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First Lady not distributing Government money-Kaingu

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Mrs Thandiwe Banda

Community Development and Social Services Minister Michael Kaingu has  disclosed    that the funds that the First Lady was distributing to women clubs was not Government money but that she received donations.

He said the First Lady had received enough donations from corporate firms both within and outside the country for distribution to intended beneficiaries.

Mr Kaingu took a swipe at politicians who were criticising First Lady Thandiwe Banda for distributing funds to women clubs in Northern and Luapula provinces respectively.

ZANIS reports that Mr Kaingu said it was unfortunate that some disgruntled politicians would be attacking the First Lady when she was merely doing her job of empowering vulnerable women with funds that would help them come out of poverty.

He said poverty alleviation in the country was not a fight for Government or the First Lady alone but was for all well meaning Zambians committed to ensuring that poverty levels in the country were reduced.

The Minister told journalists in Lusaka today in an interview that it was unfortunate that some people would be criticising the First Lady when the funds she was distributing were meant to economically empower vulnerable women.

ZANIS

President Banda leaves for Swaziland

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President Rupiah Banda has left for the Kingdom of Swaziland to attend the 14th COMESA Summit.

The President left this morning aboard the Presidential challenger.

President Banda is expected to join other heads of state and government at the two-day summit whose theme is “Harnessing Science and Technology for Development”.

The two- day summit, will be held at Lozitha Palace where his Majesty King Mswati the third, of the Kingdom of Swaziland will officially take over the Chairmanship of COMESA from Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe.

President Banda was seen off this morning by Vice President George Kunda, Secretary to Cabinet Joshua Kanganja, Lands Minister Gladys Lundwe and Transport Minister Geoffery Lungwangwa.

Others where, Commerce Deputy Minister, Dr Lwipa Puma and Lusaka Province Minister Charles Shawa.

The President’s delegation to the COMESA summit includes Finance Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane, Commerce Minister Felix Mutati, Foreign Affairs Deputy Minister Fashion Phiri and other senior government officials.

President Banda is expected to return home on Wednesday, immediately after the summit.

Zambia currently hosts the secretariat of COMESA.

[ZANIS]

Govt committed to promoting good reading culture

Education Minister Ms. Dora Siliya

Education Minister Dora Siliya has reiterated Government’s commitment to promoting a good reading culture among people in the country for social and economic transformation to take place.

Ms Siliya said a good reading culture among citizens in the nation was vital to unlocking the key to economic prosperity for the country as knowledge was power.

The Minister observed that Zambia has a poor reading culture, a situation which she said needed to be reversed as it was inhibiting the country’s economic development.

Ms Siliya said research has shown that no country with high illiteracy levels has ever developed, adding that Government wants to cut illiteracy levels so that the country could go beyond where it is now economically.

She said this in a speech read for her by Director of Standards and Curriculum at the Ministry of Education during celebrations to mark the 10th anniversary of Room to Read, an international Non-governmental Organisation that builds education infrastructure and supports girl child education.

Room to Read has been in Zambia for three years now and it has so far constructed 100 libraries in several basic schools in Eastern and Lusaka provinces and will construct another 95 more schools in other localities by the end of this year.

It is also sponsoring 186 secondary school girls in Chongwe district, Lusaka Province under its Girl Education Project (GEP) in its attempt to foster girl child education which was facing a lot of hurdles.

The Minister said Government wants to have a cadre of highly educated Zambians who are able to critically analyse and understand critical issues in the nation.

She said this could only be attained by first improving the literacy levels which still remains a challenge owing to the poor reading culture among the Zambian people.

Ms Siliya said equipping libraries with learning materials was critical to uplifting the country’s educational standards.

She said it was important to inculcate a good reading culture in children early in their lives so they grow up with the interest of reading.

She commended Room to Read for supplementing Government’s efforts in providing quality education for children in the country.

Ms Siliya hoped the partnership between Government and Room to Read continues until educational standards for children are uplifted to their full potential.

And Room to Read Founder John Wood was proud with the success that his organisation has achieved in the ten years it has been in existence.

Mr Wood said his dream of bringing the power of education to millions of the poorest children in different parts of the world is being realised.

He said the goal of reaching 10 million children by the year 2020 was now visible owing to the success that has been scored so far.

[ ZANIS ]

FODEP launches 2010-2012 electoral strategy

Foundation for Democratic Process (FODEP) has today launched the 2010-2012 Tripartite Electoral Strategy aimed at advocating for free and fair elections in the country.

Speaking during the launch in Lusaka today, FODEP Executive Director Charity Musamba said a credible electoral process was key to achieving poverty eradication and good governance in any democratic country.

ZANIS reports that Dr Musamba said there was need to have a credible electoral process that could help in attaining objectives set in national initiatives such the National Development Plans, Vision 2030, Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), Gender Equality, and Decentralisation policy among others.

She explained that FODEP believed that the country had changed greatly in the past decade and the recent general elections marked a political millstone that left Zambia with many new observations and lessons that could help in refining the current electoral process and system.

She added that the new perception on the electoral process and system needed to be equally considered in a bid to improve the way in which elections were conducted in Zambia.

Dr Musamba noted that FODEP had decided to launch the 2010-2012 Electoral Strategy as a result of to the lessons and observations learnt from the past general elections that have been held in the country.

She cited high prevalence of electoral malpractices, disputes and litigations, abuse of public resources, high incidences of electoral violence, voter apathy and wasted votes and non adherence to the electoral code of conduct as some of the key issues.

She explained that the 2011 tripartite elections would be a defining moment for Zambia and a test to the integrity and credibility of the country’s electoral process.

Dr Musamba stated that this was because since the 1996 elections there had been contention of election results which cast a doubt on the integrity and credibility of the electoral system.

She, however, expressed hope that the forthcoming elections may be different from the previous ones adding that this was because some concerns that affected the electoral process have been addressed in the new draft constitution.

She also disclosed that her organisations would engage political parties to ensure that they offered issue based campaigns and discourage vote buying to ensure free and fair elections that could enhance the country’s democracy.

Dr Musamba has also urged Zambians to register as voters, if they were to be part of the decision making in the 2011 elections.

[ ZANIS ]

Chiluba’s celebration shows corruption fight is over

http://www.lusakatimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/hh_hakainde
UPND president Hakainde Hichilema

United Party for National Development (UPND) leader Hakainde Hichilema says Second Republican President, Fredrick Chiluba’s smile following the Lusaka High Court ruling on the London Judgment is an indication that the fight against corruption in the country is over.

Mr Hichilema said the focus should not be on Dr Chiluba but rather on the judiciary and the MMD government which he says allows a dual justice system to exist in the country.

The UPND leader said the blame should be on the justice system which favours those who are friends with the MMD government.

Mr Hichilema called on the judiciary to examine itself and its relevance to society.

He said he could not see any value in the judiciary when Zambians have nowhere to go when they were aggrieved.

Mr Hichilema said the fight against corruption in Zambia is over and called on Zambians to understand and accept the matter at hand.

Dr Chiluba told journalists in an interview that he is genuinely smiling following the Lusaka High Court ruling on the London Judgment.
[ QFM ]

UTH records over 300 casualties

University Teaching Hospital (UTH)

The University Teaching Hospital (UTH) has recorded 318 casualty cases in the past one week.

UTH Public Relations Manager Pauline Mbangweta confirmed this to ZANIS in Lusaka yesterday.

Ms Mbangweta said UTH recorded 91 road traffick accidents and two cases resulting from gun shots.

She explained that 23 cases were recorded due to burns and an additional 174 cases were recorded due to other forms of injuries.

Ms Mbangweta said a further 28 cases due to accidental falls were recorded during the course of the week which brought the total number of casualty cases recorded at the UTH to 318.

The Public Relations Manager has also disclosed that the institution recorded 22 defilement and 19 measles cases during the same week.

She added that cases of measles have continued to drop as compared to last week when the institution recorded 27 cases.

[ ZANIS ]

NCC hands over final Draft Constitution

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THE National Constitutional Conference (NCC) yesterday handed over the final Draft Constitution and Report to Justice Minister and Vice-President George Kunda.

Receiving the two documents, Mr Kunda commended the NCC secretariat and delegates for successfully adopting the Draft Constitution saying it compared favourably with constitutions of other countries.

He said the NCC Act of 2007 stood repealed and the membership of all members has expired although some members of the secretariat would continue in office to wind up until November 30.

The NCC had introduced the limitation of two presidential terms and that parliament could not amend it and also introduced national economic planning, recognised gifts and aid-in-kind given on behalf of Zambia.

Mr Kunda said the NCC process started in 2007 when the Government responded to the recommendation by the Mung’omba Constitution Review Commission (CRC) that the Draft Constitution should be adopted by a Constituent Assembly, a constitutional conference or any representative body.

In accordance with the NCC Act, all provisions of the final draft that were adopted should be submitted to his office for presentation to parliament for enactment.

The conference decided that provisions that would alter the bill of rights and article 79 of the current Constitution should be referred to a referendum for the people to determine.

Mr Kunda said now that the Government had received the final Draft Constitution, it would start legislative processes that preceded the submission of a bill to alter the Constitution.

The conference increased the composition of the National Assembly to 266 including the speaker, introduced the parliamentary service commission and adopted the provisions to establish a constitutional and an appeal court.

The introduction of the two courts also had significant implications for which careful planning must be done and at an appropriate time Government would take measures for the implementation of the constitutional provisions and present a bill to parliament.

Mr Kunda said that at the same time Government would prepare to submit to Parliament a Referendum Bill containing the provisions that would seek to alter the bill of rights and article 79 of the current constitution those the NCC failed to agree on.

If the people would approve the provisions through a referendum, a Bill would then be submitted to Parliament for the enactment of the approved constitutional provisions.

Mr Kunda also commended late president Levy Mwanawasa for starting the process and thanked President Banda for supporting and ensuring that the process was concluded.

He said the process had been concluded despite incessant attacks from people who wanted to derail the process as they had ignored the fact that the Mung’omba Draft Constitution recommended the NCC and wanted it to be rubber stamped when it had a mandate to vary or alter the proposals.

NCC chairperson Chifumu Banda said five articles and the Bill of Rights were referred to a Referendum, being article 64 (1) which provided for progressive realisation of economic social and cultural rights and article 79 (1) on the electoral process.

Mr Banda said others were article 143 (2) (I) which provided for legislative power of the National Assembly and article 148 (8) (A) which was about vacation of office of an MP and article 273 (3) (A) on Government borrowing.

He said the NCC decided to take all adopted articles to the National Assembly while those on which consensus was not reached would be taken to a Referendum.

[Times of Zambia]

UPND youths ‘headless pact’ statement irks Kambwili

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PF Roan Member of Parliament Chishimba Kambwili (L)

PATRIOTIC Front (PF) Roan Member of Parliament Chishimba Kambwili has demanded for the resignation of United Party for National Development (UPND) national youth chairperson Joe Kalusa for what he termed as issuing derogatory remarks against the pact leadership.

Mr Kambwili said he will not rest but would ensure Mr Kalusa was disciplined by his party, the UPND as his move to hold a Press briefing and attack the pact leadership was tantamount to indiscipline of the highest order.

PF leader Michael Sata said he would not waste time to react to Mr Kalusa whom he described as just a ‘national youth chairperson’.

But Mr Kalusa said the national youth leadership of the UPND was a well recognised and respected wing in his party’s constitution and that Mr Kambwili and Mr Sata’s reactions over his Press briefing where the UPND youths merely demanded an explanation of the national programme, guidelines and regulations of the pact, clearly showed that the PF lacked respect for its youth wing.

He said their reactions showed that they just wanted to reserve the youths and use them as tools for violence during next year’s tripartite elections.

UPND spokesperson Charles Kakoma, however, said his party appreciated the concerns raised by the party’s youth wing.

Mr Kalusa held a Press briefing where he also challenged Mr Sata to explain to the pact partner, UPND and the Zambians in general on how the PF leader would be able to put more money in people’s pockets.

Mr Kambwili described the briefing as indiscipline and demanded that Mr Kalusa and his copperbelt Provincial youth chairperson Kelly Jibinga should resign and join the ruling MMD which he alleged was sponsoring the UPND youths to discredit the pact.

“It is indiscipline of the highest order for the UPND national youth chairman to issue derogatory remarks against another leader of the pact. UPND should discipline Mr Kalusa and Mr Jibinga. We will ensure the leadership of the UPND disciplines these two youth leaders.

“It is sad that Mr Kalusa always wants to be a populist even on issues he never understands and I am urging him to tone down because he will leave politics with nothing if he is not careful. We know Kalusa is being sponsored to destabilise the pact and we will not allow him to succeed,” Mr Kambwili said.

But Mr Kalusa said it was worrying to note that Mr Kambwili and Mr Sata never saw the importance of youth wings in the political parties. He said Mr Kambwili was not the right person to call for his resignation because he was not a member of the UPND.

He said he was willing to appear before any disciplinary committee, especially that of the pact provided that PF vice president Guy Scott, his secretary general Wynter Kabimba and Nkana MP Mwenya Musenge were also summoned to appear for having discredited the UPND.

When contacted, PF spokesperson Given Lubinda and Mr Kabimba both refused to comment on the matter.

But Mr Kakoma said his party appreciated the concerns raised by the UPND youths. He said the issues raised by Mr Kalusa were complex and needed to be handled carefully.

“We know the youths want things to be done fast and we appreciate their concerns but these are the issues we are trying to harmonise in the pact. These are not issues that can be done within a day,” he said.

Mr Kakoma said the working committees were given two weeks in which to complete the harmonisation of the guidelines and manifestoes for the two political parties which would soon be handed over to the leadership in the pact.

And former PF secretary General Edward Mumbi said Zambians were now able to see which politician was telling the truth when it came to issues of national importance.

Mr Mumbi said it was pleasing to note that the UPND had realised that Mr Sata just wanted to use them to popularise himself.

“At least I am on record stating that this pact is a non starter. It was just formed because Mr Sata just wanted to use the UPND to popularise himself and now that he has failed to use it in the way he wanted to, he is ashamed.

“I am also urging Mr Hakainde Hichilema to be careful with Mr Sata who has now started to disrespect the UPND youths failure to which he will suffer serious consequences in his political career,” Mr Mumbi said.

[Times of Zambia]

Zambia Enters Training Camp

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The Zambia national team gathered in Lusaka today to begin their week long training camp ahead of Saturdays 2012 Africa cup Group C qualifier against Comoros at Nkoloma stadium in Lusaka.

Seven foreign based call-ups who included the clubless duo of midfielder Rainford Kalaba and goalkeeper Kalililo Kakonje all turned up for the first full day of training.

The others are the Swiss based duo of striker’s Emmanule Mayuka and Fwayo Tembo including playmaker Isaac Chansa of Orlando Pirates in South Africa.

Fwayo is currently under watch after a reported injury on his knee but it is said to be minor.

Two other South African based players also reported for opening session of training and they were defender Kampamba Chintu from Amazulu and Noah Chivuta.

Club aims to earn money for Zambia

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Zambia’s Scholarship Fund at USU, a club only a month old and ten members strong, is hoping to raise money that helps students and teachers in Zambia.

“In Zambia, the government only pays for free education through seventh grade,” Jeff Merrell, the club’s president, said. Merrell is a sophomore in business administration and political science.

The new club has ties to a charity founded in northern Utah, Zambia’s Scholarship Fund, which is a registered charity with the IRS, and has 501(c) status, he said.

Merrell and Carlee Berry, senior in speech language pathology, went to high school together, and were the presidents of the National Honor Society. As part of the organization in high school, Berry said the two of them were told about the charity and put on a benefit concert.

“When we were in high school not a lot of people knew about the event. We are from a small town,” Berry said. “We want to do more.”

The conditions in Zambia can’t be called good, as Amanda Brough, junior in social work, can attest.

Brough has been to Zambia to do humanitarian work, and said the country is poor, and doesn’t have the ability to export anything to other countries.

“Zambia is the world’s pauper,” she said.

When Merrell came back from serving a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he and Berry decided to begin a club

at USU together to help those in Zambia.

“The literacy rate is falling, and so is the life expectancy. What the fund does is make it so people can sponsor a student for a year in Zambia,” he said.

When these sponsored students graduate from high school, the fund hires them to be teachers in other villages, Merrell said.

“We’re not asking USU students to sponsor kids in Zambia, but we’d like to get the word out, maybe get some people from Cache Valley to sponsor them,” he said.

Not only does the fund sponsor students to go through high school, but it also has other projects to help teachers and students Zambia. Merrell said in Zambia, it can sometimes take a teacher days to walk to get their paycheck and days to walk back.

“We’d like to help by maybe paying for bicycles so teachers don’t have to cancel school for a week at a time,” Merrell said.

The fund at USU is planning two main events to raise funds, Berry said. A 5K race in September and a benefit concert in April.

Berry said the 5K will be held on Sept. 25. Registration will open at 7:30 a.m. and the race will begin at 8 a.m.

“It’s 5 dollars, and all the money we raise goes to the fund,” she said.

The benefit concert, called Zambia Fest, will be held April 30, called Zambia Fest, is shaping up to be a big event, according to both Berry and Merrell.

“We’re going to have Keith Stubbs, from (radio station) 101.5 The Eagle, be our MC, and he said he was excited to help,” Berry said.

Stubbs has won awards for being the best talk show host on the radio, and Berry said he owns Wiseguy Comedy Club in Ogden, UT.

Merrell said the club is growing, and he hopes it continues to do so.

“We’re looking for help, to give people opportunities,” he said.

To get more information on events and the scholarship fund, you can visit www.Zambiasscholarshipfund.org or email them at [email protected].

ñ[email protected]

[www.usustatesman.com]

Sata rebuked for his accusations on First Lady’s tours

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PF leader Michael Sata

Africa Institute for Democracy and Good Governance (AIDGG) spokesperson Thabo Kawana has urged Patriotic Front (PF) leader Michael Sata and sections of society to stop linking the first lady Thandiwe Banda’s charitable works to corruption and political campaigns.

Mr. Kawana has in an interview with ZANIS in Kapiri Mponshi today, observed that Mr. Sata’s and some politician’s comments in the media linking the first lady to politics and corruption are irresponsible and politically aimed at tarnishing her image.

The AIDGG spokesperson said Mrs. Banda’s activities across the country should be supported as they are aimed at strengthening women and improve their welfare.

He said the first lady is going across the country to support women clubs which consisted women from various political parties and hence accusing her of campaigning for the ruling MMD through this activity is baseless.

Mr. Kawana noted that the first lady had resolved not to form her own Non Governmental Organization (NGO) like her predecessors to help women but opted to work with existing ones a move which is commended.

He said the move was a clear indication that Mrs. Banda wanted to support and work with all individual women and women clubs in the country regardless of political affiliation.

He said the first lady needs to be supported and not disturbed for her activities therefore it is regrettable that some politicians and critics want to destroy her good name and works.

Mr. Kawana has since urged Mrs. Banda not to relent or be disturbed by these politicians and critics of her works but be focused to helping the needy in society.

Meaniwhile, First Lady Thandiwe Banda has commended the women of Chiengi District in Luapula Province for taking farming seriously in the Chiefdom.

The first Lady said this today in Chiengi when she donated 40 by 50 kg bags of fertiliser, 20 bags of maize and sunflower, sewing machines and a hummer Mill to Women Clubs in the area.

ZANIS reports that Mrs Banda also promised the Women that she would request the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) to teach them how to apply the fertilisers using new farming methods.

She thanked the people in the area for voting for President Banda during the 2008 presidential by elections. And speaking during the same occassion, Chief District Association Chairperson Alice Mtine said Women were part and parcel of all Government programmes in the district adding that they played a significant role in national development.

Mrs. Mtine said some of the challenges women Clubs faced included lack of access to equipment such as hummer mills and sowing machines adding that the donation the first lady rendered to the organisation would go a long way in mitigating some of the problems they were facing.

Meanwhile, the First Lady paid a courtesy call on Senior Chief Puta’s wife Agnes in Chiengi district who thanked Mrs Banda for visiting the area for the first time.

The traditional Leader’s wife further appealed to Government through the First Lady to adequately empower women in the area to enable them look after the
vulnerable in society and fight against the HIV and Aids respectively. The First Lady is in Chiengi District for a one week tour of Luapula Province.

She is accompanied by Mrs. Edina Mukuma, Wife of Presidential Affairs Minister at State house Rolnald Mukuma, Mrs. Felisty Mushosha, Mrs. Agnes Chinyanta and Mrs. Gloria Sichilima.

ZANIS

Mpulungu granted immunization kit and minibus

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Fishing boats Mpulungu at Harbor

NORWEGIANS from Jolster Kommune council in Norway have handed over a mobile immunization van and a US$ 10 000 minibus to health and council officials in Mpulungu to assist in their operations.

Northern Province minister John Chinyanta, in a speech read for him by district administrative officer Leonard Chiti during the handover ceremony at Walamo Hall said the government was grateful for the donations.

He mentioned that bilateral relations between Zambia and Norway dated back to independence, saying that government had received massive support in education, health and agriculture sectors through NORAD.

Chinyanta said he was aware that relations between the Norwegian council and Mpulungu district council went back to 2007 and expressed happiness that the marriage was in line with the millennium development goal number eight (8) that highlighted the development of a global partnership for development both at national and international level.

He said these partnerships were envisaged to be a strategy for global poverty reduction whose objective was being implemented in the donation.

Your donation of the immunization van is a tool in the hands of the health sector because it will reinforce the reduction of infant mortality by prevention of diseases that cause death in children through effective immunization, Mr. Chinyanta said.

He advised the youths from the local youth council to put the donated minibus to proper use.

Mr. Chinyanta said youths in the country faced a lot of challenges of drug abuse, unemployment and disease, saying they must rise above those challenges and make good of their lives.

And Manager for Administration at Mpulungu district hospital Amon Phiri said his department was happy to receive the all weather immunization van, adding that the vehicle will go a long way in ensuring that the health institution provided quality services to the community.

Phiri admitted that there was a shortage of transport at the district hospital because the available vehicles were mostly being used for ambulance services.

Meanwhile, Mpulungu District has commenced a training programme of 30 spray operators in readiness for the spraying exercise against mosquitoes in over 10 000 households in the district.

The training is in line with the Indoor Residual Spray (IRS) programme and is being undertaken with support from the national malaria control centre in collaboration with the ministry of health (MOH).

The training will last for 18 days and once trained, the spray operators will be deployed to spray households in Mpulungu central and part of Isoko areas in October.

Health workers spoken to said the objective of the exercise was to reduce malaria cases in the district, adding that according to data from districts that had undertaken the exercise in the past, the IRS programme was capable of drastically reducing the cases of malaria.

And this is why we are targeting 8 000 to 10 000 peoples dwellings in Mpulungu. This number will be increased next year depending on the availability of funds, a health worker who did not want to be named said.

Mpulungu is among the 54 districts in the country where the IRS programme is being carried this year and health workers say the number will be increased to cater for all the 73 districts in the country in due course.

According to available data, malaria was the number one killer disease in Mpulungu and the disease accounted for over 50 percent of all hospitalized cases at Mpulungu district hospital and the surrounding rural health centers.

Malaria experts say the impact of the disease on the population was huge and it was great financial cost to both government and the affected individuals.

The 30 spray operators have been drafted from different areas in the district.

ZANIS

Land and mineral rights in conflict

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Mining prospectors in Luapula Province, northern Zambia, have forced small-scale farmers from their land at gun point, according to villagers in the region.

“We have a lot of battles going on over land; people’s right to land is being violated by manganese miners, time and again,” said Ignatius Musenge of the Zambia Land Alliance, a land rights NGO based in Mansa, the provincial capital.

Luapula Province borders the mineral-rich Katanga region of the Democratic Republic of Congo, and has deposits of manganese, cobalt, citrine and copper; some reports claim there are also deposits of diamonds, uranium, gold and tin.

“We are handling about 20 complaints per week on average, and so far we have had more than 500 people evicted [since 2009] in various parts of Mansa as a result of manganese mining,” Musenge told IRIN. People forced from their land have been given no compensation or alternative land.

“They [prospectors] are chasing us from our own land,” Peter Mwila told IRIN. “Is this country just for the rich? The chief [traditional ruler] gave me a 10-hectare piece of land many years ago, where I have been farming. But early this year someone came and chased me with a gun, saying I was farming on his mining area, and I am now living with my uncle in the next village.”

President Rupiah Banda’s government has permitted exploration to gauge the extent of the province’s mineral deposits, and has allowed small-scale mining activities, but residents claim that once mineral deposits are discovered they are evicted from their land.

Lister Zimba, who was “chased from her land” in Mansa district in May 2010, told IRIN: “The only thing I have is this land, where I do my farming. So, what happens to me now? The chief gave us land; people with money got the land from us.”

Nowhere to go

“Where can we go? This is the only land we [I, my husband and three children] have lived on. We have no jobs, why should they take even the little that we have?” she said.

Mining – particularly in Copper Belt Province, northern Zambia – contributes 80 percent of the country’s foreign earnings, and since 2003 has been the main driver of its annual five percent growth rate. But the commodities boom, tempered by the 2008 global slowdown, has failed to improve the livelihoods of most of Zambia’s 12.4 million citizens.

About two-thirds of Zambians survive on less than US$1 per day, and only about 500,000 people have formal employment, but these statistics become more extreme in Luapula.

The province is one of poorest of Zambia’s nine provinces, poverty levels are an estimated 78 percent – compared to the national average of 64 percent – and only three percent of Luapula’s 775,353 people have access to formal jobs, according to the 2008 Labour Force Survey Report released in June 2010 by the Central Statistical Office.

One of the few large industries, a battery factory, closed in the 1990s and there is an expectation that large-scale mining operations could transform the province’s economic fortunes.

Chief Ndake, a member of the House of Chiefs, a body of traditional rulers, warned that pro-market policies could push poor people living on customary land into deeper poverty if they were evicted.

In Zambian law, land is held by customary tenure, and although the government has encouraged citizens to take title to their land, many are unaware of the need to do so, and the state has the authority to revoke any untitled land awarded by traditional rulers.

“The powers that we have [as traditional rulers] to give land to the people are not actually honoured; in fact, the villagers living in rural areas are termed as squatters. The millions and millions of Zambians who have lived on this land for more than two, three centuries up to now, they are squatting,” Chief Ndake told IRIN.

“It is only those who have settled on statutory land, where there are all those title deeds, that are settled permanently, and this law becomes very effective when there is an investor coming, when there is timber to be produced, when there are mineral deposits,” he said.

Kennedy Sakeni, a former parliamentarian living in Mansa, is one of the small-scale miners accused of evicting people from their customary land.

Wild allegations

“Those are just wild allegations – they want to create problems where there are no problems. Others want to eat with both hands; you compensate them today, tomorrow they come back and ask for more money,” he said.

“The truth is, I have seven mining licenses for [digging] pits in different places, and wherever there are fields of cassava [a staple food] in any of my mines, I have compensated them [local people]. In certain areas, where I am not mining just now, the people still have their cassava fields intact,” he said.

Boniface Nkata, Zambia’s deputy minister of mines, said government was concerned at the rising number of evictions. “There’s very serious tension in terms of mining activities in the district [Mansa],” he acknowledged.

“But … government cannot be blamed where someone is evicted from the land they have been occupying illegally, without valid documentation – they are squatters. Those who are driving them out are permitted to do so, because they should not come and find their minerals tampered with,” Nkata told IRIN.

“The law is very clear – even when your chief gives you land, you should obtain title deeds for it from the ministry of lands. Then, any investor will have to partner with you, or just mine outside your farm area,” he said.

“We can’t have a situation where anyone does what they think is right. As government, we can only call on all our investors to offer some form of compensation to the affected people, to ease their relocation or resettlement.”

The government intended to open the mineral wealth of the province to international investors after a two-year exploration period, “so that they can develop the province, invest in corporate social responsibility, pay tax,” Nkata said.

“These mining activities have the potential to improve the economy of Zambia significantly, and I think we should look at the bigger picture.”

[IRIN]

Higher ground areas to face low water supply-LWSC

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The Lusaka Water and Sewerage Company (LWSC) has disclosed that there would be low water supply in areas that are on higher ground than in areas that are on lower ground during the hot season.

Chief Engineer at the LWSC Wilson Shan said it was quite common to experience low water supply during the hot season in places that were on higher ground because the ground water table was at its lowest.

Mr. Shan also attributed the water shortage during the hot season to water wastage by people in lower areas.

He explained that various activities that people engaged in like taking longer showers, car wash using the hose pipe and brushing teeth on running water resulted in water shortage causing other people to experience a low water supply during the hot season.

He disclosed this during a live programme called Water Chat on MUVI Television and monitored by ZANIS in Lusaka yesterday.

Mr. Shan stated that Lusaka Water and Sewerage relied on ground water and during the hot season the water table receded reducing water supply and increasing the pumps working capacity. This he noted caused some areas on higher ground to experience low or no water supply during certain times.

He named areas mostly affected by low water supply during the hot season, as Chudley, Upper Ibex Hill, Chalala, and Garden township.

“Demand for water supply during the summer is at its highest but the supply is low because our water sources are equally low during this period in time” the Engineer said.

He noted that there was need to continue sensitising people on the importance of water conservation especially during the hot season in order for everyone to have access to the commodity.

ZANIS

Mpulungu seat wont be easy to win – PF

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PF Members

Several Patriotic Front (PF) members in Mpulungu have said that the public statements being issued by their leaders in the province were misleading the national leadership because they were not a true reflection of what was happening on the ground.

They have waned that if the statements were not stopped, they might cost the party dearly in the Mpulungu by-election because party officials would relax and be made to believe that Mpulungu would be as easy seat to scoop.

Recently, PF provincial chairman Fred Chisanga and District Chairman Charles Mazimba were quoted as having said that Pf would win the Mpulungu seat by a landslide because people in the area were not happy with the way government allegedly treated the late MP Lameck Chibombamilimo and wanted change.

But sources in the party today revealed that the story on the ground was different from the way it was being portrayed in the media.

The party official revealed that as their leaders were busy issuing press statements their colleagues in the MMD were on the ground in the remotest parts of Mpulungu constituency and they were busy campaigning for their party.

The sources said there was also need to hold elections for new office bearers at constituency, district, ward and branch levels within the Pf ranks in the district.

“ It is common knowledge that our party in the district was currently divided into two camps. The last meeting we had, to which they are minutes, it was resolved to hold fresh elections to elect new people.

“ This has not been done and the delay has divided the party. To say that PF in Mpulungu was in a state of confusion because of the many wrangling is an understatement, “ the PF officials revealed.

The PF members have advised their leadership to stop releasing media statements and put in place strong party structures that can challenge the ruling MMD in Mpulungu if the opposition was to scoop the seat in the impending by-election.

The Mpulungu Parliamentary seat fell vacant following the unexpected death of the MMD parliamentarian who died in an Indian hospital after an illness.

ZANIS