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The Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation (ZNBC) has announced that it has received overwhelming response on its new Television station TV2.
ZNBC Public Relation Manager, said in an interview with ZANIS in Lusaka today that the new station is receiving a 100 percent viewer-ship in Lusaka.
Ms Tonga further said ZNBC‘s TV2 will soon migrate to the sate-dish hosted on its behalf by Multi-choice Zambia.
She said the feedback being received from viewers appreciating the new channel is overwhelming.
“I am receiving a lot of feedback especially through phone calls of people watching our new channel. In fact, most homes I have been to even business places including other television stations watch Tv2.” Ms. Tonga said.
Ms. Tonga further said the TV2 expansion project will soon extend to Livingstone in Southern province and on the Copperbelt province with the availability of funds.
She disclosed that TV2 is a self-run and generating its own funds and therefore expansion to other towns will be done gradually.
Vice President George Kunda launched TV2 on January 15, this year on behalf of President Rupiah Banda.
The Zambia Wildlife Authority (ZAWA) says quick action will be taken to control the presence of crocodiles in Livingstone’s Kashitu Extension Area.
ZAWA Park Ranger, Moses Kaoma said in an interview with ZANIS in Livingstone today that more information would be gathered on the matter to ensure action is taken before human life is lost.
Mr. Kaoma explained that it was possible that crocodiles strayed into Kashitu extension area because of pools of water in that area located near the boundary of the Mosi-O-Tunya National Park.
Some residents of Kashitu Extension today stormed ZANIS offices challenging ZAWA to protect human life by preventing wild animals from straying into residential areas.
The residents claimed that each year, crocodiles stray in their residential area during the rainy season posing a danger to their well being.
Community development and social services minister, Michael Kaingu says the criticism on President Rupiah Banda by the opposition PF-UPND pact is normal because all opposition political parties world over were behaving in the same manner.
But Mr Kaingu warned that the negative criticism being targeted at President Banda by some MMD members will not be tolerated.
The Minister who said this when he paid a courtesy call on Chief Mwanachingwala of Mazabuka at his palace assured the Chief that the criticisms on President Banda was being perpetrated by a few disgruntled party members and has no capacity to destroy the party and the vision of the President.
Mr Kaingu challenged MMD members attacking the President to make their position known on which political platform they belong.
And the Minister said the MMD does not take the criticism by PF leader, Michael Sata and UPND leader, Hakainde Hichilema as being offensive because they are interested in going to State House.
Mr Kaingu also praised the people of Southern Province for rejecting the PF through the ballot.
Meanwhile, Mr Kaingu has commended Chief Mwanachingwala for the crucial role he played in influencing other chiefs in the province to rally behind President Banda during the Presidential By-election.
He said without the chief’s support, the MMD would have had serious problems to gain the 52,000 votes the President scored.
And Chief Mwanachingwala said he will continue supporting President Banda’s government.
He said chiefs play an important role in advising government on key national issues.
Minister of Education, Dora Siliya, has condemned the riotous behavior exhibited by pupils at Petauke Boarding High School recently.
This is contained in a statement issued by the Petauke Central constituency office and made available to ZANIS today.
Pupils at Petauke Boarding High School on Sunday night rioted and extensively damaged the school administration block, the computer laboratory and the girls’ dormitory.[quote]
The pupils accused the school administration of not explaining the circumstances that allegedly led to the deaths of mathematics teachers at the school every year.
Ms. Siliya, who is also Petauke Central Member of Parliament, said in a statement that pupils should have used proper channels to air their grievances rather than rioting.
She said the damage caused to the school infrastructure will still fall back on them for repair works.
She said government would not pay for vandalized infrastructure because it was spending a lot of money on constructing new schools.
Ms. Siliya urged the school administration and the Parent Teachers’ Association (PTA) to quickly ascertain the extent of damage and ensure that the pupils that were involved in the riot paid for the repair of the school infrastructure.
The Minister also appealed to the pupils and the community to appreciate the school property and have a sense of ownership by guarding it jealously.
Police have since released the three pupils that were on Sunday arrested for riotous behaviour but have continued with investigations in the matter.
World Bank Group President Robert Zoellick has described his meeting with President Rupiah Banda as excellent and fruitful for the people of Zambia.
Mr. Zoellick said he had good discussions with the Zambian Head of State on many areas of national development such as infrastructure development, agriculture, irrigation among other key national programs.
He said he discussed with Mr. Banda how the country would find money to invest in the sectors adversely affected by the global economic meltdown.
Mr. Zoellick disclosed that he also discussed with Mr. Banda how Zambia can diversify its economy from dependence on mining as the key economic activity to agriculture.
He told a video press conference today that he was able to discuss with President Banda how the country can find additional funding for clean development projects.
Mr. Zoellick said President Banda was able to tell him about his own farming experience and how some farmers sold the subsidized fertilizer they got from government to other farmers.[quote]
The World Bank Group President said this situation was unfortunate and did not make sense hence the need to reduce subsidies.
And the World Bank chief said Africa’s development lies squarely with Africans themselves.
He said the World Bank was committed to work with Africa to create jobs and reduce the prevailing poverty among the African people.
Meanwhile, Mr. Zoellick has said Chinese investment in Africa was welcome as it had the potential to contribute to Africa’s infrastructure development which could in turn result in job creation for the people.
He, however, said Chinese investors need not to come with their Chinese workers as that did not do Africa any good in terms of development.
The World Bank is working with China, including via jointly funded projects, to develop a manufacturing sector in Africa and potentially transform the economies of the poorest continent, its head said on Tuesday.
“If you look back at the growth of east Asia, starting with Japan and then Korea and Taiwan and southeast Asia and China, they’ve used the model of basic manufacturing to slowly move up the value-added chain,” Bank President Robert Zoellick said at the end of an African Union summit in Ethiopia.
“I’m not saying this is going to happen overnight but…”
The legacy of colonial rule means many sub-Saharan African countries — South Africa excluded — have economies structured round the export of raw materials such as oil, gold and cocoa, and have to import basic manufactured goods at higher prices.
Developing a domestic factory sector would go a long way towards cutting these costs, as well as creating jobs and accelerating industrialisation.
Chinese officials often talk of the potential for Chinese investment to bring about an African industrial revolution. Zoellick’s desire to see World Bank expertise and cash tied up with Chinese business and manufacturing knowhow supports that view.
It also marks a departure from World Bank criticism of some of the massive minerals-for-infrastructure deals that have typified much Chinese investment in the continent.
“In the case of China, we may sometimes look for opportunities to co-invest; sometimes we may try to help and work with the local government to build infrastructure — maybe it’s the electricity to power the plants, maybe it’s the roads,” Zoellick told journalists via teleconference from Addis Ababa.
Other examples included advising host countries on streamlining customs procedures — a vital step in establishing manufacturing-for-export zones, he said.
Zoellick said last year he had talked to senior Chinese officials about the feasibility of moving low-value factory work, such as making toys or shoes, from China to special economic zones in sub-Saharan African countries.
Such projects already exist in Zambia, Nigeria, Mauritius and Ethiopia, but are very much in their infancy.
Despite his praise for China’s investment in Africa, Zoellick said too many projects tended to rely on imported Chinese labour to the detriment of African skills development.
“We’ve wanted to work with both Africa and China so that people get the full benefits,” he said. “It doesn’t do Africa much good if China comes in and brings in Chinese workers.” (Editing by Tim Pearce)
President Rupiah Banda says government will soon commercialize the ICT sector in the country in order to enhance economic growth.
Mr. Banda says government wants to give specific emphasis to the growth of the sector because it has realized that ICT has the potential to transform Zambia’s economy more rapidly than other sectors.
President Banda disclosed this to ZANIS in an interview in Addis Ababa today shortly before departure for South Africa where he is scheduled to undergo a medical review.
The President said government has already taken first steps in its plans to commercialize the sector by inviting foreign investors to invest in ICT.
The President also disclosed that the World Bank has shown willingness to help the country grow the ICT sector.
He said during a meeting held yesterday, the bank pledged to transform the ZAMTEL ICT Training school in Ndola into a viable institution.
And President Banda says Zambia will take a leaf from Ethiopia on how that country has managed to grow its economy within a short period of time.
Mr. Banda said Ethiopia had come up with a deliberate policy of setting up colleges and schools in rural areas where many people have been trained in various skills.
President Rupiah Banda was in Addis Ababa Ethiopia to attend the 14th ordinary session of the African Union (AU) whose theme was, ‘New Information and Communication Technologies in Africa: Challenges and Opportunities for Development’. The summit closed today.
As chairperson of the Great Lakes Region, Zambia’s President Rupiah Banda reported to the summit on the progress made so far from the time he took over the chair.
On the sidelines of the summit, President Banda held closed door meetings with World Bank president Robert Zeolleck and US head of delegation to the AU Lauren Ladenson.
The summit witnessed the change of guard between outgoing chairperson Colonel Muhammar Gaddafi of Libya and Malawian President Dr Bingu Wamutharika who has taken over as chairman.
The summit also witnessed the launch the AU flag.
A combined team of police officers from Mazabuka and Lusaka yesterday arrested a witch finder of Magoye, who has been on the police wanted list for swindling businessmen out of millions of Kwacha.
It is alleged that the witch finder used to claim to the businessmen that he could multiply their money.
Police told ZANIS in Mazabuka today that the named Zambian witch finder, who was posing as a Nigerian and responding to the name of Chinedu, was captured in Magoye Township around 16:00 hours yesterday.
Police say the witch finder was hiding at a girl friend’s house for two weeks to escape the police dragnet.
According to police, the named suspect has been running advertisements in the national daily newspapers about what he claimed to be able to do.The police said some people who were desperate to get rich fell victim.
Police said after sensing danger, the suspect, who is a Kaonde by tribe but based in Lusaka, fled the capital city and settled in Magoye.
Police said one Lusaka businessman was allegedly swindled out of K13 million cash after the suspect promised him that his money would be multiplied.The suspect has since been taken to Lusaka.
The first train carrying ballast stones for the completion of the Chipata/Mchinji railway project arrived in Chipata today to the excitement of residents that gathered to witness the laying of the stones on the railway track.
Construction of the Chipata-Mchinji railway is scheduled to be completed before the end of this month.
Project manager Ernest Silwamba said 95 percent of construction works on both the railway line and the station terminal building have already been done.
Mr. Silwamba said construction on the rail line will be completed by the mid February.
He was speaking during a NACALA Corridor Development meeting in Chipata yesterday.
The meeting was attended by representatives from Zambia, Malawi and Mozambique.
Mr. Silwamba said the remaining works include ballasting of two kilometers and three yard lines.
He added that lifting and aligning of four kilometers of the main line and four yards and the rehabilitation of the station building will be done within the month of February.
Meanwhile, the Malawi has commended the Zambian government for putting up resources to complete the 27 kilometer stretch of the Chipata-Mchinji railway line.
Malawian delegation leader, Stephen Mkandawire said the Zambian government had shown commitment in the Chipata-Mchinji railway which he said is an economically viable project.
Mr. Mkandawire said President Rupiah Banda and his Malawian counterpart Bingu Wamutharika played a critical role in the completion of the railway project.
He noted that the existing warm relationship between the two countries and their leaders would further be strengthened as the project would continue uniting Zambia and Malawi.
And Central and Eastern African Railways (CEAR) Director of Marketing and Commercial Services, Wilfred Ali, said vandalism on the railway line was the greatest challenge in the development of the NACALA Corridor.
Mr. Ali said the NACALA Corridor was a major economic target for Zambia, Malawi and Mozambique.
He noted that the most common form of vandalism in the railway was the removal of stones and rail sleepers.
Mr. Ali said part of the 510 kilometer stretch of the rail line in Malawi was vandalized and needed emergency repair works.
He noted that a number of bridges on the railway line had also been vandalized.
He stated that CEAR had engaged the local community and area Members of Parliament in sensitizing people against vandalizing the infrastructure in Malawi.
Mr. Ali emphasized the need to ensure that the vandalism in Malawi did not spill over into Zambia.
Meanwhile, a contractor, Ziyaundin Daya, has commended the Zambian government for contracting local contractors to carry out works on the Chipata-Mchinji railway.
Mr. Daya said government was promoting local contractors through giving them big projects such as the Chipata-Mchinji railway.
He however, expressed concern that revenue officials in both Zambia and Malawi were slow to clear cargo that was meant for the completion of the railway line.
Mr. Daya cited an incident where it took close to four hours for the train carrying ballast stones to be cleared simply because border authorities in both countries did not have transport to the point where the train was to be cleared.
Patriotic Front leader Michael Sata has announced that the PF will hold its long awaited general conference between September and October this year.
Mr Sata said it will be during the general conference that a new party leadership will be ushered in. He said the Patriotic Front is very much geared and far much ahead of other political parties in the country in its quest to hold the general conference.
He was speaking when he featured on radio Phoenix’s Let the People Talk this morning
While on the same programe, Mr Sata said that former President Fredrick Chiluba should repent for the destruction he caused to Zambia.
Mr Sata said Dr Chiluba should repent and not add any more to the destruction he caused to the country. He said as someone who has worked closely with the former president there are so many things he knows which he has kept to himself.[quote]
He said Dr Chiluba knows the poverty Zambians are currently going through because of the destruction he caused during the time he served as President, that is why he was dishing out K10,000 notes to people when he visited the Copperbelt.
Mr Sata added that when leaders know the poverty people are going through the best thing to do is to address the poverty, wondering what a K10,000 can do to address the poverty people are facing.
A 12 year old boy in Katete district has allegedly killed his 40 year old uncle by stabbing him with a knife.
Katete District Commissioner, Elemani Mwanza and police sources confirmed to ZANIS that the incident happened last week at Kajiwa village in chief Kawaza’s area.
Mr. Mwanza identified the deceased as Samson Mbewe, adding that he died two days after he was stabbed.
He said the deceased was stabbed after he allegedly picked a quarrel with his 12 year old nephew.
He said after being stabbed, the deceased was rushed to St. Francis’ hospital where he was admitted and treated before he died two days later.
Mr. Mwanza, who expressed shock at the incident, said the 12 year old boy was apprehended by police after relatives to the deceased reported the matter.
Police in Kabwe have arrested three men who allegedly caused commotion when one of them attempted to shoot a callboy.
Central province police commanding officer Simon Mpande told ZANIS today that the three men, include a police officer, a Zambia Air Force officer and a civilian are currently detained in police custody.
Mr. Mpande said all the three men come from Lusaka.
He named the men as Robison Phiri, Kennedy Fulilwa a ZAF officer and another one only identified as Fulilwa.
He said the three men claimed to have gone to Kabwe to attend a funeral.
Mr. Mpande said the men were driving a Toyota Corolla registration number ABJ 8556, which is also detained at Kasanda police station.
He said during the struggle, one of the three men fired at a callboy but missed him.
He explained that the bullet that was fired from a pistol sunk into the ground.
The pistol that was used and four rounds of ammunitions have since been confiscated from the men.
And an eyewitness, who wrestled with the armed man, told ZANIS that the suspects said they were driving back to Lusaka and wanted a fourth person who would be a passenger in their vehicle.
He said the men failed to convince any one to travel with them, prompting them to pull a passenger from one minibus that was loading at the station near the railway crossing in Kabwe.
The eyewitness, who did not want to be named, said callboys resisted the action and advised the three men to find a passenger elsewhere because the woman they wanted had already boarded a bus.
He said this caused a strong argument which made one of the three men to pull a pistol and threatened to shoot a callboy who in defense held the hands of the man with a pistol.
He narrated that other callboys joined in the struggle and overpowered the man with a pistol after pressing his private parts.
The other two suspects were also apprehended before they could speed off the bus station.
Commotion reigned at the bus station during the wrestling to restrain the armed man from opening fire until police arrived at the scene and arrested the three men.
Former Kabwe District Commissioner Paul Chaikatisha, who called the police during the scuffle, commended the callboys and other citizens for the courage to challenge the armed men.
A 24-year old woman in Kawambwa is laying unconscious in the district hospital after she was allegedly attacked and raped.
A source at Kawambwa police station and a hospital medical officer, Chota Chishimba confirmed the incident to ZANIS in Kawambwa yesterday.
The police source and Dr. Chishimba named the woman as Cecilia Musonda of Chikobe village in sub-chief Kabanda in chief Mushota’s area.
Dr. Chishimba has described the condition of Mrs. Musonda as stable.
The anonymous police source said the woman is suspected to have been raped because there were some marks of struggle at a scene.
Emeldah Chabala, 40, who is a mother in-law to the victim, explained to ZANIS that the incident happened on Monday afternoon when the woman went to harvest cassava.
Mrs. Chabala said Mrs. Musonda told her husband, John Chileshe 31, of the same village that she had gone to get cassava tubers from their field while he (Chileshe) went to work at his friend’s field called “iciima”, a system where three or more people come together and help one another in cultivating.
Mrs. Chabala explained that when, her son, Chileshe returned home, he did not find his wife and asked his children if their mother had come back from the cassava field.
She said upon learning that his wife was still away, Chileshe became worried mobilized his fellow villagers to go and look for Musonda in the cassava field.
Mrs. Chabala said the victim was found lying unconscious in the grass with her underwear tied around her mouth.
She said Mrs. Musonda also had bruises on her head and neck and a cut on the right ear.
And a check by ZANIS at the hospital’s female ward yesterday revealed that Mrs. Musonda could neither talk nor eat.
Luapula Province Police commanding officer, Auxensio Mbewe could not be reached for a comment.
Police in the area have since arrested Martin Mwape 29 to assist with investigations in connection to the matter.
The Zambia United Local Authorities Workers Union (ZULAWU) in Mazabuka says the K 359 million grant given to the council as compensation for scrapping off crop levy is inadequate compared to hundreds of millions of Kwacha the council used to collect.
ZULAWU branch chairperson, Crinco Mushiba explained to ZANIS in Mazabuka today that government should consider sourcing for the deficit to pay the local authority if it was to sustain its operations.
Mr. Mushiba said it was unfair for the government to abolish crop levy when it cannot release enough grants to compensate the council.
He said the abolition should have been targeted at small scale farmers and not commercial farmers who are benefiting a lot from crops.
He noted that the council’s as service delivery and payment of salaries to its workers will now be difficult.
Mr. Mushiba said Mazabuka municipal council owes retirees, statutory bodies such as Local Authority Superannuation Fund (LASF) and National Pension Scheme Authority (NAPSA) billions of Kwacha through unremitted statutory obligations.
He said unless government revisits the abolition of crop levy, the operations in most local authorities who depended so much on crop levy will ground to a halt.
Mr. Mushiba also lamented that it was unfair for the government not to listen to the ZULAWU national leadership’s concerns over the abolition of the crop levy.
MMD spokesperson Dora Siliya says she has earned her positions in government through hard work.
Ms Siliya who is also Education Minister said she has been in the party for a long time and that she had added value to it.
She was responding to a question that she is untouchable in President Rupiah Banda’s government. This was when she featured on Zambezi FM, a local radio station in Livingstone over the weekend.
Ms. Siliya noted that people had become opinion makers, a vice which the MMD fought. She said she was a hard worker who managed to get votes in the Eastern province when she ran for parliamentary elections.
Ms. Siliya pointed out that she was first appointed as a Deputy Minister by late President Levy Mwanawasa.
”Political space should be filled with issues and not what people think about me,” she said.
She said her job as MMD Spokesperson was not to sell herself but the party brand.
And reacting to a question that some chiefs in the province had branded the MMD a violent party following some threats by some MMD cadres to gang rape opposition Forum for Democracy and Development (FDD) leader Edith Nawakwi, Ms Siliya described the statements as unfortunate.
”That statement is unfortunate that is why I have said space should be filled with issues. Every party has a following and when we insult leaders we forget that there are people who support them passionately,” she said.
And commenting on whether the expulsion of Livingstone MMD Constituency Chairman Capt John Mwamulima still stood since he had rejected it, Ms Siliya said there must be discipline in the party since the MMD had been in existence for a very long time.
She said that there was no political problem within the MMD adding that there was also no insurmountable problem in the party but that discipline must prevail.
Ms. Siliya observed that President Rupiah Banda believed in dialogue and that what the people of Zambia wanted to see from the party was development. She also said at the moment, government was concerned with the implementation of its programmes.
She said the President was concerned about implementation because when the election time comes, the MMD would be able to point at the programmes that it had implemented.
”We have a plan and we know where we are going,” she said.