Tuesday, May 13, 2025
Home Blog Page 5014

Baboons temper with ZNBC’s dish antennas in Itezhi-tezhi

19

A head of baboons has tempered with the Zambia National Broadcasting Cooperation (ZNBC) receiving dish in Itezhi-tezhi district disrupting television signal.

The incident happened barely two days after ZNBC restored its television signal to the district after more than one month without signal.
Itezhi-tezhi Acting District Commissioner (DC) Hampende Hichilema confirmed the incident to ZANIS in interview that the wild beats descended on the ZNBC installation on Saturday morning and disturbed the dish.

“The incident happened on Saturday when a group of baboons were playing around the dish and in the process they moved the dish from its position and some cable to the LNB got disturbed” he said.

A check at the ZNBC dish by ZANIS revealed that the dish was slightly moved off its position and some rods supporting the dish were bent.

The Acting DC has asked ZNBC to provide protection of the satellite dish to prevent further damage of the installation by the baboons.
Meanwhile Itezhi-tezhi residents have asked ZNBC to urgently restore the signal to Itezhi-tezhi.

One resident Mukubulo chilufya appealed to ZNBC to treat the loss of the signal to the district with urgency so that the district is not left in the dark in terms of information and current affairs.

Itezhi-tezhi residents have appealed to the ministry of information and broadcasting and the Zambia Communications and
information technology authority (ZICTA) to expedite the issuance of a license for Itezhi-tezhi radio station which has been test transmitting for more than five months.

The residents said that there was need for the authorities to urgently issue the license to the station so that people can be listening to
developmental programmes as opposed to the current scenario where the radio station is just playing music.

They said that the issuance of a radio license has been dragging for too long despite the radio board putting everything in place for the radio station to run smoothly.

Chilufya Mukubulo said as residents they need good programmes that are developmental in nature to start airing on the community radio station as opposed to music only.

He said the radio station will play a critical role in informing Itezhi-tezhi residents on current affairs especially those that have no
access to ZNBC radio.

And Lucas Chiwele one of the board members at the station said that test transmitting for more than four months is very costly for a radio station because the radio station cannot generate revenue from advertisements and other programming.

He said the station was having difficulties to operate smoothly due to lack of funds.

ZANIS

Fans advise Nkonde and Kasolo to stop squabbles

17

Zambia Volunteer Soccer Fans Association (ZAVOSOFA ) patron Peter Makembo has urged Football Association
of Zambia (FAZ) Disciplinary Committee Vice chairperson Anthony Kasolo and his boss Sunday Nkonde to stop fighting each other in the media.

Speaking in an interview with ZANIS sports, today, Makembo says since Nkonde and Kasolo are both learned lawyer, it was important for the duo to interpret the FAZ constitution in a somber manner.

“ We hope as ZAVOSOFA that the duo will interpret the FAZ constitution in a tangible manner and not sort each other in the media,” he said.

The ZAVOSOFA Patron was reacting to the ongoing wrangle in FAZ executive following its decision to indefinitely suspend Amakumbi Stars proprietor Simata Simata from all football activities for gross indiscipline.

Hardly 24 hours after the Kalusha led FAZ executive’s decision to suspend Simata, Nkonde over ruled the decision saying the FAZ constitution does not give the executive such powers.

However, Kasolo differed with Nkonde’s stand on Simata saying his committee has no powers to overrule the executive committee’s decision.

He explained during weekly press briefing at Football House, yesterday, that Article 20 (1) empowers the executive to suspend any member who violates its obligation. Article 20 (1) reads: “The council is responsible for suspending a member.

The executive committee may, however, suspend a member who seriously and repeatedly violates its obligations with immediate effect. “The suspension shall last until the next council meeting unless the
executive committee has lifted it in the meantime.” He also said Article 4 (15 ) also gives powers to the executive committee to suspend a member.

However, Makembo says his Association has welcomed the Simata – FAZ saga adding that both parties area exercising their constitutional rights of opinion. “It is healthy. Simata was once a FAZ executive official and thus knows the constitution as much as the current Kalusha led executive knows full
well, “he said.

Makembo said fans were watching the Simata – FAZ saga with keen interest adding that it was his personal prayer that the issue is settled amicably.

ZANIS

Opening of Flood Gates at Lake Kariba Wont Affect Wildlife-ZAWA

7

The Zambia Wildlife Authority (ZAWA) has dismissed fears that the opening of flood gates at Lake Kariba is likely to affect both domestic and wildlife in the surrounding areas.

ZAWA Public Relations officer Wilfred Moonga told ZANIS in an interview in Lusaka today that the opening of flood gates posedno threat to wildlife because most animal parks were not along the river banks.

Mr. Moonga explained that it was the responsibility of the authority to ensure that animals in all parks were protected at all times.

He noted that if there were any signs of a possible flood which could affect wildlife, ZAWA could have put in place measures to mitigate such occurrence.

“As at now no measures have been put in place because we know that our animals are safe from these floods”, Mr. Moonga said.

He further said that at the moment all wildlife in Luangwa and lower Zambezi national parks are protected.

Mr. Moonga said whenever there were threats of floods in one area, animals were normally moved from the low lands to higher grounds.

“If there is any threat of floods the animals will automatically be moved to higher grounds were their safety is guaranteed,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mr. Moonga has disclosed that domestic animals in the surrounding communities are expected to be affected by the floods once the gates are opened.

He explained that this is because some communities are so close to the river.
ZANIS

Zambia risked incurring huge loans-IMF Managing Director

82
Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Managing Director of IMF.

International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said today that Zambia risked incurring huge loans if the country continues borrowing from other countries.

Speaking at State House today during a meeting with President Rupiah Banda, Mr. Strauss-Kahn advised government to get loans that the country would be able to pay back to avoid huge debt burden.

Speaking at the same function , President Banda hailed the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for undertaking ambitious reforms aimed at enhancing the governance of IMF and economic well being of member
states.

President Banda said the reforms, aimed at making the fund’s financial support more flexible and better tailored to the diverse needs of low income countries, were particularly important for countries like Zambia.

Mr. Banda said he was aware that Zambia has benefited from the reforms with resources amounting to US$260 million in 2009 and this year under the extended credit facility.

The president said the IMF and Zambia share a common goal of reducing poverty through macro-economic stability adding that government would continue working closely with the Fund.[quote]

Mr. Banda said his government looked forward to continued collaboration so that more progress could be made for the benefit of the Zambian people.

The president said he acknowledged the role IMF played in reducing the country’s debt burden through the highly indebted poor countries initiative (HIPC).

He said although the debt burden had been reduced and a lot achieved in terms of freeing resources for economic development, there were still a lot of challenges in terms of economic development and poverty reduction.

Among the challenges the country was facing were lack of sufficient infrastructure especially in the road, railways and energy sectors.

Mr. Banda said before the reduction of the debt under HIPC, the country was able to access funding under the international development Association (IDA).

“Now that we have achieved debt sustainability, our access to IDA funding had diminished despite our huge developmental needs. This has limited the extent to which we can implement development projects,” President Banda said.

The president said however that his government remained committed to addressing the problem of infrastructure and improving the business environment despite the financial limitations. He said the country looked for China for support because it needed financing at concessionary rates to build the necessary infrastructure.

Mr. Banda said he was delighted that IMF chief decided to include Zambia among the countries he was visiting because it has consolidated the relationship Zambia has with IMF

ZANIS

First Lady calls for concerted efforts in addressing effects of floods

10
First Lady Thandiwe Banda

First Lady Thandiwe Banda has called for concerted efforts in addressing the challenges caused by floods in various parts of the country.

Mrs. Banda said one of the challenges that should be addressed is the issue of making polluted water clean and safe for drinking.

She said water was very important for human life hence the need to always make it safe for human consumption.

Mrs. Banda was speaking at State House this today when she received 1,200 bottles of chlorine from Society for Family Health (SFH).

She urged Zambians to always appreciate the importance of clean water especially this year when many sources of water have been contaminated by
floods.

She thanked Society for Family Health (SFH) for the donation and called on other corporate entities join in assisting government cope with the effects of floods.

And Society for Family Health Director for Programme Operations, Charles Kalonga said it was prudent to help ease the sufferings of people that have been affected by floods.

In Livingstone, District Commissioner Francis Chika has advised the city’s local authority to desist from allocating land for housing units in flood prone areas.

Mr. Chika sounded a similar warning to flood victims in Livingstone cautioning them against settling in low lying areas and land located near streams.

He said this when he received 100 x 10 kilogram bags of roller meal on behalf of the Disaster Management and Mitigation Unit.

The mealie meal was donated by the National Milling Corporation.

He said it would be unfortunate for the same people to be victims each time the city experiences floods.

Mr. Chika said such people might not receive aid from government if they refused to resettle in safer areas.

He said the recent floods that hit the tourist capital were the worst since 1958 when the entire country was hit by floods.

Mr. Chika said government alone could not tackle all the challenges the country was facing and called for concerted efforts from all stakeholders to work towards the continued development of the country.

He urged other business houses to emulate National Milling Corporation by donating to those in dire need of support.

And National Milling Corporation Managing Director, Peter Cottan said the donation was meant to mitigate the suffering of people who were adversely affected by floods.

Mr. Cottan said this in a speech read for him by National Milling Corporation Livingstone Branch Manager, Dennis Chiwaya.

ZANIS

Government calls for modernization of higher education

6
“The RUINS“ University of Zambia student residence

Government has called for urgent renewal, revitalization and modernization of high education in the country.

Education Deputy Minister Clement Sinyinda says the failure to address the three issues would make it difficult for higher education and graduates to synchronize with the current national expectations and needs in the country’s economy.

Mr. Sinyinda says the country needs a higher education that will stand up to acceptable international benchmarks in scope and quality.

He was speaking at the launch of the Private Universities Association of Zambia in Chisamba today.

Mr. Sinyinda said there was need for both private and public universities to strive to offer higher education that fits the needs and aspirations of the country.

“Universities must therefore examine carefully the status of programmes they are  offering and how or what they hope to contribute in our current social and economic context,” said Mr. Sinyinda.

He appealed to both public and private universities to set clear standards and benchmarks in the degree programmes they offer.

The Deputy Minister emphasised the need for universities to also set standards in course content, performance and examinations against which external reviews would be conducted.

Mr. Sinyinda added: “Today university students need strong academic support to access knowledge, to enable them perform better and achieve higher. Modernized libraries with internet, Wifi; and online access to journals, books, and specialized publications are very essential in today’s academic and student life.”

Meanwhile, Mr. Sinyinda has expressed concern at the quality of hired lecturers and the conditions of employment in some of the private universities.

He said there was need for the Private Universities Association of Zambia to seriously address the qualitative issues inorder to enhance the image of the member universities.

Mr. Sinyinda noted that some individuals and organisations have ignored government regulations on establishing Private Schools and have gone ahead to set up schools illegally.

He said Zambia’s legal provisions on private participation in the provision of education are clear and must be followed by all private players in the education sector.
Speaking earlier, interim president of the Private Universities Association of Zambia, Professor Dickson Mwansa said the launch of the association is of great significance in the country’s higher education and government’s efforts to increase access and inclusion in higher education.

Prof. Mwansa said the nation’s demand for higher education is justified by the urgent need to revitalize the economy for growth and sustainable development.

He said the diverse range of economic activities in the country, requires the development and provision of requisite high level skills and competences to drive the economy.

“As our country’s economy grows and gets more complex, there is need for high-level skills-skills in critical analysis, quality and effective leadership in all sectors, strategic planning and management, policy-making and problem-solving,” noted Prof. Mwansa.

Prof. Mwansa assured that private universities in the country will aim to provide higher education that will respond to the needs and challenges facing the country.

The association will among other things, ensure quality of education in all private  universities in the country.

ZANIS

International Hockey Federation (FIH) to promote hockey in Zambia

8

The hockey world governing body is planning an initiative to endorse the sport in the African country.

The International Hockey Federation (FIH) was presented with 20,000 Euros by BDO, an international accounting network, who is the sponsor of the Dutch Hockey Federation.

The FIH will use that money to lay a new hockey pitch in the African country of Zambia to promote the sport there.

Speaking on the occasion, FIH president Leandro Negre said, “The International Olympic Committee is working on a multi-purpose sports centre in Lusaka, Zambia. The FIH will work closely with the IOC for the hockey pitch initiative.

“Our intention is to increase the awareness of the hockey in that region and also to boost the recruitment of young African hockey stars,” he added.

Paul van Elten of BDO said, “We are delighted to lend our support to this important project. We have a responsibility to our communities and we encourage our people to be involved in them. We aspire to create hope for a better future where currently hope does not exist.”

The sports centre is slated to officially open in April this year. The FIH will then handover the responsibility of the pitch to the Zambian Hockey Federation (ZHA).

[espnstar.com]

Stigma and bureaucracy drive maternal deaths

8

Parity Zulu, 17, constantly recited a Biblical verse asking God for protection from her persecutors while her mother ferried her to hospital following complications from the teenager’s illegal abortion.

Her mother, Margaret, was unaware that her daughter had paid K350,000 (US$74) for a back-street abortion three days earlier. “All the way to the hospital I asked my child what happened. She wouldn’t tell me. Then she began to sing Psalm 57, a cry for help. I began to suspect she was aborting a pregnancy,” she told IRIN.

At the hospital’s emergency admission desk, Zulu’s medical condition was immediately apparent to Nurse Serephina Moonde. “I can tell a botched abortion as they come in through the doors – on average I see up to ten new patients a day. Women and young girls coming in, bleeding – sometimes we can save them; other times, like in Parity’s case, it’s too late – their wombs are rotting and they have lost too much blood.”

Moonde said she had seen the results of the horrific methods women sometimes used to induce abortion: drinking crushed glass boiled with coca-cola, inserting crudely sharpened wooden sticks into the cervix, taking heavy doses of anti-malaria tablets, and even ingesting poisons such as battery acid.

Zambia’s maternal mortality rate of 591 per 100,000 live births is one of the highest in the world, according to the 2008 Demographic Health Survey (DHS), the most recent.

One-third of maternal deaths are thought to be the result of abortion, but a shocking statistic is that 80 percent of the women who die from abortions are under the age of 19.

Abortion law

The Zambian Termination of Pregnancy Act 1972 is based on British colonial legislation, which permits abortion when continuation of the pregnancy can be proved to be detrimental to the mother, or the child, or both.

The law states that those wanting a termination must seek the consent of three physicians, but this requirement may be waived, if the abortion is deemed an emergency, to save the woman’s life or prevent grave permanent injury to her physical or mental health.

In 2009 the University Teaching Hospital (UTH) in the capital, Lusaka, the country’s largest medical facility, recorded 5,295 abortions, of which 5,246 were a consequence of incomplete abortions; 31 women died as a result of complications.

Only nine terminations of pregnancies were performed at UTH in 2009, according to the provisions of the law, down from the 2008 figure of 126 legally performed terminations.

Dr Peter Mwaba, UTH’s managing director, told IRIN that the hospital was a place of last resort, and the statistics did not include women seeking help for complications from an abortion at other public or private clinics.

He said many women did not have access to effective contraception, and there were gender inequalities as well as deeply entrenched stigmas around abortion, which contributed to women practicing self-abortion or seeking other unsafe procedures. Women seeking to terminate pregnancies were also making use of the greater availability of a variety of drugs at pharmacies and private clinics.

It was the attempts to procure abortions this way [unsafely] that brought on the complications – it was basically guesswork, and that was why women arrived at hospitals “half dead”, he said.

Holo Hachoonda, a clinical director at the Planned Parenthood Association (PPAZ), told IRIN that many health practitioners did not understand the abortion law, and were reluctant to provide these services.

“People still do not see abortion as a right backed by law. They still also have not gotten used to the thinking that a woman has rights over her own body, and can make decisions about something like abortion,” he said.

Mary Beth Jones, 46, decided to seek an abortion after falling pregnant with her fifth child. At the clinic she was asked why, as a married woman who had no health issues, she wanted an abortion. Had she had committed adultery?

“They wanted me to tell my husband, go through couple counselling, etc. I also felt they were judging me, and I was afraid that there would be no confidentiality, as we were being lumped together like naughty children and lectured. I can imagine how horrible it must be for a young girl seeking an abortion,” she told IRIN.

Jones resorted to a herbal remedy from a traditional healer to induce a miscarriage. “I haemorrhaged so badly I ended up in hospital and had to have my womb removed. Needless to say, I am now a divorcee.”

Religious barriers

In an effort to improve the efficacy of the Act, in June 2009 the government launched the Standards and Guidelines for Reducing Unsafe Abortion Morbidity and Mortality in Zambia, for interpreting the 1972 legislation.

The guidelines provided for abortions to be performed in the interests of a women’s physical or mental health; nurse practitioners had been trained to provide medical abortions and first-trimester abortions; women no longer had to stay overnight in hospital after the procedure. Family planning services, including abortion services, have been extended throughout the country.

However, the biggest challenges to abortion are the deeply held religious views that think girls engage in sex when they should not, and see abortion as a sign of promiscuity.

Zambia’s more than 11 million people are predominantly Roman Catholic, but conservative evangelical churches have grown considerably in recent years; in combination these represent a formidable degree of social disapproval of terminating pregnancy.

Suzanne Matale, Secretary-General of the Christian Council of Zambia (CCZ), the Catholic Church’s mother body in Zambia, told IRIN that life began at conception. “There are no grey areas, no room for discussion. We condemn abortion. It’s an absolute no-no.”

Government spokesman Ronnie Shipakwasha, a Pentecostal church elder, told IRIN the abortion law would not be touched until there had been wide consultations with medical authorities, policy-makers and religious bodies.

He did not provide a timeframe, and there has been no call for this dialogue; he said the law, read in conjunction with the guidelines, was sufficient to ensure safe abortions.

“We just need to make this information available,” he said. “We are a Christian country, so the church’s teachings on morality are a major factor in how we deal with the issues of abortions.”

[IRIN]

Consumer Driven Products Vs Sales Driven Products

4
Street vendors selling their wares outside Shoprite Suppermarket

By Wesley Ngwenya This week I want to talk about consumer driven products and sales driven products. As a consumer of many goods and services in the country, I cannot help it but notice how much companies in the country force their products on consumers. Or using what I call the sales driven products approach. This approach focuses on sales and is designed by the company prior to the launch of the product. However, the consumer driven approach tests the market first and develops a strategy according to the demands of the consumers.

While Zambia boasts with so many local fast moving consumer products there seems to be little understanding in the marketing strategy. Little wonder why so many of these products come on the market and eventually experience a natural death. Could it be that the manufacturers of these products have little understanding of the market? Or is it that the products were probably not the best fit for the market? I think really it is a combination of these reasons.

Those companies that have developed and designed their products around the needs of their consumers have experienced a long lifespan on the market. They have constantly continued to consider the consumers. While a sales driven approach is rigid, a consumer driven approach is more flexible. Its products adapt with the market. It is dynamic because it operates with consumers who have dynamic needs and are in dynamic markets.

Sometimes all a company has to do is to change the packaging of the product. While in one market the packaging may be appropriate, in another it may not be. Recently, I have been consulting with companies that are launching new products here in Zambia. One company’s product is tea while the other is detergent powder. Both of these companies are optimistic about their products’ success here in Zambia. In order to penetrate the market the companies had to change their packaging to better meet the needs of the consumers here in Zambia especially their pockets.

It is therefore not surprising that consumer driven products fair well than sales driven products. The tea and detergent powder, for example, were very popular products in their home countries. Consumers knew these products very well and bought them in supermarkets. However, here in Zambia these products did not fair well—hence the different approach. Here in Zambia, they had to compete with some of the big brands on the market especially the detergent pastes. We therefore found that packaging the tea and detergent powder in very small packages did the magic.

Once this was done everything changed for my clients. They suddenly had a new clientele at their table—the lower end of the market. This is actually where the money is because of the numbers. Wholesalers, retailers and little tuntembas were able to order the products and sell them in numbers. The price was very attractive so were the profits. The lower end of the market in Zambia love to buy in small doses. Think about the success of the tujilijili industry in Zambia. It is all about a consumer driven product. The packaging did the magic for the hard liquor companies.

It is not only the manufacturing industry that has had to use the consumer driven approach. Mobile companies, here in Zambia, have been on top of the game in driving mobile subscriptions towards them. The companies that have not only focused on sales but have taken consumer needs into consideration continue being the leaders in the industry. Similarly, those that have focused only on sales continue lugging behind.

Consumer driven products are not necessarily easy products to design. They are time consuming because of the effort in investing in research and consumer behavior. They can be complex and costly too because of the different approaches used. Unlike sales driven products that only need smooth talking salespeople, consumer driven products need skilled salespeople. It needs personnel who better understand marketing and consumers. This means that the company has to invest in attracting good paid personnel. In turn this can raise the price of the product.

I am really looking forward to a time in our industry when companies will save their money and invest it in understanding their consumers. We seem to be having some kind of universal format of communicating to our Zambian market which should not really be the case. The Zambian market can be segmented in various forms. Understanding the ever changing consumer needs in our market is fundamental. Until next time. Adios. [email protected]

86 Cases of cholera reported in Lusaka

The Ministry of Health Spokesperson Dr. Kamoto Mbewe has revealed that 86 new cholera cases have been recorded in Lusaka province.

Dr. Mbewe said currently Lusaka has 241 cases of cholera under treatment.

He said Copperbelt province has recorded 8 cases bringing the number to 11
under treatment at various cholera centers on the Copperbelt.

Dr. Mbewe said southern province recorded one new case which is under
treatment.

He said this in a telephone interview with ZANIS in Lusaka today.

Dr. Mbewe explained that previously cholera was only confined to three
provinces namely Lusaka, Copperbelt,and Southern Provinces but that 13 new
cholera cases have now been recorded in Luapula province.

“Previously Cholera cases were only being recorded in three provinces
namely Lusaka, Copperbelt, and Southern provinces but the ministry has
recorded thirteen new cholera case in Chiengi district of Luapula
province,” Dr. Mbewe said.

Dr. Mbewe stated that the ministry was working hard with its cooperating
partners in addressing the cholera epidemic.

He said the ministry through the National Epidemic Preparedness Prevention
Control Management Unit (NEPPCMU) had been carrying out massive
sensitisation programmes in the affected areas to educate people on the
prevention of cholera.

The Ministry of Health has recorded a total of 1,474 cholera cases since
the beginning of the rain season in October last year.

ZANIS

Zambian Gets $1 Billion Loan From China

18

Zambia’s government was granted a $1 billion concessional loan by China for various development projects, Commerce, Trade and Industry Minister Felix Mutati said.

The loan follows a visit to China by Zambian President Rupiah Banda last week, Mutati said in an interview today in the capital, Lusaka. In addition, China provided a grant of $10 million to be used to complete a stadium being built in the northern town of Ndola, he said.

[Bloomberg ]

2009 KCM/FAZ Football Awards

5

Here are is the winners list of this years KCM/FAZ Football Awards.

2009 KCM/FAZ FOOTBALL AWARDS

Best Player: Patrick Kabamba (Zanaco)

Top Scorer: Patrick Kabamba (Zanaco, 20 goals)

Best Coach: Fighton Simukonda (Zesco United)

Best Team: Zanaco

Best Young Player: Mukuka Mulenga (Kabwe Warriors)

Most Disciplined Player: Simon Bwalya (Power Dynamos)

Best Referee: Bernard Chabala (Mufulira)

Creative answer to call of nature and charms in Gwembe

5

Inmates at the Gwembe Police cell have been sharing a twenty litre container to relieve themselves, after the toilet system got blocked several years ago.

A check this morning found a yellow container that has been cut in half balancing on top of the toilet pan and is used as a lid for the blocked toilet as well as for answering the call of nature.

IT was further confirmed that the inmates empty the used container in a nearby ditch, about 15 metres from the police station, accompanied by an armed officer.

The container is emptied and rinsed with plain water once or twice a day, depending on the frequency and number of inmates at a given time.

Gwembe Police officer- in-charge, Tundwe Chisanga confirmed that the problem had been on- going for over several years now and attributed the sad situation to lack of funding and inadequate office space for the police department.

The squared police cell that is about 2 metres wide poses a health hazard to both inmates as well as police officer due to the stench that emanates from the blocked toilet and the over-crowding.

Gwembe District Commissioner, Raymond Nampindi said his office was not aware of the unhealthy situation as the matter was not brought to his attention.

Mr. Nampindi who then visited the police cell to have a spot check was moved by the pathetic condition in which inmates were in and promised to rectify the problem next week.

And Gwembe Administrative Officer, Matthias Fundi has appealed to well-wishers to help supply the police cell with disinfectants to ensure inmates stayed in a healthy environment.
Mr. Fundi said the small size of the police cell put inmates at risk of contracting contagious diseases.

“It is a sad situation. All of us are potential culprits. Anybody can be pushed in a cell – even on false accusations. Some senior officers have been pushed in there and when they came out, they wanted to resign. It is not a good place,” he said.

In another development, a 33 year old man of Lumuno village in Gwembe today displayed at the district administration office, charms that where discovered in his house earlier this week.

Staywell Hamoonga displayed the charms in the full view of the District Commissioner, the Administrative Officer and other government staff.

Hamoonga narrated that he was forced to seek intervention from a Zionist prophet after seven years of torment.

He said the charms were used on his wife in the night each time they go to bed.

Hamoonga disclosed that the two pieces of bones that were rapped with human hair, beads, 17 needles, and a mirror glass were responsible for his unsatisfying sexual relationship in their marriage.

Hamoonga who is a security guard at Gwembe clinic said that he fears for his life and plans to leave the village.

Baboons halt Itezhi-tezhi ZNBC signal

A group of baboons has tempered with the Zambia National Broadcasting Cooperation (ZNBC) receiving dish inItezhi-tezhi district disrupting television signal.

The incident happened barely two days after ZNBC restored its television
signal to the district after more than one month without signal.

Itezhi-tezhi Acting District Commissioner (DC) Hampende Hichilema
confirmed the incident to ZANIS in interview that the baboons descended
on the ZNBC installation on Saturday morning and disturbed the dish.

“The incident happened on Saturday when a group of baboons were playing
around the dish and in the process they moved the dish from its position
and some cable to the LNB got disturbed” he said.

A check at the ZNBC dish by ZANIS revealed that the dish was slightly
moved off its position and some rods supporting the dish were bent.

The Acting DC has asked ZNBC to provide protection of the satellite dish
to prevent further damage of the installation by the baboons.

Meanwhile Itezhi-tezhi residents have asked ZNBC to urgently restore the
signal to Itezhi-tezhi.

One resident Mukubulo chilufya appealed to ZNBC to treat the loss of the
signal to the district with urgency so that the district is not left in the
dark in terms of information and current affairs.
ZANIS

Nakonde border closed after riot

The Nakonde border in Northern Province has
been temporarily closed following a riot that erupted this morning leaving
three vehicles damaged.
The riot was started by Tanzanian traders conducting business on the
Zambian side when a combined team of Nakonde council and Zambia police
tried to move them from vending on an undesignated area.

The fracas that started at about 10:30 hours this morning has left both
Zambian and Tanzanian customs gates closed.

All officers and clearing agents at the border scampered for safety as
police fought with the irate Tanzanian nationals.

Nakonde District Commissioner (DC) Billy Silwimba confirmed the
development to ZANIS and described the riotous behavior by the Tanzanian
nationals as unfortunate.

Mr. Silwimba said normal business is expected to resume any time soon
adding that the confusion has been sorted out and what is remaining is for
the two authorities, the Zambia Revenue Authority (ZRA) and their Tanzanian
counterparts to resume normal operations.

Mr. Silwimba assured importers and the local people not to panic as the
situation was now under control.

Meanwhile an eye witness told ZANIS at the border that the riot was
started when the combined team tried to disperse the Tanzanian nationals
who sale various merchandise on top of the TAZARA under bridge tunnel which
is on the Zambian side.

The irate Tanzanians started throwing stones and all sorts of objects on
the combined team of council and state police who pounced on them and
confiscated their goods.

Three newly imported vehicles which include a Toyota Hiace mini bus were
damaged in the process before a reinforcement of police officers from both
TAZARA and general duties arrived on the scene.

Heavily armed police officers have since been deployed to keep vigil and
DC Silwimba says officers will remain patrolling the area for some time.
ZANIS