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Chama husband commits suicide after marital dispute

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File picture

A man of Lundu Village of Chama District in Muchinga Province, has committed suicide by hanging himself in the main bedroom following a marital dispute.

Chief Lundu of the Senga people of Chama District has confirmed the incident in an interview with the Zambia News and Information Services (ZANIS) in Chinsali today.

Chief Lundu identified the man as Evaristo Mwila who is in his late thirties.

Chief Lundu explained that Mwila who came from Mufulira recently, was staying with his wife, who is a teacher at Kabele Primary school.

He said that the couple differed over a planned trip to Nakonde yesterday where the deceased wanted to take groundnuts for sale.

The traditional leader said Mwila asked him to help him (the chief) to transport groundnuts to Nakonde but his wife refused to accompany him to the border town to sale the groundnuts.

Chief Lundu said the wife refused because she wanted to travel to Chama to draw her November salary adding that after failing to agree, Mwila picked a stick and advanced towards the wife but the wife run away.

Seeing that the wife had run away, Mwila went home in anger and hanged himself in the main bedroom.

The body of Mwila has since been deposited to Chinsali General Hospital mortuary awaiting postmortem and burial.

Meanwhile, Chief Lundu has regretted the death of Mwila more especially that it has come at a time the world is observing 16 Days Activism against Gender Based Violence (GBV).

Chief Lundu has counseled couples to improve on communication and seek better ways of solving problems rather than engaging in physical confrontation.

Chief Lundu also disclosed that he has intensified the campaign in the chiefdom to sensitize and educate people on GBV.

When contacted for a comment, Muchinga Deputy Police Commissioner James Masiye said his office had not yet received a report.

Being a Doctor Is Hard. It’s Harder for Women.

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Female medical residents and physicians endure bias and a larger burden with home duties. They also face a greater risk of depression and suicide.

Happy medical residents are all alike. Every unhappy resident would take a long time to count.

It’s no secret that medical training is grueling: long hours, little sleep, rigid hierarchies, steep learning curves. It’s unfortunate but not surprising, then, that nearly one-third of residents experience symptoms of depression, and more than 10 percent of medical students report having suicidal thoughts. But is it worse for women than men?

A new study in JAMA Internal Medicine suggests yes. Dr. Constance Guille and colleagues analyzed the mental health of more than 3,100 newly minted doctors at 44 hospitals across the country. Before starting residency, men and women had similar levels of depressive symptoms. After six months on the job, both genders experienced a sharp rise in depression scores — but the effect was much more pronounced for women. A major reason: work-family conflict, which accounted for more than a third of the disparity.

Despite large increases in the number of women in medicine, female physicians continue to shoulder the bulk of household and child care duties. This unequal distribution of domestic labor is not unique to medicine, of course, but its manifestations are particularly acute in a physically and emotionally demanding profession with a lengthy training process that allows few, if any, breaks.

The structure of medical training has changed little since the 1960s, when almost all residents were men with few household duties. Support for those trying to balance home and work life hasn’t kept pace with changing demographics, nor has the division of domestic labor shifted to reflect the rise of women in the medical work force. Today, women account for more than one-third of practicing physicians and about half of physicians-in-training. In 1966, only 7 percent of graduating medical students were women.

There’s a saying that you can’t take good care of patients unless you take good care of yourself, but as a colleague recently told me, “Try taking care of patients, yourself and two kids at home — while working 80 hours a week.”

Female physicians are more likely to cut back professionally to accommodate household responsibilities. Among young academic physicians with children, women spend nine more hours per week on domestic activities than their male counterparts, and are more likely to take time off when a child is sick or a school is closed.

Households in which both spouses are doctors are particularly illustrative: Women in dual-physician households with young children work 11 fewer hours per week (outside the home) compared with women without children. There’s no difference in hours worked by men, and this disparity hasn’t narrowed in the past two decades. Female physicians are also more likely to divorce than male physicians — and working more is associated with higher divorce rates for women but not for men.

These work-family conflicts are crystallized by the intensity of medical training, but gender bias within hospitals — both subtle and overt, from patients and colleagues — may be just as pernicious.

As a man of Indian descent, if I’m mistaken for anything, it’s for a cardiologist. (Which I am not — much to my mother’s chagrin). But for many female physicians, just getting others to call you doctor can be a daily struggle.

“I wear a white coat; I introduce myself as doctor,” said Dr. Theresa Williamson, a neurosurgery resident at Duke. “But patients still assume I’m a nurse or medical assistant or pharmacist. If there’s a man in the room — even if he’s a medical student and I’m the doctor — he’s the one they make eye contact with, tell their story to, ask questions of.”

It’s not just patients. A recent study explored how physician speakers were introduced at formal academic lectures, known as Grand Rounds. Female introducers almost always referred to the speaker as “doctor,” regardless of his or her gender. Male introducers used the formal title only two-thirds of the time — and were much more likely to use “doctor” for men than women. They used a woman’s professional title less than half the time.

“I remember being on a panel with all men, and the moderator thanking Dr. X, Y, Z — and Julia,” said Dr. Julia Files, an associate professor at the Mayo Clinic in Arizona and lead author of the study. “It happens all the time.”

After her study came out, Dr. Files said, “we heard from women across the world who said: ‘Thank you, this is our shared reality.’ ”

These biases can bleed into the way we do business. A new working paper by Heather Sarsons, a Ph.D. candidate at Harvard, examines whether surgeons’ gender affects their referrals after a good or bad patient outcome. Ms. Sarsons finds that physicians are much less likely to refer patients to a female surgeon after a patient death, but barely change their referrals to a male surgeon.

A bad experience with one female surgeon also makes physicians less likely to establish referral relationships with other female surgeons. There was no similar effect for men.

“That individual men and women are treated differently is obviously not a nice result,” Ms. Sarsons said. “But what’s really concerning is the broader spillover effects to other women.”

Medicine styles itself as both art and science. The science creates new knowledge and treatments. The art helps us recognize another’s humanity. But it also creates space for bias — conscious and unconscious — in how we treat patients and how we treat one another. These biases influence who is respected, who burns out and who is promoted.

By these measures, we’re not doing well. Female physicians are more than twice as likely to commit suicide as the general population. They earn significantly less than their male colleagues. They’re less likely to advance to full professorships — even after controlling for productivity — and they account for only one-sixth of medical school deans and department chairs.

There are steps that might help. A pilot program at Stanford, for example, allows physicians to “bank” hours they spend mentoring others or serving on committees. Those hours can then be used as credits for child care, dry cleaning pickup, ready-made meals, housekeeping and handyman services. Preliminary results are promising, and suggest that the program has increased job satisfaction, improved work-life balance and reduced turnover.

As these initiatives evolve, they could be evaluated to see not only if they improve physician well-being, but also if they promote career advancement, cut medical errors or improve patient satisfaction.

We can all also examine our own biases. Those of us evaluating medical students and residents, for example, could make it a point to ask ourselves whether a trainee’s gender — or race or ethnicity or accent — might have affected our assessment.

And more women in leadership and mentorship roles may help with the larger cultural shift that seems necessary. It’s possible that gaps in gender pay, promotion and mental health will narrow as medicine shifts from a boys club to one with more women. It’s also possible they will not. Disparities don’t close on their own. They close because we close them.

By Dhruv Khullar

Source:New York Times

Rains leave a trail of destruction

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Chilubi Member of Parliament, Rosalia Fundanga has appealed to the Disaster Management and Mitigation Unit to move in and re-construct some schools damaged by heavy rains.

Mrs. Fundanga has appealed for support to ensure the school buildings are worked on before the start of the next term in 2018.

She told ZNBC News in Chilubi that there is need to have roofing sheets, so that works are done on the school.
Three weeks ago, heavy rains hit Chilubi Island, destroying property, ranging from schools to houses.

PF firm on corruption- Wina

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Vice President Inonge wina

Vice President Inonge Wina says the Patriotic Front -PF- administration has not diverted from its stance on fighting corruption.Ms. Wina said government wants to achieve zero tolerance against the vice.

She said there is need to put in place punitive measures and new strategies that will see zero tolerance against corruption and a need to revisit laws and financial regulations to stop pilfering of public resources.

The Vice president said it is important for the Anti-Corruption Commission to enhance its capacity to detect and mitigate corruption if it is to gain public confidence and trust among Zambians.She said this in Parliament when she delivered a policy statement on the budget estimates for the ACC for 2018.

Mrs. Wina said the ACC should build and strengthen programs that will see reforms that are geared to fighting corruption.She explained that over 25 million Kwacha will be channeled to the operations of the commission.

And during the debate, Nkeyema Member of parliament Kapelwa Mbangweta challenged the ACC to ensure that the carry out their mandate effectively.Kanchibiya Member of Parliament Martin Malama urged the Commission to be aggressive in fighting corruption.

UPND Monze Member of parliament Jack Mwiimbu urged Zambians to support the commission by reporting cases of corruption.

 

ZNBC

Slap D unveils video for “Forget You” that stars socialite, Iris Kaingu

Slapdee unveiled the music video for a song off his critically accliamed BW2 album. The track is titled “Forget You” featuring vocals from Kalu Konga and a fabulous production laced by Mr. Starsh.

The stunning clip features the celebrated socialite – Iris Kaingu. Shot and directed by MT Productions.

Launch of 2017 edition of DStv Eutelsat Star Awards competition

THE 2017 DStv Eutelsat Star Awards competition is back with a bang after scooping a Better Satellite Award at the third annual Better Satellite World Awards gala dinner in London last night.  The awards honour established companies along with disruptive innovators who make the world a more prosperous, healthier, better-educated, sustainable and inclusive home for humankind. Drawing on six years of success across the continent, the DStv Eutelsat Star Awards is returning for a 7th edition.

Students from secondary (high) or combined schools can enter from today by writing a creative essay or designing a poster based on the following topic: “It’s sixty years since the first satellite, Sputnik, was launched, broadcasting a unique and easily captured ‘beep, beep, beep’ signal. Looking back at this historic moment, write an essay or design a poster depicting how satellites have launched humankind into the 21st Century and acted as a unifier.” 

Reach for the stars

The prizes of this innovative competition are as big as the dreams of a young, energised African generation ready to shape the evolution of our continent. Selected from thousands of entries by a high-standard jury, the essay winner will be eligible for a once-in-a-lifetime trip for two to Paris, France in the company of Eutelsat, and onwards to French Guiana to see a rocket launch into space. The poster winner will win a trip for two to South Africa which includes a visit to the South African National Space Agency as well as exploration of several heritage sites as guests of MultiChoice Africa. The schools attended by the two winners will also receive a DStv installation, including a dish, TV, decoder and free access to the DStv Education Package. 

Open to learners with a passion for technology

The DStv Eutelsat Star Awards are open to all learners from secondary (high) or combined schools on the continent where MultiChoice Africa maintains operations. Entry forms can be obtained from any MultiChoice Resource Centre, the nearest MultiChoice office or via www.dstvstarawards.com. Entries are accepted in English, French and Portuguese and will be judged on the basis of high-standard criteria of accuracy, creativity, originality and innovation. For the first time this year students are also invited to engage with the Awards community through a dedicated Facebook page. 

The competition closes on 12 February 2018. Only entries submitted on the official entry form will be eligible. The overall winners will be announced at an awards ceremony in March 2018.

All details on the judging criteria, national prizes and finalists’ selection are available on the DStv Eutelsat Star Awards website: http://www.dstvstarawards.com/about.html

Supporting Africa’s education needs

MultiChoice Africa and Eutelsat are convinced of the power of science and technology education to encourage young minds to positively change their world. Now in its 7th year, their joint initiative, the DStv Eutelsat Star Awards, inspire innovative thinking among a young African generation. This pan-African collaboration has created a meaningful engagement with students, the academic community and the scientific world. Since the start of the DStv Eutelsat Star Awards in 2011, over 6,000 students have taken part in this unique competition.

Join us on Facebook to get exclusive updates and inspiration:         fb.me/DStvEutelsatStarAwards

Pictures of the week

First Lady Esther Lungu during the Special Olympics Zambia Unified Sports Day  at OYDC
First Lady Esther Lungu during the Special Olympics Zambia Unified Sports Day  at OYDC
First Lady Esther Lungu during the Special Olympics Zambia Unified Sports Day  at OYDC
First Lady Esther Lungu during the Special Olympics Zambia Unified Sports Day  at OYDC
First Lady Esther Lungu during the Special Olympics Zambia Unified Sports Day  at OYDC
First Lady Esther Lungu during the Special Olympics Zambia Unified Sports Day  at OYDC
National Director of Duke Edinburgh for Zambia,Twaambo Chikoye
confers with a Board member,Richard Thompson during the gold Duke
Edinburgh International Awards
Minister of Gender Victoria Kalima confers with her Permanent Secretary  Dr. Felix Phiri during the  Launch the National Plan On Ending Child Marriage 2016-2021 at Radisson Blue
Lions Club Governor for District 413 Zambia, Ms Jessica Choobe, handing over the donated materials to the refugee leader at Kenani refugee transit centre.
Hon. Mutati receives a dividend cheque from Hon. Mushimba on behalf of Zambia Airports Corporation
Pupils from Matero Boys Secondary School, Libala Secondary School and Kabulonga Girls Secondary School show there joy after the launch of the Study Hub Pilot
A pupil of Banani International school,Mubanga bwalya receives
a certificate from President of National Restoration Party,Elias
Chipimo during the gold Duke Edinburgh International Award
A pupil of Banani International school ,Mutano Mubanda
receives a certificate from President of National Restoration
Party,Elias Chipimo during the gold Duke Edinburgh International Award
National Director of Duke Edinburgh for Zambia,Twaambo Chikoye
confers with President of NAREP,Elias Chipimo during the gold Duke
Edinburgh International Awards

Ghana President: What has Africa done the last 60 years of independence?

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File:29th Ordinary Session of the Assembly of the AU.

Hosting President Emanuel Macron of France on 30 November last week, Ghana President Nana Akufo-Addo said many things to his audience and host. But one key message was something like: What have African leaders done for the continent in the last 60 years of independence? He complained against continuous begging from Europe. For sure, at independence and many years after, most African countries planned their own national budgets with their own resources. But today, most if not all of them do not own their budgets because almost half of it is funded by foreign donors, leading to some to say that Africa has lost its soul. For example, “Agenda 2063, or the Africa that we want” is very good on paper. Yet, the African Union has no self-financing budget to achieve the goals. In other words, a large part of the funding will come from external partners. That is why the Ghana President is right. He called for Africa that believes in itself, an Africa that is economically self-reliant and provides hope and job opportunities for young people to own within Africa the same things that they are seeking as they migrate to Europe in order to prevent migration.

But other African Presidents, whose governance is shrouded in a cloak of secrecy should say and act the same way and stop inflating the importance of their achievements which only they, and not the people see. They should emulate the courage and honesty of the West African leader. In fact, the African Union should put this item on its agenda whenever heads of state meet, to discuss, “Where did Africa go wrong? How can Africa restore some important economic achievements it made in the past?

The purpose of this article is to use numbers to explain what the Ghanaian leader is talking about, and we use Ghana itself.

Ghana’s ranking in World Bank Doing Business drops

Not long ago, it was Ghana that the World Bank and International Monetary Fund were extolling for its economic achievements. But this was largely macro-economic achievements. Yet, we know that economic advancement is not simply macro-economic, although this is quite important as a base. On 2 November this year, an article that said, “Ghana drops 12 places in the latest World Bank Doing Business Report. According to the report, the country dropped from 108 in 2017 to 120 in 2018.”

What do we know about Ghana’s regional economic competitiveness?

Table 1: Ghana’s ranking in African countries’ economies (GDP) in $ Billions

  1970 GDP in $ Billions   2016 GDP in $ Billions
         Africa 108          Africa 2,238
1          Nigeria 24          Nigeria 428
2          South Africa 19          South Africa 292
3          Egypt 8          Egypt 284
4          Algeria 5          Algeria 166
5          DRC 5          Angola 117
6          Morocco 5          Morocco 103
7          Libya 4          Sudan 93
8          Angola 4          Kenya 69
9          Mozambique 4          Ethiopia 67
10          Ghana 4          South Sudan 64
11          Tanzania 48
12          Ghana 43

Source: Unctadstat

What do we know about Ghana’s global competitiveness in trade?

Since I am a trade expert, let me use two simple trade indicators that may help us explain how Ghana has performed in its participation in international trade, given that it is one of the countries in Africa gifted with natural resources that it exports. Ghana exports Gold and crude petroleum as two key products.

When the Ghanaian President complains and asks, “What has Africa achieved in the last 60 years of independence?”, again, it is better to look at his own country’s performance in international trade because trade is an important source of finance. As the President says, Africa is gifted with huge natural resources which it exports and should make the continent self-sufficient and stop asking for handouts. Yet, according to numbers, his predecessors disappointed not only Ghanaians but Africans. In the last 60 years that Ghana has been independent, it has lost its share in international trade drastically, from 0.23% in 1957 when it got independence to 0.07% in 2016 as Figure 1 below shows. According to the President, it is incomprehensible that a country blessed with many natural resources that it has been exporting to the world in the last 60 years has lamentably failed to compete globally. Instead of inheriting and maintaining a growing share of 1950 of 0.35% or in 1957 of 0.23%, which by today would have made immense contribution to the growth of the economy, create jobs and reduce poverty, leaders that presided over the country failed the people and allowed other countries in the world to grab the share while Ghana’s share went into the abyss of erosion. But Ghana is not alone. Most, if not all African countries lost their share in international trade in the last 60 years. We can provide numbers if asked.

The images show that Ghana, a rentier state is making money from exports but refusing to diversify and add value to its exports

Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana’s first President called for a united African economy. But he unfortunately died without seeing it diversify or upgrade exports. I heard when I was at school that Malaysians used to go to Ghana to learn about export diversification of palm oil because the African country was more advanced then. 60 years after independence, Malaysia is exporting more value added products from palm oil than Ghana does. 60 years have passed since its independence and Ghana, inexplicably continues to export more primary commodities than processed products. The image you see in Figure 2 below shows that in the last 20 years, despite repeated political calls to diversify and add value to exports, Ghana provides one of the worst examples of a rentier state, obtaining cash from exports of Gold and petroleum but refusing profusely to upgrade. The red line on top shows the share of exports of primary commodities in Ghana’s total exports to the world and this has been consistently rising from 90% in 1995 to 92% in 2016 while the share for exports of manufactured goods remained at below 10%. Like Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Sudan, Nigeria and Zambia, all rentier states, Ghana’s performance in upgrading its exports has been appalling therefore a very bad example of the Africa we want. The Africa we want must develop a culture of innovation, of upgrading, of moving into global value chains and networks, of ending the commodity dependence syndrome, of creating jobs, ending poverty and empowering its citizens to walk upright instead or downright in the world where its people will be respected and not looked at as beggars. We therefore hope before he leaves office, President Addo will be remembered differently from his predecessors who invested in more talk and showboating than action.

Don’t cry for me, cry for yourselves and for your children

The other question that President Addo asked was, “Why Africa falls behind Asian countries like Singapore of Malaysia whose economies 60 years ago were more inferior to some countries like Ghana or Africa? The unfortunate answer to his Excellency’s question is that it is no longer necessary to compare Africa’s performance with Asia. Instead, we now compare Africa with small countries like Viet Nam. As figure 3 shows for example, Viet Nam has overtaken the whole continent of Africa in exports of manufactured goods. In 195, Africa exported $ 28 billion compared to Viet Nam’s $ 2 billion. In 2016, we see that Viet Nam exported almost $139 billion relative to Africa’s $91 billion.

Concluding remarks

Don’t cry for me, cry for yourselves and for your children. These numbers must be discussed in African Union meetings. Where did Africa go wrong? Why is Africa being overtaken by small countries? Why are we discussing irrelevant things in the African Union instead of real issues that our countries are facing? How can we learn from countries like Viet Nam? We can only learn by mixing with the country, yet there are only about five African countries with Embassies in Viet Nam. Ghana has a mission in Malaysia for many years, but what has the African country learnt from Malaysia in terms of upgrading their exports? Why do African countries have Embassies in countries that are experts in processing exports but are not learning anything? Why can’t African countries ask their Asian partners, using South-South Cooperation to learn how to upgrade exports as the priority goal of the Embassy? Now Africa has China, what is Africa getting from China? We prefer to ask for a state of the art African Union headquarters building in Addis Ababa from China instead of a building that trains young African entrepreneurs innovations, industrial skills, how to make toys, etc. When China finally leaves Africa in the next 30 years when copper, petroleum oil, Gold and other natural resources are dry, what shall we remember the Asian country for? Shall we remember that it built football stadiums, the African Union headquarters, roads and things which we can do ourselves?

By Economic.Governance

400, 000 households on SCT country wide

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Minister for Community Development and Social Welfare, Emerine Kabanshi, says over Four Hundred Thousand (400,000) households have been enrolled on the Social Cash Transfer (SCT) programme countrywide.

Ms Kabanshi says the programme is targeting to enumerate and register over Five Hundred and Ninety Thousand (590,000) vulnerable households across the country before the end of 2017.

ZANIS in Kabwe reports that Ms Kabanshi said this in a speech read for her by the Ministry’s Permanent Secretary Howard Sikwela during a workshop for lessons learnt under Social Cash Transfer held at Misuku Lodge.

Ms Kabanshi explained that the government places importance on improving the implementation of the SCT despite the numerous challenges the ministry faces.

“Social protection programmes and Social Cash Transfers in particular are key to fighting poverty and its dire effects including the inter-generational spill over” she said.

The SCT programme has scaled up to Five Hundred and Ninety Thousand (590, 000) beneficiaries compared to Two Hundred and Forty Two Thousand (242,000) beneficiaries in 2016.

Meanwhile Acting Director for Social Welfare Department, Kennedy Mumba, said all districts are done with community validation process.

Mr Mumba said the workshop is meant to share and document how the districts fared in the area of Social Cash Transfer.

He said he is happy with the progress and applauded all those that took part in the enumeration, registration, and validation programmes for their commitment.

Suspected Wizard found naked at a farm in Kazungula District

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A 47-year-old Deputy village headman of Ndangalaza village in Makunka’s area in Kazungula district in   Southern Province was allegedly found naked in another man’s farm between 06:00 and 7:00 hours.

ZANIS reports that according to an eyewitness,  Benson Chazanga of Mulingula village said Mr Arthur Hamusinza was allegedly believed to have been practicing witchcraft in someone’s farm.

Mr. Chazanga said it was bizarre to find an old man allegedly naked in someone’s farm very early in the morning  “ unless the person was practicing witchcraft.”

He said the community suspects that Mr. Musinza was attempting to be-witch the owner of the farm so that he would not produce enough food during the next harvesting period.

Mr. Chazanga told ZANIS in an interview today that since witchcraft was common in most rural areas, it was certain that the suspect is an alleged wizard.

He said village headmen around the area are planning to hold a meeting on Friday this week to decide what to do to the suspected wizard.

Mr. Chazanga charged that the man used to live in Sichifulo Game Management area in Chief Nyawa’s chiefdom and came to ask for land to stay in Sekute’s chiefdom after he was chased from Sichifulo Game Management area by Zambia Wildlife Authority (ZAWA) officials.

And commenting over the same issue, Mike Mundanda of Makunka area said it was a sad development that a visitor in the area could do such a thing because he was supposed to exhibit good morals by emulating the owners of the land who accommodated him in Sekute’s chiefdom.

Mr. Mundanda said there have never been cases of suspected witchcraft reported in the area for a long time now except the current scenario involving a visitor which has left many people with different feelings.

He said the village headmen will decide his fate during a meeting to be held on Friday whether to chase him out of the area or not.

When contacted for a comment the suspected wizard said he run away from his house in the night to go and hide in someone’s farm because he was scared of ZAWA officials who were reported to be in the area.

Commodity prices and rentals increased in Ndola ahead of new salaries

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Some concerned civil servants in Ndola district in Copperbelt province says the salary increment which is expected next month should not result in increased rent and essential commodities in the area.

Mrs Memory Ndeila a teacher by profession notes that it was unfair for landlords in the area to have increased rentals by 25 percent already in expectation of increased civil servants’ salaries who have been awarded increment of less than 10 percent effective next month.

 She  explained that it was unfair for someone who gets an increment of five percent to have his or her rentals increased by 25 percent.

 “So these landlords that want to increase the rental should also increase them according to the salary percentage increment. If you get a 5 percent increment then the landlord should also consider giving you a 5% increment on rentals and not the 25 percent or 50 percent they are coming up with,” she said.

 Another resident observed that an upward adjustment in commodity prices would not be very fair considering the electricity tariffs and fuel prices had already been adjusted upward.

 “As civil servants we are not looking forward to having prices of various commodities increased for the simple reason already government has increased the price of fuel and also the electricity tariffs have been adjusted upwards.

 Salaries for public service workers will be increased next year.

 This is according to a statement on the proposed 2016-2018 Medium Term Expenditure Framework issued by Secretary to the Treasury Mr. Fredson Yamba.

 He, however, cautioned that the overall size of the public sector pay as a share of GDP should not rise during the period 2016-2018.The public service pay is therefore programmed to fall to 8.4 percent of the GDP by 2018.

HH demands that Tayali apologizes for calling him a Freemason or face court

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HH speaking to Journalists outside the Cathedral
UPND Leader Hakainde Hichilema

Opposition leader Hakainde Hichilema has issued a 48 hour ultimatum to EPP leader Chilufya Tayali to apologize and withdraw his recent statement that the UPND President is a Freemason.

According to Mr Hichilema’s lawyers L.M Chambers, Mr Tayali should retract the statement, issue an apology within 72 hours or face a legal suit.

The matters relates to a Facebook post on Mr Tayali’s page in which he alleged that he can prove that Mr Hichilema practices Freemasonry.

It later emerged that Mr Tayali fabricated the WhatsApp conversation which was purported to have taken place between Mr Hichilema and a South African based Freemason colleague.

But Mr Tayali has vowed that he will not withdraw the statement.

He said he cannot wait to face Mr Hichilema in court and that he will use the court hearing as an opportunity to expose the UPND leader.

“There times when jack-pot comes your way and you should never hesitate to take it. This is good, I would love to meet HH in court, and since his lawyers are taking things from social media, let them get this one as well,” Mr Tayali said.

He vowed, lI am not retracting anything, let HH go to court immediately, I shall meet him there so that we can talk about a lot of things. I have a number of questions for HH, this is my chance. I will make him retire from politics and he will thank me later for the favor.”

Commodity prices and rentals increased in Ndola ahead of new salaries

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Some concerned civil servants in Ndola district in Copperbelt province says the salary increment which is expected next month should not result in increased rent and essential commodities in the area.

.

Mrs Memory Ndeila a teacher by profession notes that it was unfair for landlords in the area to have increased rentals by 25 percent already in expectation of increased civil servants’ salaries who are have been awarded increment of less than 10 percent effective next month.

She explained that it was unfair for someone who gets an increment of five percent to have his or her rentals increased by 25 percent.

“So these landlords that want to increase the rental should also increase them according to the salary percentage increment. If you get a 5 percent increment then the landlord should also consider giving you a 5% increment on rentals and not the 25 percent or 50 percent they are coming up with,” she said.

Another resident observed that an upward adjustment in commodity prices would not be very fair considering the electricity tariffs and fuel prices had already been adjusted upward.

“As civil servants we are not looking forward to having prices of various commodities increased for the simple reason already government has increased the price of fuel and also the electricity tariffs have been adjusted upwards.

Salaries for public service workers will be increased next year.

This is according to a statement on the proposed 2016-2018 Medium Term Expenditure Framework issued by Secretary to the Treasury Mr. Fredson Yamba.

He however cautioned that the overall size of the public sector pay as a share of GDP should not rise during the period 2016-2018.The public service pay is therefore programmed to fall to 8.4 percent of the GDP by 2018.

Ndola motorists call for user friendly issuance of drivers’ licenses

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Some motorists in Ndola City in Copperbelt province have appealed to the Road Traffic and Safety Agency (RTSA) to consider introducing a more user friendly system of issuance of drivers licenses.

ZANIS Ndola reports that some motorists complained that acquiring of drivers licenses in Ndola was marred with inefficiency and irregularities.

A concerned driver Simon Zulu who applied for a license alleged that some officers at the agency were biased when dealing with clients.

He explained that some clients were given priority and attended to swiftly while others were made to wait in queues for long periods of time.

“When some of us go there, we wait in queues, while others just go straight to the counters and are attended to, when we complain they make us fail the tests,” he complained.

Another applicant Andrew Mubanga complained that even successful applicants were being inconvenienced by the agency as they took their time to issue the license.

“Imagine you are in the queue before lunch time then at 13:00 hours you are told they are closing for lunch, you have to come back later. Why can’t they work shifts? This is why we don’t develop as a country,” he said.

Another applicant Maybin Chewe advised that RTSA Ndola should speed up the process of renewing old licenses.

“My appeal is to RTSA Ndola to speed up the process of renewing one’s old license. It should not take as long as a first time applicant,” he said.

The residents have since appealed to the agency to be more efficient in its operations considering that it offers very cardinal services to the general public.

Efforts to get RTSA Head of Public Relations Fred Mubanga to comment on the matter failed by broadcast time as he was unreachable on his mobile phone.

Veteran Kitwe United supporter salutes sides promotion

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80-year-old Kitwe United supporter Vincent Kabanda has saluted Chingalika for securing promotion back to the FAZ Super Division.

The Buchi Boys are back in the topflight league after winning the 2017 FAZ Division 1 Zone 2 championship with 62 points from 30 matches.

“I am very excited that we are finally back in the Super Division. We need to thank God and the boys for their hard work,” Kabanda said at Garden Park Stadium.

Kitwe last tested Super Division football in 2006.

“Now we will be playing with Super Division teams like Zesco United and Nkana. This is good news for us,” he said.

Kitwe needed a 2-0 win over Zesco Luapula in Mansa on Sunday on the final day of the season to clinch promotion.

“I didn’t go to Mansa but I was following the game through phone updates. At first I heard that we have scored one goal and later we scored another and from there I knew we had done it,” Kabanda recounted.