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Lusaka based FIFA referee, Wilson Mpanisi has retired at the age of 45.
Mpanisi announced his retirement in an exclusive interview with LT
Sports in Kitwe, after officiating Saturday’s Barclays Cup Final
between Power Dynamos and Konkola Blades.
He stated that he has quit refereeing in order to give opportunities
to upcoming match officials in the country and described his
refereeing career as a success.
Mpanisi has since urged upcoming referees to be disciplined.
“I think have done what I am supposed to do. I have been in this
business of refereeing for the past 28 years and I think after
refereeing there is more I can do in football,” he said.
“I have done my part let the younger ones pick it up from where I
have left and I am happy my last game has been a cup final,” Mpanisi
added.
File:Western Province Minister Nathaniel Mubukwanu doing a sack race during the launch of the (SADC) and Integrated Campaign on Malaria, Maternal, Newborn Child Health Nutrition week at Mongu Independence Stadium in Mongu
Government has dismissed rumors circulating suggesting that there is tension between the Patriotic Front government and the Litunga also that a team of paramilitary was sent to Barotseland.
He told a media briefing in Mongu that the PF government has not sent any paramilitary officers in the district since it came to power.
The Minister said the only security officers he recalls coming to Mongu was a brass band that came to play during this year’s Independence Day celebrations at the stadium.
“I remember Luena Barracks brass band having come to Mongu during this year’s Independence Day celebrations specifically to play music for us and not to be sent to Barotseland as claimed by some people,” he added.
Western Province Minister Nathaniel Mubukwanu said BRE has welcomed the PF government at different government forums and has already made it clear that the establishment is committed to work with the government of the day.
Mr. Mubukwanu who is also ruling PF’s Mongu Central Member of Parliament described as cheap propaganda rumours that government has tension with the Litunga adding that it was just mere internet gossip.
“This is what crazy people are busy putting on the internet, the BRE has welcomed our government with two hands, I mean you yourselves as JournalistS have seen them attend and participate in many government programmes since we came into power not so?” Mubukwanu said.
Mr. Mubukwanu said both BRE and the PF government are responsible citizens whose main objective is to ensure that Western Province is developed and has since advised all not to listen to people whose intentions are to mislead the nation with lies.
He emphasized that the Patriotic Front government is in good books with the Litunga and the Barotse Royal Establishment as a whole.
President Michael Sata has warned that the law will be fully applied on politicians who are mobilising and inciting chiefs and people in North-Western Province to revolt against the Patriotic Front (PF) which was duly elected government.
This is contained in a press statement released to the media by special assistant to the president for Press and public relations George Chellah.
According to the statement, the President has been briefed on the subversive activities by some known opposition politicians inciting their royal highnesses in the region to make demands that are tantamount to black-mailing government on some issues including public service appointments pertaining to the provincial administration of North-Western Province.
At a Provincial Council of Chiefs Meeting held on 3rd December 2011 in Kabompo, chiefs presented two documents that contained demands that are identical to the ones being championed by a group seeking to undermine the PF government so that on-going corruption investigations against them could be stopped.
The President warns that no citizen, regardless of their status in society must abuse the freedom of speech and association to engage in activities promoting a revolt against a democratically elected government.
“My government was elected with a clear mandate to steer the affairs of state for the next five years and those with grievances have an option to seek legal recourse but not to mobilise any section of society into a revolt or any other subversive activities. This borders on treasonable acts and the law will take its course,” President Sata says.
“Whilst acknowledging that some regions of the country did not vote for us and that does not mean we have no jurisdiction over those areas. And that does not mean we are sidelining any region. We are doing our very best to allocate resources and appointments equitably.”
The President notes the order of an electoral democracy is such that those who lose elections are expected to remain loyal to the fundamental legitimacy of the state by accepting the will of the people expressed through the ballot. Whilst legitimate opposition is to be tolerated, the President does not accept that some people must take advantage of the broad freedoms government has provided to undermine the basic foundations upon which the unity of the state is built.
“Zambia is a unitary state derived from the constitution as the supreme law of the land and it shall remain as such. Our government will always remain open to genuine dialogue on national issues but will not be blackmailed,” President Sata says.
“On that basis, as Commander-in-Chief, I have instructed the security wings to deal with anybody inciting any form of instability. No one must use this transition period to destabilize the country. We have just come from the polls and people expressed their free will and no one has a right to frustrate that collective resolve.”
Meanwhile the President has advised some elements seeking to cause confusion over the ongoing process to resolve the problems in Western Province to keep away from such activities.
Sports minister Fackson Shamenda has told Faz to shape-up before heading to the Africa Cup in January.
Shamenda said this at the Olympic Youth Development Centre in Lusaka on Wednesday morning that Government has no problems supporting sports associations as long as they had good administrators.
“We shall give all the necessary support to the players and to the team. All we are saying is the administrators, if they are doing the wrong things, honestly I would rather not go the Africa Cup than go with an undisciplined bunch of persons because our performance cannot be guaranteed success there,” Shamenda said.
Shamenda has been critical in the manner in which ex-Zambia coach Dario Bonetti was fired and later the hiring of Herve Renard, the latter whom Government says it will not foot his salary.
“Government has always been funding these (National team) programs all we are asking for is for sanity to prevail,” he said.
“Even if they (FAZ) have the money it is important to consult, this is sport. Football is like a religion in our country so it’s important for all us. We need to listen to everybody football is not about football administrators and the players.”
Reports that Zamtel management is resisting to be audited by the Auditor General Anna Chifungula have shocked Transparency International Zambia -TIZ-.
TIZ President Reuben Lifuka says it is unfortunate that Zamtel is not opening its doors to the auditor general, despite the 25% stake that Zambia holds in the telecommunications company.
Mr. Lifuka was speaking on Tuesday in an interview with ZNBC News in Lusaka.
Media reports emerged recently that Zamtel is resisting to be audited by the Auditor General.
Auditor General Chifungula said Zamtel was resisting because the government was a minority shareholder.
The auditor general has since written to Attorney General Mumba Malila seeking legal opinion on the Zamtel audit.
[ZNBC]
COMMITTEE of Citizens executive director Gregory Chifire
THE man who last week alleged that President Sata’s son, Mulenga, bought two luxury vehicles worth K1.8 billion within a period of 60 days after his father ascended to the presidency yesterday failed to show up at the Drug Enforcement Commission (DEC) after being summoned.
Gregory Chifire, executive director of a non-governmental organisation called Committee of Citizens, kept investigative officers waiting the whole day in vain.
DEC acting public relations officer Samuel Silomba confirmed the development yesterday.
Mr Chifire had earlier told DEC officers handling the matter that he would present himself to them at an appropriate time in the day to substantiate his claims.
After not showing up the whole morning, Mr Chifire assured DEC that he would definitely appear before close of business at 17:00 hours.
Still, he failed to show up and claimed he was “busy” and promised to show up today.
DEC through its spokesperson, Mr Silomba, told the Daily Mail that its officers will continue waiting for him (today).
“We don’t want to be misunderstood that we are harassing him. So we will wait for him, since he is the complainant,” Mr Silomba said.
He said DEC wants to do a professional job and so will not move further without hearing from Mr Chifire.
Mr Silomba said DEC has already interviewed Mr Sata (Mulenga) over the matter but will not divulge the findings until the investigations are concluded.
He simply stated that Mr Sata had cooperated well.
Efforts by the Daily Mail to get a comment from Mr Chifire failed as his mobile phone was off by press time.
But in an interview on Monday, Mr Chifire said he is merely a whistle-blower.
He said there’s no criminality in whistle-blowing and pledged to reveal more allegations on the matter.
President Sata has directed law enforcement agencies to probe his son over the allegations made by Mr Chifire.
President Sata said there will be no sacred cows in the fight against corruption.
Parliament has ordered Finance Minister Alexander Chikwanda to issue a comprehensive statement to the house over the illegally printed money circulating in the country.
Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly Mkhondo Lungu made the order after Monze Central UPND Member of Parliament Jack Mwiimbu rose on a point of order in parliament on Tuesday.
Mr. Mwiimbu had asked the Deputy Speaker whether it was in order for the PF Government to remain quite over what he termed as a serious national matter.
The Monze parliamentarian produced a fifty thousand kwacha note which was not printed by Thomas De La Rue and laid it on the table of the house.
Mr. Mwiimbu says the PF Government has created a lot of anxiety in the country and should not remain mute on the matter.
On Tuesday, President Michael Sata revealed that the MMD government illegally printed money from two other printers apart from De la rue which is in Circulation.
Northern Province Permanent Secretary Emmanuel Mwamba
Northern Province Permanent Secretary Emmanuel Mwamba has described as a scandal the decision by the previous government to spend K16.1 billion to do a 12 kilometres stretch of township roads in the rural district of Luwingu.
Mr Mwamba said it was wasteful to spend K16.1 billion on 12 kilometres of deserted township roads when Luwingu District lacked many basic t hings and infrastructure.
The contract to do the township roads in Luwingu was given by Road Development Agency (RDA) and is being done by Sable Transport.
Mr Mwamba, who is on tour of Luwingu, Chilubi, Mporokoso and Kaputa districts addressed district heads in Luwingu where he said Luwingu District did not have an ambulance, an x-ray department and basic facilities for its hospital at the boma and wondered how a decision was made to do a 12 kilometre stretch costing K16.1billion.
He stated that Luwingu had schools with no desks, and many schools remained with thatched roofs and were experiencing a critical shortage of teacher’s houses.
He also noted that the health centres were far apart to service the huge communities and also had inadequate facilities.
Mr Mwamba feared that the poor state of the Luwingu-Mansa Road which provided a shorter link to Luapula Province was threatened with closure during rainy season.
He bemoaned the state of the only secondary school, Luwingu High School whose infrastructure was in a dilapidated state and had a pupil population of more than 2500.
He stated that the school needed urgent repairs to be done to its roofs, kitchen and dormitories.
Mr Mwamba also directed Chambeshi Water and Sewerage to immediately restore water supply to Luwingu that has gone without piped water for the last eight months after a pump broke down.
He said despite the difficulties, Chambeshi Water and Sewerage was going through, it was unacceptable that the company would allow a community to go without water for such a long time because of a failed pump.
He said his office had written to the Minister of Finance to help Chambeshi Water and Sewerage Company secure US$60million longterm finance with the Africa Development Bank (ADB) to rehabilitate and upgrade the water supply infrastructure in Northern Province.
He said Government had secured similar loans in the recent past and disbursed it to Nkana and Mulonga water companies on the Copperbelt and North-Western provinces.
Mr Mwamba said his office has embarked on a retention scheme in rural areas for teachers and nurses.
He said the scheme when fully fledged would encourage rural communities to nominate eligible persons for training at teacher and nursing training institutions in the province.
He said upon completion, the persons drawn from such rural communities would travel back and work in those communities without deserting them as is the current case for professionals from urban areas posted who abandon their posting because of the harsh environment in these rural areas.
He said in the long term, these measures would ensure that schools and health centres will be manned by qualified staff who come from these areas and would therefore have a genuine commitment to serve their rural communities.
Mr Mwamba also demanded a report from Luwingu District Cooperative Union who are agents of FRA, to provide answers why maize was allowed to be soaked by rains and was lying in unauthorised satellite depots when Government had spent huge sums of money to pay for it.
THE Drug-Enforcement Commission (DEC) has instituted investigations to establish the source of the US$1 million (about K5 billion) held in a commercial bank account by Mpundu Trust, which is linked to former President, Rupiah Banda.
DEC acting spokesperson, Samuel Silomba said in an interview in Lusaka yesterday that a series of investigations into the conduct of former leaders had commenced and that Mpundu Trust was among the institutions under probe.
President Michael Sata on Monday instructed law-enforcement agencies to investigate how a private bank account belonging to Mpundu Trust got to hold a colossal sum of $1 million.
The directive comes in the wake of revelations reaching the president that Mpundu Trust had unexplained funds in one of the commercial banks in the country.
Asked how the investigative wings would get round the veil of immunity, if at all it was established that there was need to probe the former president who still enjoys presidential immunity, Mr Silomba assured that “investigations would still be conducted”, without giving further details.??Recent media reports revealed that Mpundu Trust was linked to former president Banda.
In a statement released by his special assistant for Press and public relations George Chellah on Monday, Mr Sata said it should be known from the onset that the decision to probe Mpundu Trust was without malice or ill-motive but simply to set the record straight by ensuring that the due process of the law applied.
FINANCE Bank Zambia (FBZ) Limited chairperson, Rajan Mahtani, has alleged that the former regime under president Rupiah Banda, externalised over K50 billion to the United Kingdom and South Africa at the time the bank was under seizure.
Mr Mahtani claimed that a total of K52 billion was externalised through the Bank of Zambia (BoZ) to named UK and South African-based companies.
He made the allegations at a media briefing in Lusaka yesterday, saying the previous regime separately externalised K17 billion to a London-based company and US$7 million (about K35 billion) to South Africa.
Mr Mahtani alleged that the K17 billion was transmitted to a company in London that was contracted to audit the bank shortly after it was repossessed while a named forensics company from South Africa was specifically contracted to investigate Dr Mahtani and was paid an equivalent of K35 billion ($7 million).
The FBZ chairperson said steps had been taken to ensure that the bank recovered the money because the fees were unjustifiably too high.
Dr Mathani displays stitches from his open heart operation in South Africa recently. This was during a press briefing in Lusaka.
Mr Mahtani said what was even more worrying was that the audit was undertaken after the bank obtained a court order to restrain the company from going ahead.
Dr Mahtani also said the decision by the previous government to repossess and sell the bank was ill-conceived and was done to punish him because of the long-standing differences the bank had with a former government official before he joined the government.
He alleged that the official borrowed a substantial amount of money from the bank to purchase a house and never paid back until the board decided to grab a house situated in Lusaka’s Kabulonga area.
On the audit, Dr Mahtani said there had been no firm which had ever charged K17 billion for such services and wondered why the BoZ did not engage a local international audit firm.
He said as board chairperson, he was not involved in the whole transaction about the Kabulonga house and there was nothing legally wrong with the decision by the FBZ.
Dr Mahtani claimed that the sale of the bank to First National Bank at K27 billion was purely a political decision and that within the few months it operated under its original shareholders, the bank had made K60 billion profit.
According to Dr Mahtani, FBZ made minor mistakes because the officials were human beings but such did not warrant the closure of a viable business.?
He said FBZ shareholders, Credit Suisse have resolved to fund the 500 million Euro bonds the Government intended to float and hoped to act as an agent to resell the bonds as a way of showing appreciation to the Zambian Government which had reversed the transaction.
Dr Mahtani also said FBZ planned to commence the process of listing on the Lusaka, London and Johannesburg stock exchanges and that 40 per cent shares would be off-loaded by 2014.
He said he faced hardships to seek medical treatment when he was operated on at Milpark Clinic in South Africa while officials from the Drug-Enforcement Commission (DEC) followed him without good reasons.
Dr Mahtani said the bank was expected to pay K20 billion in taxes by the end of the year while the number of workers would rise to around 1,000 before the end of next year.
Meanwhile, FBZ has, with immediate effect, increased salaries for its 734 workers by K2 million across the board with the lowest paid getting at least K4.5 million per month.
Government has set its demand if they are to meet Herve Renard’s Salary.
Sports minister Fackson Shamenda repeated in a ministerial statement delivered on Manda Hill on Tuesday that Faz should now serious deal with the National Sports Council of Zambia.
And Shamenda also repeated in Parliament that Faz’s handling of Dario Bonetti’s dismissal did not please Government.
“’If the government is to meet the emoluments of the coach then therefore all parties must come to the table and discuss and agree,” Shamenda said.
“Sports is administered by National Sports Council therefore (it) must be involved in the running of the game, the current constitution recognizes this.”
Shamenda said that Governament also believed Faz should have hired a capable local coach in the interim until after the Africa Cup after Bonetti’s sacking.
Bonetti was sacked 48 hours after he guided Zambia to the 2012 Africa Cup tournament following a 0-0 draw against Libya in Chingola on October 8.
Zambia Under-20 coach Keagan Mumba has described his 5-1 win over Amajita South Africa that sealed his teams semifinal place in their final Cosafa Youth Champions Group C game as tough.
Young Chipolopolo’s win sees them through to Thursday’s semifinals where they will face Botswana who will make only their second ever and historic appearance in their last four in the tournament.
“It was tough but we utilized out chances and we meet Botswana in the semifinals,” Mumba said.
“It is not easy to play as title holders but the boys accounted for themselves well. So far, so good.
“It is not about me to be happy but all the stakeholders involved in putting the team together.”
Mumba said he was disappointed that South African coach Solly Luvhengo sounded a now familiar tone that comes with every loss to Zambia at junior level.
“As usual South Africa cried foul on age cheating. Marely sour grapes and they are sour losers,” Mumba said.
The defending Cosafa Youth Champions secured their semifinal date with Botswana thanks to a brace from the Nkana duo of Evans Kangwa and Reynold Kampamba.
Red Arrows midfielder Shadreck Malambo added the third goal in the 57th minute after Kangwa found the target in the 24th and 57th minutes.
Meanwhile, Botswana qualified from Group A to face Zambia after beating Swaziland 3-0 to top Group A.
Foreign Affairs Minister Chishimba Kambwili has called on Chinese nationals working for 15MCC in Luanshya on the Copperbelt to feel free and marry Zambian women.
But Mr. Kambwili has on the other hand warned foreigners against taking the country’s hospitality for granted by having carnal knowledge of young girls.
He further warned the two hundred and seventy Chinese nationals working at 15MCC against abusing Zambian workers.
The foreign Affairs Minister who is also Patriotic Front Roan MP says he has received disturbing reports of some Chinese nationals who abuse Zambians while at work.
He says there are laid down procedures in disciplining workers if they are at fault.
Dr Mathani displays stitches from his open heart operation in South Africa recently. This was during a press briefing in Lusaka.
Finance Bank Zambia Chairman Rajan Mahtani has disclosed that the bank intends to offload shares on the stock market by 2013.
Dr. Mahtani says the listing will be simultaneous on the Lusaka, Johannesburg and London Stock exchanges.
He told journalists at a media briefing that the intention of the listing is to empower Zambians who will be allowed to own a stake in the bank.
Dr. Mahtani says the Zambian people will also be expected to receive more financing from the Bank especially those in business like SME’s.
He disclosed that 40 percent will be offloaded in the initial phase while 20 percent of the credit Suisse shares will also be sold on the stock exchange.
Meanwhile, Dr. Mahtani disclosed that credit Suisse has withdrawn its case against the Zambian government over its shares in Finance bank that it deemed had been wrongly repossessed by the state.
At the same briefing, Dr. Mahtani said the bank is investigating the engagement of a South African forensic firm ENS, a law firm that had been contracted by the previous bank owners to investigate him.
The Citizens Forum says meaningful development can only be achieved when citizens take part in issues of governance.
Forum Executive Secretary Simon Kabanda says citizens can only participate in public affairs when power is decentralized to the districts.
Mr. Kabanda adds that nothing has been done to implement the policy ever since was launched in 2002.
He has to this effect urged the Patriotic Front led Government to ensure that decentralization is implemented and citizens contribute to the country’s development.
Meanwhile, a local musician says decentralization will help foster development in the country.
Jordan Sinkala, who is part of Impi, a duet known for its governance and social commentary songs, says Zambians want to take part in development but lack of implementation of the policy is an impediment.
Mr. Sinkala has told MUVI TV that he is in the process of producing songs which will help sensitise citizens on decentralization.
He said this on the sidelines of an orientation workshop for journalists and musicians on the decentralization policies in Lusaka.