Former first lady Maureen Mwanawasa has challenged government to adopt a revolutionary approach to the nation’s economic challenges and create fall back industries to avoid over dependency on the mining sector.
Dr. Mwanawasa has also called for enhanced education provision and accessibilities saying education remained Zambia’s cornerstone to economic development.
Speaking in Chililabombwe when she donated assorted educational support materials to the Konkola Support to Orphans and Vulnerable Children (OVC), Dr. Mwanawasa said there was need to effectively use the abundant natural resources to develop various industries unlike depending on minerals, which are a wasting asset.
She said Zambia had the potential to alleviate poverty and ensure its citizens accessed better living standards through the implementation of pro poor policies and economic activities in various sectors.
Dr. Mwanawasa further called for the development of export zones in border areas to enhance cross border trade, which has the capacity of creating jobs for the trading communities.
“Zambia does not determine copper prices on the world market so people should have other sources of income in case they lose their jobs as is the case now. Copper is a wasting asset hence the need to create sustainability of other industries,” she advised.
The Former First Lady reiterated the Maureen Mwanawasa Community Initiative (MMCI)’s resolve to offer educational and nutritional support to OVCs as well as the aged in various localities in the country.
Among the donated items were books, assorted clothes, blankets, sugar, soap mosquito nets, chitenge materials, jerseys and sweat shirts as well as bicycles.
And speaking at the same function Konkola OVC chairperson, Obvious Kamukwamba thanked the MMCI for the donation saying the gesture would greatly help the 300 orphans his organization was currently sponsoring.
Mr Kamukwamba said his organization would demonstrate transparency in distributing the donated equipment while urging the beneficiaries to take care of the gifts whose monetary value was high.
In an other development, former first lady has implored the Zambian community to uphold children’s rights and create a conducive environment under which they should grow and develop into productive citizens.
Speaking when she officiated at the opening of Nsungeni Early Childhood Care and Development Centre at Chililabombwe’s Lubengele market, Dr. Mwanawasa said children need to be brought up in conducive environment.
The care and development centre, which shelters about 160 marketeer’s children, is an initiative of the Maureen Mwanawasa Community Initiative (MMCI) and Konkola Copper Mines (KCM).
Dr. Mwanawasa said the centre would enable disadvantages children access protection, good nutrition, healthy living conditions and an early education while their parents are trading at the market.
She commended KCM for its corporate social responsibility programme which had facilitated the funding of the project, which caters for children aged between six months and six years.
The MMCI has also facilitated the construction of another childhood care and development centre in Kapiri Mposhi called Amundame.
And KCM General Manager Keith Kapui expressed delight at his organisation’s involvement in helping the underprivileged in its area of operation through childhood care and educational support.
Mr Kapui said KCM was committed to investing into community ventures that uplifts children’s well being and development as demonstrated by its capital injection into community and trust schools in Chingola and Chililabombwe.
ZANIS/TT/MKM/ENDS