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ZESCO Limited engineers and managers analysing the aquatic weed that has besieged the Kafue Gorge power station which has resulted in low power supplyZESCO Limited has started importing 250 mega watts of
power from South Africa and Namibia at a cost of $260 000 daily to mitigate the impact of power shortage in the country.
Most parts of Zambia have been experiencing extensive load shedding since Saturday.
This was after ZESCO shut down two of its six generators at Kafue Gorge Power Station, resulting in a national deficit of about 500 mega watts.
The generators have been shut down due to the blockage of the water in-let by weed which has accumulated at the site and reduced the flow of water.
ZESCO Limited Director-Transmission and Generation, Christopher Nthala says the power company is importing 100 Mega watts of power from ESCOM in South Africa and 150 Mega watts from Namibia’s NAMPOWER.
BUT Mr. Nthala said works to clear the weed at the water in-let which started on Saturday, have not yielded success.
And Energy minister Kenneth Konga has directed ZESCO management to treat the problem at the power station as an emergency.
Kafue Gorge Power Station is currently generating 400 Mega watts, instead of its usual 900 Mega watts as a result of reduced water levels to the in-let.
[ZNBC]
The ESU nursing school Limited which is suspected to be owned by ministry of health officials linked to the K10 billion scam in Kalundu township.Police have officially arrested and charged former ministry
of Health Human Resource Manager Henry Kapoko with theft by public servant.
Police spokesperson Bonny Kapeso confirmed the development to ZNBC news in Lusaka.
Mr. Kapeso said Mr. Kapoko has been charged in relation to the on going investigations involving the K10 billion ministry of health corruption scam.
He said Mr. Kapoko is detained in police custody.
And Police Tuesday sealed off a private nursing school in Lusaka as part of the on going investigations into the K10 billion allegedly stolen at the ministry of health.
Mr. Kapeso confirmed in an interview that ESU nursing college situated in Roma residential area was raided between 15:00 and 16:00 hours.
Mr. Kapeso said police were conducting verifications and investigations because the nursing school has been linked to a director at the ministry of health.
Investigations into the 27 billion kwacha financial scandal at the ministry of health has continued with 32 officers sent on leave so far.
THE Lusaka High Court has thrown out Henry Kapoko’s three applications for judicial review regarding properties seized by the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC).
Mr Kapoko, a Local Government and Housing employee is being investigated in connection with fraud amounting to K10 billion at the Ministry of Healthy where he worked.
The three applications were made by Best Home Lodge shareholders, Lusaka businessman Fred Chileshe and Kabwata resident Steven Chisala.
Mr Kapoko, through his lawyer Nicholas Chanda, applied for a fresh judicial review application after the first one to challenge the seizure was also thrown out.
The shareholders argued that the action by the ACC to extend search and seizure to the lodge was illegal as they were not included in the search warrant.
The shareholders also questioned the seizure of their vehicles.
In the initial application, Mr Kapoko argued that the decision by the ACC to seize his property and that of innocent third parties was irrational and irregular.
But High Court judge Evans Hamaundu ruled that Mr Kapoko was not the right applicant to commence proceedings and that of innocent third parties.
The ACC has since seized several vehicles and restricted a number of properties including an executive lodge in Lusaka.
MMD chairman for elections, Mike Mulongoti has challenged opposition Patriotic Front president, Michael Sata, to produce evidence of how President Banda and the MMD allegedly used funds from the Ministry of Health to campaign in the 2008 elections.
Mr Mulongoti said President Banda and his campaign team never used money from the Ministry of Health as alleged by Mr Sata.
He said in an interview in Lusaka yesterday that if Mr Sata has evidence on the matter, he should present it to the relevant law enforcement agencies that are carrying out investigations at the Ministry of Health.
“I was in charge of President Banda’s campaigns during the 2008 elections and I can tell you we never used money from the Ministry of Health as alleged by Mr Sata and if he has proof, let him present it to the relevant investigative wings so that they can prove whether or not the MMD got money from the ministry,” he said.
Mr Mulongoti wondered why Mr Sata did not present the matter as one of his reasons for petitioning the MMD in the Presidential elections.
He said if Mr Sata has evidence that the MMD used money from the ministry for campaigns, he should have revealed that before the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) unearthed the K10 billion scam.
“He challenged the election results in the last Presidential elections and so I wonder why in his petition, he did not include this matter as one of his submissions that my party used money from the Ministry of Health.
“If he knew that the MMD got money from this ministry, why has he been quiet?” he said.
Mr Mulongoti said as an opposition political party leader, Mr Sata should be truthful in his statements.[quote]
He said opposition political parties and the citizenry in general should allow the investigating wings to complete their work at the Ministry of Health without disruptions.
Mr Mulongoti said Zambians should desist from making statements that are likely to alarm the nation and disrupt the investigations.
He challenged Mr Sata to call for a commission of inquiry beginning from 1991 so that all those who have stolen money from Government can be revealed.
“The nation should allow the security wings to do their job without disturbances. If people have evidence, let them present it to the officers as opposed to alarming the nation by making statements anyhow.
“We should allow the law enforcement agencies to prove who the perpetrators of the scam are and not point fingers at one another,” he said.
Mr Sata is quoted in The Post newspaper as saying President Banda used funds from the Ministry of Health for the Presidential election campaigns last year.
Sport, Youth and Child Development Minister, Kenneth Chipungu has urged the Food Reseve Agency (FRA) to look for alternative storage sheds in Serenje and let the Council Hall be given back to youths as a recreation centre.
Speasking in Serenje last weekend, Mr. Chipungu said it was unfortunate that youths in the district were denied recreation by the council who rented the Council Hall to the FRA to use as storage sheds.
Mr. chipungu said the council should get back the Hall and let the youths use it to meet and share ideas including playing indoor games such as badminton, chess, pool, tennis and other games to keep them busy.
He said FRA should in fact build their own sheds in the district this year so that they should not depend on the hall.
Mr. chipungu who inspected the Hall and ball game playing fields in Serenje, said government was working hard to make sport be at the center stage because many youths were getting spoiled by engaging in bad habits such as beer drinking and illicit sex because they did not have recreation facilities.
He also expressed sadness that the council and FRA had neglected the Hall by not paying attention to the falling ceiling boards.
“I am not happy with this arrangement FRA should immediately find its own sheds and leave this to the youths. We can find some donor to fund for the renovation of this building so that it can become a good reading and recreation facility for youth,” he said.
Mr. Chipungu also challenged business houses in the district to work with sport organizers and ensure sport activities were supported financially.
He said government was concerned about the number of youths leaving school every year and do nothing.
“There are over 300 youths come out of school every year and only 40 percent find chance to get places in colleges while the rest are left out. These are the ones we want to carter for so that they also have something to do,” he said.
Mr. Chipungu also challenged the youths to take advantage of the Citizen Economic Empowerment Fund (CEEF) and apply for the fund to enable them engage in business ventures.
Comesa Secretary-general Sindiso Ngwenya Trade among Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) member states rose from about US$3.2 billion in 2000 to US$15.2 billion last year, an official said on Tuesday.
Secretary-general Sindiso Ngwenya said this while addressing the 26 th meeting of the Council of Ministers underway in Victoria Falls ahead of the Comesa Customs Union launch this Sunday.
He said though the increase was commendable, a lot more still needed to be done as the figure was still less than 10 percent of global trade.
“Since the launch of the Comesa Free Trade Area (FTA) on 31 October 2000, intra-Comesa trade has grown from US$3.2 billion to US$15.2 billion in 2008,” he said.
He said the region had also recorded an increase in cross border investment, resulting in spin off benefits such as employment creation.
Ngwenya, however, urged member states to create conducive environments that attracted investment, adding the establishment of the Comesa Customs Union this Sunday will present the region with an opportunity to boost trade and lure investment.
“By launching the Customs Union Comesa countries are sending out a strong political message that there will be no policy reversal on trade liberalization and the creation of a single market for goods, labour and capital,” he said.
Ngwenya said establishment of the customs union would also sent a bold message that the region, with about 400 million people and a gross domestic product of US$350 billion, was now an emerging market for trade and investment.
“We can now speak with a single voice and negotiate as one,” he said, adding that this would help the region to pool its resources together to fund some of its projects even though a similar fund was already in existence.
The union would also facilitate the speedy realization of Comesa macro-economic convergence programmes, exchange rate convertibility and ultimately the establishment of a single currency, he said.
The secretary-general, however, urged member states to work together in implementing agreed policies to ensure the Customs Union was a huge success.
Ngwenya said the globalization process required Comesa countries to operate like a pride of lion that work as a collective group.
And Ngwenya urged African countries to craft their own economic policies and not depend too much on foreign policies, noting that this had a negative impact on growth.
He said the global economic recession was a clear example of how dangerous it could be to naivley accept policies without critically interrogating them.
It was sad, he said, to note that what a central bank in developed countries decided over lunch or dinner became universal law.
“The lesson to be learnt from this and related factors that have thrown the world economy in a worst recession is that it is absolutely necessary for Comesa to understand the cause rather than the symptoms in order for the region to craft strategies and policies than can lead to a vicious cycle of growth and equitable development,” he said.
Meanwhile , Zimbabwe assumed the chairmanship of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) Council of Ministers at the regional meeting which opened here on Tuesday in the resort town of Victoria Falls.
The council, which brings together ministers responsible for Trade, Industry and Commerce, makes key decisions that commit member states to various programmes in Comesa. It also makes recommendations to Heads of States for approval.
Zimbabwean Industry and Commerce Minister Welshman Ncube assumed the chair on behalf of the country.
Ncube takes over from Kenyan Trade Minister Amos Kimunya, whose country hosted the previous Comesa Summit while Swaziland retained the vice-chairmanship post.
As Comesa vice-chair, Swaziland would host next yera’s Comesa Summit.
Speaking soon afterwards, Ncube said Zimbabwe took seriously issues of regional integration and would strive to promote full cooperation among member states.
“I want to assure you that Zimbabwe takes more seriously the responsibilities entrusted on her as she assumes the chairmanship of the council,” he said.
He pledged to continue championing the good work of those that served in the previous council to ensure Comesa implemented its developmental programmes.
In his address, the out-going council chairman Kimunya said Comesa had done a lot to promote regional integration. Zimbabwe, he said, was now entrusted with the task of spearheading the programmes.
“I am satisfied with my tenure,” he said, adding that Zimbabwe also had the capacity to do more for the regional economic bloc.
A visiting Cardinal of the Catholic Church has said that the Catholic Church has no role to play in politics.
Speaking on arrival at Livingstone International Airport today, Vinko Puljic who is Cardinal of Sarajevo in Bosnia-Hezegovina said, when the Church sees that a priest is disobedient, it will not just standby and look, but will try hard to put him in line. He further said, if the priest concerned does not reform, then the Church would have recourse to other corrective measures.
The Cardinal was responding to questions on Former Radio Icelengelo Priest, Father Frank Bwalya’s recent involvement in politics.
He said, sometimes priests identify themselves so closely with the people they live with in a particular community, to the extent that they forget that they are priests.
Cardinal Puljic said the Priest’s role is that of giving advice to politicians to lead a nation in a proper way.
And commenting on corruption, Cardinal Puljic said the scourge would always be in existence, but that it is the role of the church to teach about the evils of corruption and other moral activities.
”Corruption shall always be there. It is not enough to just shout to those who are elected as political leaders, but level minded moral principles must be preached to people at all levels,” he said.
The Cardinal is in Zambia to visit Lusu Mission in Sesheke district, Western Province and will leave the country next week on Monday.
A Zambian woman has been convicted and sentenced to death by a Chinese court for trafficking in heroin.
Mary Musiyalike, 38, who was sentenced on May 14, is to be executed by a firing squad within two years.
Drug Enforcement Commission Spokesperson, John Nyawali, told ZNBC news that Musiyalike was found guilty of trafficking 2.5 Kilogrammes of heroin into China, in December last year.
She was arrested at Shanghai City International Airport as she entered China with the drugs.
China is one of the countries in the world with very strict laws on drug trafficking and the offence is punishable by death.
Mr. Nyawali has appealed to Zambians at home and abroad to desist from drug trafficking.
He said no country in the world is a safe haven for drug trafficking.
Ten Zambians, five of whom are women have been convicted outside the country for drug related offences in the last six months.
The majority of these were arrested in the far east.
Zambia striker Collins Mbesuma will not be a Mamelodi Sundowns player next season when his contract with the South African club expires on June 30.
According to Kickoff, Sundowns have decided not to extend Mbesuma’s contract for an optional two years and will be a free agent at the end of this month.
The news comes in the wake of local press reports today that he skipped a days training at Zambia’s training camp in South Africa on May 25 after the team was given a break the previous day.
Mbesuma with one goal to his credit this season for Sundowns joined the Pretoria side last August after leaving Turkish club Bursaspor.
He previously played for Roan United before moving abroad to Kaizer Chiefs in 2004 and later Portsmouth in England including a brief loan spell at Portuguese side CS Maritimo.
President Rupiah Banda has warned that there will be no sacred cows in the on-going investigations regardless of whether those involved are members of the ruling MMD or from the opposition.
And President Banda has said the on-going investigations are too serious to be trivialized or politicized because of the huge sums of moneys involved and that all Zambians should therefore give necessary support and information to the investigating agencies in order to bring those involved to book.
He said Zambians, especially leaders, should not trivialize the investigations and appealed to Zambians to refrain from making comments that are prejudicial to the on-going corruption investigations at the Ministry of Health and other government line ministries.
President Banda said this in a press statement released to ZANIS in Lusaka today by his Special Assistant for Press and Public Relations Dickson Jere.
Mr. Banda said he wants justice to prevail and the truth to come out adding that he would not shield anyone from being investigated or prosecuted once the truth is established.
He said people with information regarding the beneficiaries or individuals who were involved in the corruption allegations at the Ministry of Health should report to relevant law enforcement agencies as opposed to issuing unsubstantiated press statements.
“There will be no sacred cows in the on-going investigations regardless of whether those involved are members of the ruling MMD or from the opposition. The on-going investigations are too serious to be trivialized or politicized because of the huge sums of moneys involved,” he stated. “The investigating agencies of government are looking for evidence. Please, feel free to take evidence to these law enforcement agencies instead of rushing to the press to issue unsubstantiated statements.”
Recently, 33 health officials including former Health Permanent Secretary Dr. Simon Mitti were sent on forced leave to pave way for investigations for allegedly embezzling over K27 billion public resources from the Ministry of Health.
Luapula Province has the highest prevalence rate of childhood mortality in the country, with 157 and 97 deaths per 1 000 live births in under-five children and infants respectively.
This came to light during the Central Statistical Office (CSO) 2007 Zambia Demographic and Health Survey (ZDHS) dissemination seminar in Mansa today.
CSO Director, Efreda Chulu, however, said although the province still remained with the highest prevalence in infant mortality, it had recorded a reduction from 157 to 97 deaths per 1000 live births over a five-year period.
Ms Chulu also said there had been a decline in under-five mortality from 248 to 157 deaths per 1000 live births but said Luapula Province still ranked the highest with prevalence of childhood mortality in the country.
She also disclosed that the province also accounts for the highest cases of stunted and malnourished children.
According to the ZDHS report findings, 56 per cent of under-five children in the province are stunted and about 18 per cent are underweight and over five per cent were wasted or too thin for their height.
The report revealed that the levels of stunted and underweight growth amongst the under five children indicated that there was chronic and acute malnutrition in the province.
The ZDHS report indicated that the high prevalence of childhood mortality was as a result of lack of family planning among many families, mostly in the rural parts of the province.
It said there was low family planning contraceptive usage and unmet need for family planning amongst married women and missing of antenatal and postnatal care.
The CSO has embarked on a countrywide dissemination of the findings of the 2007 ZDHS in provinces.
Speaking at the same function, Luapula Province Permanent Secretary, Jazzman Chikwakwa, said there was need for more attention and focus in addressing the challenges that hampered the attainment of improved health care and livelihood in Luapula Province.
Mr Chikwakwa said government and its co-operating partners needed to strengthen their interventions and programs aimed at reducing the health problems that beleaguered the province.
He said this in a speech read for him by Luapula Province Deputy Permanent Secretary, Blackson Ndlobvu.
Mr Chikwakwa said the government and its partners should not lose focus due to the worsening statistical findings in the survey but work harder and focus on the raised concerns for improved lives of the people in the area.
He called on heads of government departments and Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs) in the province to study the findings of the ZDHS and assess the effectiveness of their activities on the people in their areas of operation.
Meanwhile, Mr Chikwakwa commended the CSO for initiating a program to disseminate the survey findings to provinces, noting that the ZDHS findings were vital to the development of policies and plans to tackle the highlighted challenges as most policy implementing agents were based in provinces.
And Mr Chikwakwa said that government was committed to strengthening capacity of research institutions to conduct surveys and research studies in order to meet the increasing demand for information for policy formulation, planning and evaluation of interventions and programs.
He said timely and reliable statistics would enable government and its cooperating partners and other stakeholders to make informed assessments of its programs and interventions.
Some parents in Serenje district have registered their biological children as orphans at the newly opened Hope Children Care (HCC) orphanage.
HCC director, Pastor Navice Kalunga, disclosed to ZANIS today that out of the 150 registered children, ten were discovered to have their parents still living.
Pastor Kalunga, who described the situation as unfortunate, said after investigations, such children were sent away because they were stealing from the actual orphans.
Pastor Kalunga said investigations were still going on and all those that would be found to have their biological parents still living would be sent away.
“It is not good to try and take advantage and benefit from the disadvantaged children who have found assistance from charitable organizations such as the church. Why cheat that you are dead simply because you want help? It is not good,” he said.
Pastor Kalunga warned that the matter could have been reported to police because this is pure theft from the oprhans.
“Imagine, as HCC we bought all the children school items including uniforms, shoes, books and other clothes and we also feed them only to discover later that some of them were actually registered by their own parents. It it painful,” he said.
He explained that one child met his father behind the market when he was being taken to school by him (Pastor Kalunga) and child started calling his father, much to the surprise of the pastor.
He said he stopped and asked the boy as to whether the man he was calling was his biological father or not, to which he said the man was his biological father and he never lost the mother.
Pastor Kalunga warned that he would not tolerate any lie meant to deprive orphans what is due to them.
HCC has children at Serenje Boma Basic, Kamwala, Miselo Kapika and Handabala Kapotwe schools in Serenje.
It was constructed with the help of two churches from America – Conerstone church, a Baptist church and Brookside an independent church.
Kasempa Member of Parliament, Kabinga Pande, has directed councillors in the district to sensitise their people against aiding foreigners to acquire Zambian National Registration Cards.
Mr Pande, who is also Foreign Affairs Minister, observed that foreigners obtain Zambian National Registration Cards through help from Zambians themselves.
Mr Pande noted that without help from local people, it would be very difficult, if not impossible, for a foreigner to obtain a Zambian National Registration Card.
He pointed out that the trend should stop, saying it is dangerous because the character and background of some of the foreigners who are aided into obtaining the cards is not known.
Mr Pande sounded the warning in Kasempa yesterday at an ordinary council meeting held in the council chambers.
“This is serious. It is important that you councillors go flat out in your wards and sensitise your people against helping foreigners obtain Zambian NRCs. It is dangerous to help someone you do not even know to obtain a Zambian card. What if he is a thief?” he said.
Mr Pande’s warning came after the Council Secretary told the meeting that the mobile registration exercise was expected to commence yesterday (June 1) up to August 29, 2009.
Meanwhile, Mr Pande cautioned council management against increasing salaries for council employees, saying the increase should be done only if the council has the capacity to sustain the increment.
“If the council is able to increase the salary for its workers, well let it do so but there should be a resolution not to get into arrears. It should be sustainable and further correspond with the output from the employees,” advised Mr Pande.
He noted that some employees in the council just report for work and end up warming themselves in the sun and loitering at the expense of working and only to demand salary increments.
The Kasempa MP advised councillors to monitor work done by council employees, saying councillors should show interest in what is happening in the local authoruty.
Earlier, Council Chairman, Taipi Kyendamali, told the meeting that the council’s move to increase salaries for its employees is aimed at motivating the workers.
Mr Kyendamali said the council has the capacity to pay the proposed increments to the workers.
Mr Pande is in Kasempa to monitor development projects and to received submissions of development nature from various sectors in the district.
Information and broadcasting minister Ronnie Shikapwasha
Chief Government Spokesperson Lieutenant General Ronnie Shikapwasha says government will promptly extend forensic investigations of corruption to other government departments and ministries.
Lt. Gen. Shikapwasha told ZANIS in an interview that effective measures aimed at extending forensic investigations of corruption to other government departments and ministries have since been put in place.
Gen. Shikapwasha, who is also Information and Broadcasting Services minister, said the move taken by government to extend forensic investigations of corruption to other arms of government will ensure that the plunderers of national resources and perpetrators of other corrupt practices are brought to book.
He said government through the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) and other Law Enforcement Agencies is working tirelessly to ensure that it gets to the root cause of corruption in government.
Gen. Shikapwasha said that it is saddening that allegations of serious corruption involving huge sums of funds have persisted in the country despite government serious interventions to fight the vice.
He said government will ensure that perpetrators of corrupt practices are brought to book in a bid to ensure that there is transparency and accountability in the utilization of public funds.
Gen. Shikapwasha further said that government will ensure that it fully supports the efforts taken by the ACC and other Law Enforcement Agencies to clean-up ministries and government departments as corruption was frustrating government efforts of attaining the goals set in the Firth National Development Plan (FNDP) and the Vision 2030.
“As government will not relent in our efforts of fighting corruption and will ensure that forensic investigations of corrupt practices are extended to other ministries and not only the Ministry of Health,” Lieutenant General Shikapwasha said.
Gen. Shikapwasha further appealed to all government officials and civil servants to adhere to the principle of zero-tolerance on corruption.
He has since called for the prudent utilization of public funds with a view to ensuring that development programmes are implemented within the prospects of this year’s national budget and donor funding.
Last week, a combined team of the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) and the Zambia police swung into action and arrested 33 Ministry of Health employees including Former Health Permanent Secretary Dr Simon Miti and sent them on forced leave to pave way for forensic investigations.
The 33 Ministry of Health employees have allegedly to have been involved into the financial fraud scam involving over K27 billion.
Eastern Province Education Officer Pilila Jere says sit-in protests by teachers are not the best way of airing their grievances.
Speaking to ZANIS in an interview in Chadiza, Ms Jere said teachers should channel their grievances through their union representatives.
She said confrontation has never been a solution to any dispute, adding that solutions to problems were only achieved through amicable interventions.
Ms Jere said teachers should be patient as their union representatives were engaged in discussions with government over their concerns.
The Provincial Education Officer, who expressed sadness that teachers in some districts in the province were on a sit-in protest, said the move was disadvantaging pupils in the affected schools.
She commended teachers in Chadiza district for not resorting to industrial action even when they equally had similar grievances as other teachers in the province.
Ms Jere said teachers should have the pupils’ interest at heart as pupils suffer the most when teachers shun their teaching duties.
Some teachers in Eastern Province, particularly Petauke, have joined the sit-in protest by their colleagues in other parts of the country to press government for improved conditions of service and payment of rural and remote hardship allowances.