell goods and services to related companies, including parent companies, subsidiaries, and others within the same corporate structure. And if not, Zambia’s tax auditors will have the information needed to more effectively audit and make tax adjustments.
What is transfer pricing and why is it relevant?
Imagine that it costs (fictional) Nsima Mining $5 to mine a kilogram of a certain mineral that it sells to its parent company, Nsima Global, which markets the minerals at a cost of $1, before reselling it for $10. The group of Nsima companies has $10 in income, $6 in costs, and a total profit of $4. But what price did Nsima Global pay Nsima Mining for the minerals?
Defining this “transfer price” – the price of the first sale between the companies – matters if Nsima Mining and Nsima Global are in two different countries, where the profit can be taxed by two different governments. If the rates at which the profits are taxed in the two countries are different, companies may be able to increase after-tax profit by shifting their profits to the lower tax jurisdiction.
In the example above, surely Nsima Mining does not accept less than $5/kg, to cover costs, and surely Nsima Global does not pay more than $9/kg if it intends to resell the minerals at a price of $10/kg and had $1/kg of marketing costs. Between $5 and $9, the Nsima group has some control over setting the price, but it would be artificial for the group to assign a price at either extreme, and would raise eyebrows for tax authorities looking to address tax avoidance. For instance, with a transfer price of $5/kg, Nsima Mining reaps zero profit, meaning that the country where the minerals are being mined receives no profit tax.
The Mbeki Panel on Illicit Financial Flows has suggested that corporate tax avoidance may be costing Africa some $50 billion annually, and manipulation of transfer pricing is a key form of tax avoidance. In Zambia, particular concerns over potential transfer mispricing have been raised in the mining sector, which dominates the Zambian economy. Some of the largest mining companies, like Glencore’s Mopani Copper Mines, have been featured in the headlines over payments to related parties that may have significantly diminished their taxes paid. Some reports suggests that transfer pricing and other forms of corporate tax avoidance could be costing Zambia hundreds of millions of tax dollars annually. While it’s difficult to reliably quantify the scale of the problem, additional safeguards can be put in place to reduce the risk of transfer mispricing.
Combatting transfer pricing in Zambia
One common way in which governments often protect against profits being artificially located elsewhere is by requiring that the related companies use the “arm’s length price” – that is, the price they would get if the transaction took place between two unrelated parties. If the transfer price is equivalent to the arm’s length price, the transaction may be considered valid. In 2008, Zambia enacted incorporated an arm’s length pricing requirement (Income Tax Act Art. 97A). However, determining what the arm’s length price is can be a challenge without sufficient evidence.
Fortunately, there is a growing body of guidance on how to address transfer pricing, including specific guidance to Africaand the mining sector. In addition the African Tax Administration Forum (ATAF) has provided technical support to Zambia on transfer pricing. In line with this guidance, the Natural Resource Governance Institute (NRGI) and Oxfam have specifically encouraged Zambia to require transfer pricing documentation to allow tax authorities to verify compliance.
With its new transfer pricing regulations, Zambia takes an important step, joining a growing number of countries around the world in using documentation requirements to protect against erosion of the tax base and artificially shifting the profit. The regulations require companies to document transactions between related parties and to demonstrate that the transfer is at an arm’s length price. Multinational corporations must also maintain detailed information about the structure of the group of companies and their intra-group relationships. The documentation must be ready annually by the tax filing deadline, and must be shared with the Zambia Revenue Authority (ZRA) within 30 days upon request.
A key challenge going forward will be to ensure that the ZRA has the human resources and technical capacity to review the documentation generated by the new requirements. The ZRA must be well equipped both to assess transfer mispricing risks, so that it can request the most useful information, and to perform audits on the basis of such information. If the ZRA is empowered and sufficiently resourced, the documentation requirement can have impact: reducing transfer mispricing, both via tax adjustments and as a deterrent.
By reining in transfer pricing risks, Zambia can limit profit shifting by multinational companies, ensuring that more tax revenues are generated. If well managed, in part through stronger public finance management laws and efficient resource allocation and oversight, such revenues can provide Zambia the means to prioritize spending to address poverty as well as different forms of inequality, including gender and income inequality, as both Zambian civil society and the World Bank have recommended.
Daniel Mulé is a senior policy advisor for tax and extractive industries and Eneya Maseko, Extractive Industries Program Coordinator for Oxfam in Zambia.
Rating agency Fitch says the uncertainty surrounding Zambia’s IMF programme and the recent First Quantum tax bill show key challenges facing Zambia.
In a note, Fitch says dispute over tax bill presented to First Quantum Minerals Ltd could discourage foreign investors.
Fitch reiterates that an IMF Programme would support fiscal adjustment and make additional sources of long-term external financing available to Zambia.
It says the IMF uncertainty show key Zambia rating weaknesses of weak public finances and high commodity dependence.
Fitch notes that how the dispute related to First Quantum is eventually resolved may have an impact on Zambia’s investment climate.
The rating agency thinks the Zambian Revenue Authority will apply penalties and interest at a lower level to First Quantum than initially assessed.
It said it does not think the Zambian Government will seek to avoid jeopardizing its key foreign exchange earning industry and a major source of employment.
The rating agency noted that Zambia’s other sovereign rating weaknesses include poor power provision and transport infrastructure to Zambia’s Copperbelt.
Shoprite on Thursday opened its doors of its 33rd supermarket in Zambia, bringing welcome relief to Chirundu and its neighbours in the Southern Province.
Lusaka Province Minister Bowman Lusambo officiated opened the shopping centre and commended Shoprite for creating jobs and business opportunities for local suppliers.
“Situated near Lake Kariba, where guest lodges and tourists abound, the opening of Shoprite Chirundu means those in the tourism and hospitality industry no longer have to make the more than two-hour long trip to Lusaka to stock up on supplies,” explained Charles Bota, General Manager of Shoprite Zambia.
With this new store, Shoprite Zambia has created another 137 new job opportunities. Of the more than 4 200 people employed by Shoprite Zambia, 52% are women and just over a quarter of them are young people.
As part of its Corporate Social Responsibility programme, Shoprite Chirundu will donate assorted grocery items and cash to the value of K25 000 to “Munzi wa moyo”, a home for vulnerable girls.
The donation is supported by suppliers Trade Kings, Knelt, Sobi, Inscore, Mukwa and Cold Chain.
Shoprite Zambia has also launched a campaign to tackle issue of plastic waste following the launch of the first Shoprite Plastic Recycling Centre (Shoprec) across the road from the supermarket.
With this new recycling centre, Shoprite Zambia becomes the first retailer to address the problem of plastic waste in Zambia.
Its partner Vision Green will operate this collection point for recyclable plastics.
Over the next three months, K20 000 in Shoprite store vouchers will be made available to encourage residents to bring their plastic waste to Shoprec, which is located inside a 40-foot container. Once baled, the plastic will be transported to Lusaka, where it will be recycled.
“Shoprite was the first retailer in Zambia to introduce oxo-biodegradable shopping bags in 2016. With Shoprec we continue to lead the way by counteracting the mounting effect that waste generation has on our environment,” commented Mr. Bota.
There will be a full-time employee on-site at the recycling depot to receive and advise on which plastics can be recycled, as well as at least four attendants to assist with the baling.
Lusaka Province Minister Mr Bowman Lusambo officiates at the official opening of Chirundu Shoprite Store.Lusaka Province Minister Mr Bowman Lusambo officiates at the official opening of Chirundu Shoprite Store.Lusaka Province Minister Mr Bowman Lusambo officiates at the official opening of Chirundu Shoprite Store.Lusaka Province Minister Mr Bowman Lusambo officiates at the official opening of Chirundu Shoprite Store.Shoprite Recycling Plant in Chirundu
The Human Rights Commission has demanded that police should charge New Labour Party leader Fresher Siwale or release him.
This is after Mr Siwale spent his third night in police custody after police detained following his allegations that President Edgar Lungu is not a Zambian.
Human Rights Commission Spokesperson Mwelwa Muleya said in an interview that the continued detention of Mr Siwale without a charge amounts of unlawful detention.
Mr Muleya said the police should quickly charge the opposition leader and avail him before the Courts unlike keeping him in detention without charging him.
He said the Commission has taken interest in the matter and deployed officers on Wednesday to track Mr Siwale’s area of detention.
Mr Muleya said when the Human Rights officers eventually tracked Mr Siwale at Chilenje Police but he quickly moved to Chelstone Police but the officers were told that he had been moved to Police Headquarters when they arrived there.
He said Mr Siwale’s human rights must be respected by the police as they go about investigating the allegations.
Police Spokesperson Esther Katongo when contacted for a comment on Thursday said Police will issue a statement at an appropriate time.
The last time I spoke to Hakainde Hichilema, he was trapped in a panic room in his Lusaka home. Dozens of riot police had stormed the opposition leader’s house in a violent predawn raid, and were now waiting outside to arrest him or worse. “This guy, [President Edgar] Lungu, wants to kill me,” he said, his voice shaking on the telephone line, as the police tried to flush him and his family out of the panic room with teargas.
That was a little over a year ago. Lawyers eventually negotiated safe passage for Hichilema and his family, but he was still slapped with a treason charge. Prosecutors said that he had endangered Lungu’s life by blocking the presidential motorcade at a cultural celebration but most observers agreed that this was simply a pretext by Lungu to crack down on his major political rival.
Eventually the charge was dismissed but not before Hichilema had spent 127 days in jail. It was an experience that changed him as a person — and as a politician.
“Any normal person has to be changed by that experience,” he said, speaking to the Mail & Guardianat an upmarket hotel in Johannesburg. The scene is a world apart from the filthy, overcrowded Zambian prison cells that he describes.
“Our detention centres are death traps … In a room like this, you have 200 inmates spending nights. So you really don’t go to sleep. You take a nap by sitting, and someone has their body inside your legs. There is very poor ventilation something very simple to fix but it’s not there. Food, there’s no food. And when it’s there, it’s rotten beans, rotten kapenta [sardines]. Medical services are very poor. People go into prison and come out with diseases. During my stay we saw bodies being taken away, dead,” said Hichilema.
But at least he learnt something while he was inside. “It’s fortunate that I have been able to be put through this, so when our time in office comes we know which priorities need to be dealt with yesterday.” Needless to say, prison reform is near the top of that list.
The 55 year old was one of Zambia’s richest businessmen and the country’s second largest cattle rancher before turning his hand to politics. Now he leads the United party for National Development, which lost the 2016 elections by the slimmest of margins: the party was less than 100 000 votes short out of the 3.78 million votes cast.
Hichilema disputes the validity of that poll, arguing that Lungu manipulated the result in his favour. He refuses to recognise Lungu’s legitimacy as president, a stance that contributed to his arrest which, according to Hichilema, was merely the highest profile incident in a long list of human rights violations committed by Lungu’s administration.
Recently, Chishimba Kambwili, a member of Parliament, was arrested on corruption charges, which surfaced only after he defected from the ruling party. Nevers Mumba, the leader of another opposition party, was sentenced to three months in prison after being convicted of lying to a public official, a charge critics say was politically motivated.
Earlier this year, the M&G spoke to Pilato, a rapper, who fled into exile in South Africa after receiving death threats from ruling party loyalists after releasing a song that described Lungu as a “rat” whose “main job there is to steal”, a reference to the corruption allegations that have dogged the president.
“The abuse of human rights and freedoms in our country … has gone unnoticed beyond our borders,” said Hichilema. “Even to have peaceful demonstrations is almost impossible if you are not associated with the ruling party. If you see the sort of demonstrations you have around here [in South Africa], they don’t occur in Zambia … If you try to do that you will be met with brute force, where the police discharge live ammunition along with teargas wantonly.”
image is hard to square with Zambia’s hard won reputation as one of Africa’s most peaceful democracies. But civil society activists contacted by the M&G say Hichilema is not exaggerating, and in its most recent country overview Amnesty International confirmed this bleak picture.
“The authorities cracked down on critics, including human rights defenders, journalists and opposition political party members,” said Amnesty. “The Public Order Act was used to repress rights to freedom of expression, association and assembly. The police used unnecessary and excessive force against peaceful protesters and failed to address violence by groups close to the government. The judiciary came under verbal attack from the president. Levels of food insecurity in rural areas remain high.”
Zambia’s economy is also struggling yet another stick with which critics are beating Lungu. It doesn’t help that, under his administration, the country’s debt has officially quadrupled from about $2 billion to more than $8 billion. Hichilema claims more debt has been hidden, and that the true figure is about $16 billion about 75% of Zambia’s gross domestic product.
‘Nobody is listening’
Zambia’s political crisis is falling on deaf ears. “There are times I feel like nobody is listening,” said Hichilema, looking tired. And his fleeting visit to South Africa only emphasises this point: at a press briefing that took place just before our interview, only three journalists attended. Aside from the M&G, no South African media house was represented.
Hichilema said that international community representatives sympathise with Zambia’s problems but tell him that the situation is not as serious as elsewhere. But he argues that, if left unchecked, Zambia will turn into “another Zimbabwe”, or another Democratic Republic of the Congo.
He believes that South Africa, Zambia’s largest trading partner, should play a more active role in the country. So far, South Africa and the Southern African Development Community (SADC) have been entirely silent on Lungu’s abuses.
This may come back to haunt the region, warns Hichilema. “Zambia’s economy is not growing, there is abuse of civil rights, there is no rule of law, there is increasing violence. We are creating a recipe for disaster, not just for us but for the region.”
The disaster can be easily averted. Lungu is not immune to regional pressure, and a few firm words from Cyril Ramaphosa, the new president of South Africa and the SADC chair, would go a long way towards ensuring free and fair elections and the protection of basic civil liberties, the opposition leader says.
So far, however, Ramaphosa has shown no sign that Zambia is on his foreign policy agenda. No matter how loud Hichilema shouts, few are prepared to listen.
Eastern Province Permanent Secretary, Chanda Kasolo, explains something to Secretary to the Cabinet, Dr. Roland MsiskaSecretary to Cabinet, Dr. Roland Msiska (right) addresses health personnelSecretary to the Cabinet, Dr. Roland Msiska (far left), is led by Eastern Province Medical Director, Dr. Kennedy Kabuswe (second left) and Ministry of Health Spokesperson, Dr. Maximillian Bweupe, when he toured Chipata District HospitalChipata District Hospital Information Officer, Kuwani Banda, explains the electronic data entry of patients’ information through e-serviceSecretary to Cabinet, Dr. Roland Msiska ( c ) being shown information about the construction of the new one stop border at Mwami and Mchinji border postsA Nurse at Chipata District Hospital explains about how patients’ data is entered in a computer through e-serviceSecretary to Cabinet, Dr. Roland Msiska, interacts with medical staffA Patient presents a personal data electronic card to an information officer at Chipata District Hospital.
President Edgar Lungu greets Mr JACK MWIIMBU MONZE UPND member of Parliament after the State of the Nation Address on the Application of National values and Principles
Leader of the opposition in Parliament Jack Mwiimbu has charged that elections in Zambia have become a despicable disgrace.
Mr Mwiimbu who is also UPND Monze Central Member of Parliament said the party has noted with concern the obnoxious zeal by the PF to hack their way to repulsive victory whenever elections are held in this country.
“We shudder to imagine what will happen in the next General election. Its frightening to realise that violence has become a norm in Zambia,” Mr Mwiimbu said.
He said ordinary citizens are now afraid to peacefully excercise their right to choose leaders of their choce due to violence.
“Its even more frightening to note that government ministers who are supposed to be custodians of the rule of law are the ones in the forefront perpetrating violence,” he said.
“Where does the ordinary helpless member of the public seek recourse to redress in such situations? The PF must realise that their is a limit to self restraint.”
President Lungu with China Harbour Engineering Company Chairman Lin Yichong (C) and CHEC Zambia General manager Peng when they paid a Courtesy call on him
President Lungu with China Harbour Engineering Company Chairman Lin Yichong (C) and CHEC Zambia General manager Peng when they paid a Courtesy call on himPresident Lungu with China Harbour Engineering Company Chairman Lin Yichong (C) and CHEC Zambia General manager Peng when they paid a Courtesy call on himPresident Edgar Lungu has arrived in the Angolan capital Luanda for the SADC double troika heads of state summit .President Edgar Lungu has arrived in the Angolan capital Luanda for the SADC double troika heads of state summit .Pupils sing during the First Lady’s Day of a mentorship Programme at State HouseFirst Lady Esther Lungu receives a certificate of application from Junior Achievement Zambia Board Chairperson David Chakonta during the First Lady for a Day Mentorship programmeFirst Lady Esther Lungu receives a cheque on behalf of the Junior Achievement Zambia from Stannic Bank Zambia Board Chairperson Dr Austin Mwape during the First Lady for a Day Mentorship programmeLeaders from Zambia Lesotho and DRC at SADC summitPresident lungu at SADC summitSADC summitPresident Edgar Lungu arrive at the SADC summitSADC Talks Congo DRC , Namibia, South Africa Angola ,Zambia,,Tanzania vice President and Lesotho leaders at SADC meet in LuandaDisplaying Sipelu Traditional Dance, one of the traditional dances of Western Province at the Launch of the Barotse Culture Material ExhibitionA close up photo of the Namalwa Traditional Drum being played by Mongu Arts and Culture Officer Prince MayambaMongu Arts and Culture Officer Prince Mayamba (front) playing a Namalwa Traditional Drum used for moving cattle from flooded plains to upper land at the sound of it as Western Province Administration Chief Human Resource Cleopatra Mbewe (r) and her entourage observeMongu Arts and Culture Officer Prince Mayamba (r) explains to Western Province Administration Chief Human Resource Cleopatra Mbewe (l) how a traditional food warmer (Mukeke Wakota Kwiti) is used during the Launch of the Barotse Culture Material ExhibitionWestern Province Administration Chief Human Resource Cleopatra Mbewe (c) admires Mongu Dry Fish (bream) as Ministry of Tourism and Arts Acting Director Thomas Mubita (l) and Mongu Arts and Culture Officer Prince Mayamba (r) look on during the Launch of the Barotse Culturel Material ExhibitionNayuma Harbor where the Nalikwanda docks from during the Kuomboka ceremonyClearing of Musiyamo Canal in progress in readiness for Kuomboka Ceremony which is scheduled to take place on 28th April 2018 in Limulunga District Western Province.Clearing of Musiyamo Canal in progress in readiness for Kuomboka Ceremony which is scheduled to take place on 28th April 2018 in Limulunga District Western Province.First Lady Esther Lungu donates a wheelchair to Chisamba’s Kanakantapa’s School pupil Scholastica Banda during the First Lady for a Day Mentorship programme
Roger Federer at one of the schools he supportsRoger Federer in one of the classroomsRoger Federer kicks a ball with children during his visit to LundaziRoger Federer learning the dance and moves in Lundazi while visiting community schools thereRoger Federer on his way to Eastern Province in Zambia visiting his Foundation’s community school programmesRoger Federer Visits Zambia For Work With The Roger Federer FoundationRoger the Teacher-Roger Federer took the children in a lesson in English