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Renard Seeks to End Zambia’s False Dawns

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Zambia face Senegal on Wednesday in an important battle for supremacy of Group A at the inaugural CHAN tournament when the two sides face-off in Abidjan in an 18:00 kickoff.

This game will be Zambia’s first real test of its staying power in the CHAN after all the hype surrounding their fairly easy 3-0 win against modest hosts Cote d’Ivoire in the tournaments opening game on Sunday.

Both Zambia and Senegal are on 3 points but the former lead Group A thanks to a superior goal difference after the latter beat Tanzania 1-0 in match two also on Sunday.

Victory for Zambia in their mid-week Group A game will hand the team its first major semifinal appearance slot in a senior Caf event since the 1996 Africa Cup tournament.

This match too is another test for Zanaco striker Given Singuluma’s reputation as CHAN top scorer with three goals as he tries to erase his part of Zambia’s Cecafa Senior Challenge Cup misadventure last month.

The same will go down for Herve Renard who is under pressure to avoid a case of De Ja Vu after the false down in Uganda.

Meanwhile, Zambia face a pragmatic Senegal whose pace and physical presence is surely to test Renard’s adventurous flair from their game against Cote d‘Ivoire.

Zambia’s captain Kebby Hachipuka of Green Eagles should be a key figure in what is expected to be potentially a bruising battle ahead against Senegal.

Senegal are certain not to give too much respect to midfielders Henry Banda of Zanaco and including Zesco United’s William Njobvu following their impressive display against Cote d’Ivoire.

Moreover, Renard’s side were not tested defensively on Sunday and looked suspiciously suspect when Ivorian striker Florent Sahoure bear down on them for the 79 minutes was on the pitch before being red carded.

And defender Elijah Tana is set to start after his arrival in Abidjan on Monday and should bring some stability and experience though he will be certainly short on pace against an expected rampaging attack from the Senegalese.

However, Renards biggest worry is the left back where Power Dynamos’ Perry Mubanga, as expected, was exposed- something familiar with the defenders form over the years.

And in the second Group A penultimate match, winless Cote d’Ivoire and Tanzania meet in the second kickoff at the same venue each hoping to keep their CHAN dreams alive.

Kwacha tumbles further

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The local currency depreciated by K50 to the US dollar, Monday.

This was after trading closed in the range of five thousand 550 to five thousand 570 kwacha.

Standard Chartered bank Zambia said in its daily newsletter that the market was quiet for most of the day until in the afternoon when offshore players cashed in.

The bank predicts that the kwacha will weaken to a range of five thousand 500 to five thousand 600 kwacha Tuesday.

Last week the local unit hit five thousand 700 kwacha to one US dollar.

Copper and oil prices also weakened slightly.

The price of Copper closed at three thousand 200 dollars a tonne, down from three thousand 251 dollars a tonne last week.

Oil prices fell by about three dollars to close at 38 dollars per barrel.

/ZNBC/NEWS

Solwezi mayor wants central sewer system

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Solwezi Municipal Council Mayor, Emmanuel Chihili, has bemoaned lack of a central sewer system in the district.

Mr Chihili said households in the district depend on septic tanks which pause a danger to the provision of safe and clean drinking water to the people in future.

He was speaking at the inaugural ceremony of nine Northwestern Water and Sewerage Company (NWWSC) held at Royal Solwezi hotel yesterday.

Mr Chihili observed that the water level in the district was high, adding that this can cause contamination of under-ground water due to the effluent from the septic tanks.

“There is need to look into the urgent provision of a central sewer system,” he said.

Mr Chihili also said the council shall continue ensuring that the allocation of plots was done accordingly to avoid structures being built on water service lines and pledged to enforce the standard of water service provision.

He said plots shall not be allocated to people within 50 to 100 meters within the installation of water facilities and appealed to people encroaching near rivers and water treatment areas to stop as the exercise causes a danger to water.

Mr Chihili, however, commended NWWSC for its continued supply of clean water to people in the province, saying most households have access to water 24 hours service despite the challenges that have befallen the water utility company due to economic boom.

ZANIS/ENDS/EC/EB

Street kids – a major problem in Southern Province

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GOVERNMENT says the problem of street kids is one of the major challenges being faced in Southern Province.

Southern Province Permanent Secretary, Darius Hakayobe, said the problems have been compounded by poverty in rural areas and peri urban areas.

Mr Hakayobe said this in a speech read on his behalf by Southern Province Deputy Permanent Secretary, Aaron Zulu, during the preparatory meeting for skills training held at provincial administration for the mobilisation of street children and vulnerable youths.

Mr Hakayobe said some of the households in rural and peri-urban areas were living in absolute poverty and did not have access to the basic needs such as food, clothing and shelter.

The Permanent Secretary said as a result of increased poverty in many households, children and youths had been forced to live and work on the street.

Mr Hakayobe said this had exposed youths to bad vices such as child prostitution, early pregnancies and marriages resulting in most of them contracting HIV/AIDS.

He said in order to curb the problem of street kids, government, through the Ministry of Sport, Youth and Child Development and the Ministry of Defence had embarked on vulnerable street children and vulnerable youths rehabilitation and re-integration programme.

Mr Hakayobe said the programme was aimed at equipping street children and youths with relevant skills such as carpentry and joinery for their self reliance.

He said government had also created an enabling environment for vulnerable households to access micro-finance so that they could engage in income generating activities and in the process reduce children’s vulnerability to poverty.

ZANIS/ENDS/FM/EB.

Council Police Pounce on Livingstone Vendors

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Livingstone city council police yesterday swung into action grabbing merchandise from street vendors operating in the town after giving them a one week ultimate in which to relocate to designated areas.

Acting town clerk, Clement Chisanga disclosed that the council wants to find a lasting solution to the problem of street vending that he termed as difficult to deal with.

Mr.Chisanga wondered why the vendors always want to be pushed out of the town when they know that trading along the shop corridors is wrong.

“You know these people always want to be policed and so we will be doing just that, am sure within this week we will start operation because yes we have also seen that this thing has gone out of hand,” he explained “But you see we need to find a lasting solution to this problem not just short term.”

And acting director of administration, John Kapumpa said the vendors have a negative perception that money is in town and hence they tend to shun the markets.

“There are a lot of empty markets around, there is Dambwa market, Linda market, and other small markets all these are trading areas but people think in town that is were there is money and so they come to town and conduct business along corridors,” he said.

He has since asked these vendors to go and do business in designated areas such as the markets.

However some vendors spoken to dispute that they were not given any prior notification and that they do not know of empty market to do business from.

One vendor who sort anonymity said that the council only cares about themselves and do not consider the plight of other people because they are doing fine financially.

“They don’t know the problems we go through, most of us on the streets are widows and we have children to feed and send
to school so we don’t just do it for the sake,” She said in vernacular.

When asked if she did not think that their way of conducting business compromised tourists’ perception of the tourist capital, she said there is nothing wrong because tourists even buy their products.

Another trader who sells fish along the corridors said a lot of tourists buy her fish because of easy access instead of them going to the market.

Street vendors who intensified their operation along corridors of most shops in town are deemed to be a stumbling block in the council’s operation of the ‘keep Livingstone clean campaign’ that was kick started in 2007 following the introduction of the ‘Keep Zambia Clean Campaign’ that was pioneered by late President Levy Mwanawasa.

ENDS/AS/PK/ZANIS

Registration of voters to begin soon

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grey_logoThe Electoral Commission of Zambia -ECZ- may start the continuos registration of voters in June this year.

ECZ Chairperson, Florence Mumba, says the commission has already started working on how best to carryout the exercise.

Justice Mumba told ZNBC news in an interview in Lusaka that the exercise may start in June if all the requirements are put in place before that time.

She however appealed for patience from all stakeholders to allow the commission to sort out all issues related to the exercise before it can commence.

Justice Mumba said the commission is determined to carry out the exercise in a transparent manner.

Parliament last week approved 5 billion kwacha budgetary allocation for the continuous voter registration exercise.

ZNBC/NEWS

Luanshya Miners take to the streets

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Former miners at Luanshya Copper mines staged a peaceful demonstration on Monday to press Government to quickly open the closed mine.

The former workers marched from Mpatamatu to the central business district demanding to be addressed by Government officials.

They wanted government to give them a specific date as to when a new investor will take over the running of the mine.

Addressing the demonstrators, Luanshya district commissioner, George Kapu, reassured them that government is actively pursuing the issue of reopening the mine.

And Roan member of parliament, Chishimba Kambwili, said the people of Luanshya want the mine to be re-open soon.

And he Gemstone and Allied Workers Union of Zambia has lost more than 1,400 members due to the global economic melt down.

Union president, Sifuniso Nyumbu says the price of Emeralds and other precious stones have fallen forcing most companies to reduce on its workforce.

Mr. Nyunmba has however commended government for facilitating the joining of the Zambia Gemstone Industry into the Extractive Industry Transparent Initiative.

Mr. Nyumbu told znbc news in interview that the development will help to minimize the rate of smuggling of Zambia’s precious stones.

He said Zambia has a lot of precious stones in the countryside but most of it is smuggled out of the country.

NCC Luanches own website

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Deputy Minister of Justice Toddy Chilembo today launched the National constitution conference (NCC) website(www.ncczambia.org) at the Mulungushi International Conference Center.

Mr.Chilembo said the website will help create a platform were members of the public can engage in interaction with the NCC delegates.

He said the website will also make it possible for all Zambians whether resident in the country or abroad to take part in the proceedings of the NCC by making their submissions on what they feel should be included in the final constitution.

Mr.Chilambo said it is gratifying to note that Zambians were following the deliberations of the NCC with keen interest, adding that the launch of the website will increase their participation in the constitutional process.

The deputy Minister said the constitutional process was not only for the NCC delegates but for all Zambians, hence the website will broaden people’s participation.

He said the website will be an additional supplement to the well publicized constitutional process which, since inception, has been well covered by both the electronic and print media in the country.

The minister has urged members of the public to take advantage of the website and participate in this important national process.

He further called on all Zambians to work in unity in order to come up with a constitution that will be inclusive and will stand a test of time.

Speaking at the same function NCC Chairperson Chifumu Banda said the NCC received the financial support from the United Nations (UN) to set up the NCC website with relief and gratitude.

Mr. Banda said since the NCC started its work in 2007, there had always been need to establish a direct communications link with the public so as to come up with a constitution that was people driven.

He urged all stakeholders to take advantage of the facility to make contributions to the NCC if the conference was to come up with an inclusive constitution.

Justice Banda has revealed that 10 committees have so far concluded their works and that the human rights committee will be concluding its works tomorrow.

He further disclosed that next 11 committees will be presenting their works in April after parliament adjourns.

Justice Banda said the delegates are working flat out to ensure that Zambians are bestowed with a good and inclusive constitution.

And speaking earlier United Nations Residents coordinator Macleod Nyirongo disclosed that the United Nations support to the NCC amounts to US$350,000 adding that the UN first began by supporting a public information advocacy campaign which was the forerunner of the constitutional review of the NCC.

He congratulated the Zambian government and the people of Zambia for tirelessly endeavoring to deepen democracy in the country.

Mr. Nyirongo who is also the United Nations development programe resident representative in Zambia said the effort to accommodate divergent views from as many stakeholder groups as possible needs to be recognized as it is a key ingredient for conflict prevention.

He is hopeful that the support given by the UN for the establishment of a website and Internet connectivity will contribute to addressing the challenge and help in ensuring inclusive constitution making process.

Mr. Nyirongo further said that the constitution of a country provides a framework upon which people can govern themselves in a democracy, hence the need for a broad based participation.

“Key issues that are of great national interest such as separation of powers, public accountability of the executive, electoral systems and enhanced public participation in national priority settings processes are all enshrined in the constitution. Further it should be noted that impact of a constitution making process transcends generations, interest groups and so forth”, he said.

He said it was for that reason that the formulation of national constitutions and consequently deepening of democracy should not be taken for granted but should aim at being inclusive and participatory.

ZANIS/PM/PC/PK/ENDS

Mother poisons baby, commits suicide

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A 25-year old security officer for Mamonisilos Control Security Company in Itezhi-tezhi has committed suicide while her eight-year old baby is battling for its life in Itezhi-tezhi district hospital after the mother forced it to drink some of the poison she used to kill herself.

The incident happened on Saturday morning in Masemu compound.

Itezhi-tezhi health authorities, police and the District Commissioner, Leonard Shampile, have confirmed the death of Ms Mwendabai Mundia, who was a security officer working Mamonisilos Control Company at Zesco recreation club.

“The security officer is reported to have picked up a quarrel with her parents and she was so annoyed that she took drugs and forced her eight-year old baby to drink some poison so they could die together but unfortunately she died after taking the poison but the baby is still admitted to Itezhi-tezhi district hospital” the District commissioner said.

The body of the deceased security officer is lying in Itezhi-tezhi district mortuary awaiting burial while the baby is said to be recovering.

ZANIS/ENDS/FM/EB

“Poverty can be overcome” – Kaingu

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Government has challenged orphans and the vulnerable people in society not to surrender to their plight but to rise challenge of wealth creation by venturing into productive activities.

Community Development and Social Services Minister Michael Kaingu says engaging in productive activities would better their welfare and help the country attain the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) on Poverty reduction.

Mr. Kaingu was speaking during his familiarization tours of orphans and community centres in Lusaka today.

He said as a country recovers from its economic doldrums, there was an urgent need for the less privileged people to play an important role of participating in economic activities in order to help the country address the various challenges associated with poverty and hunger in the country.

Mr. Kaingu, who reiterated his government’s commitment to fighting poverty among the poverty stricken homes, appealed to the Ministry of Finance and National Planning to increasing funding to his ministry with a view to addressing the challenges associated with the global economic credit crunch.

He observed that if financial funding was increased to his ministry which he said was directly involved in issues pertaining to poverty reduction, the UN Millennium Development Goals on fighting extreme poverty could be attained by 2015.

Mr. Kaingu further appealed to community centres and orphanages looking after the vulnerable people in societies to maintain high standards in order to avoid being closed down by the relevant authorities.

He said that people manning community centres and orphanages must commit themselves to ensuring that there was sanity in places where orphanages and the vulnerable people are kept.

And Mr. Kaingu has called on the Zambian citizenry not to shun away from extended families with a view to addressing street vending in the country.

Mr. Kaingu, who further expressed concern at the high levels of street kids on the Zambian roads, said that there is need to consider the extended family programme as an important factor in the family maintenance.

He expressed disappointment at the manner in which some people were fond of chasing away their relatives a move he described as contributing to street vending and vulnerability in the country.

Among the places that Mr. Kaingu visited were Matero After Care Centre, Cheshire Divine Provident Home, Lazarous Christian Community School and City of Hope.

ZANIS/TK/AM/ENDS

Mines Safety department lift suspension on Chinese Mine

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The Mines Safety department has lifted the suspension slapped on the Chinese Collum Coal Mine (CCCM) in Sinazongwe district in Southern province in January this year.

Chief Inspector for mines Billy Chewe said in his letter to the CCCM management that Shaft two and shaft three has been opened following compliance to the 34 safety rules they were given to fulfill.

The Chinese Marketing Manager Lu Haiguan told ZANIS that all the workers have reported for work. Mr. Haiguan said the two shafts have started producing 100 metric tones of Coal per day.

He said the shutting of the mine affected the supply of coal to Konkola Copper Mine (KCM), Chilanga Cement (Lafarge), Amanita Zambia and many breweries.

Mr. Haiguan noted that the opening of the mine would improve its coal supply to the customers that were affected as a result of the closure.

Last week Mr. Chewe said Shafts One and Four would remain closed because the owners failed to comply with the safety regulations.

On 4th January Mr. Chewe handed a letter to the CCCM management instructing them that operations at the mines have been suspended with immediate effect.

He said it was clear that the mine was no longer safe following the two fatal accidents which included a Chinese national recorded in less than one month. He said the mine would only be reopened when the 34 safety conditions given to the management was met.

Some of the conditions included the employing of trained personnel such as the shift boss, to provide proof of appointment of a qualified mine manager for the shafts, and to provide proper support methods used in the tunnels.

ENDS/TN/PK/ZANIS

Why to privatise Zambia’s ZAMTEL and how

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zamtel-lamyahouseBy Mjumo Mzyece

On 6 February 2009, The Post newspaper of Zambia published an article about the recent award of a government contract to RP Capital Partners (Cayman Islands) Limited. The contract was to undertake a valuation of the assets of Zambia Telecommunications Company Limited (ZAMTEL), the state-owned telecommunications operator, as a precursor to a subsequent privatisation of ZAMTEL.

The Post alleged that the contract had been irregularly awarded to RP Capital Partners by the Honourable Dora Siliya, MP, Zambia’s current Minister of Communications and Transport. The article ignited a firestorm of controversy and recrimination which continues, unabated, up to the present time.

Precisely how and where this firestorm will end is, as yet, unclear. However, this should not prevent the Government of the Republic of Zambia (GRZ) and the Zambian public from grappling with the important issues around the privatisation of ZAMTEL.

In particular, the issues of why ZAMTEL should be privatised and how ZAMTEL should be privatised must carefully considered.

Why should ZAMTEL be privatised?
Zambia must rank among the best qualified candidates to give the last word on the true nature of that oxymoronic beast, the state-owned enterprise. By the time the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD), the current ruling party, was elected into government in 1991, Zambia had undergone decades of increasing state ownership and state control of the economy.

The result was unmitigated economic disaster. Soon after their 1991 electoral victory, the MMD embarked on a bold programme of economic deregulation, liberalisation and privatisation. The transition from a state-owned and state-controlled economy to a free market economy has not been an easy one. Nor has the transition been completed.

The Zambia Privatisation Agency (ZPA) was established in 1992 to privatise all state-owned companies, including ZAMTEL. Today, 17 years later, a fair number of these companies, including ZAMTEL, remain state-owned; dinosaurs in a kind of government-sponsored Jurassic Park. A costly experiment in avoiding extinction and avoiding the adaptation required for economic survival.
In her Ministerial statement to Parliament on 13 February 2009, prepared in response to a point of order on the engagement of RP Capital Partners, Ms. Siliya highlighted a number of very sobering facts about ZAMTEL’s current condition:

  1. ZAMTEL is technically insolvent with liabilities, as of December 2008, of approximately US$ 125 million, up from about US$ 100 million in January 2008. So not only are the liabilities massive, they are growing.
  2. 70% of ZAMTEL’s 2008 revenue of approximately US$ 49 million went towards staff-related costs. (ZAMTEL currently has a workforce of 2,623.)
  3. ZAMTEL had a 2008 operational expenditure shortfall of approximately US$ 17 million (which, presumably, had to be provided by the government).
  4. ZAMTEL experienced some significant operational difficulties in 2008, including major disruptions to international voice and non-voice services and serious industrial unrest.

To these can be added the following:

  1. After more than 40 years in operation, ZAMTEL has only managed to install some 90,000 fixed telephone lines. (ZAMTEL has a state-sanctioned monopoly in fixed line telephone services.) Compare the well over three million mobile telephone lines that have been installed by the three mobile phone operators (two private operators and ZAMTEL’s Cell Z) in the last 10 years. This, in itself, is a powerful object lesson in why ZAMTEL should be privatised.
  2. ZAMTEL also has a monopoly on international gateway services for voice traffic. (International gateway services for data traffic have already been liberalised.) It should come as no surprise that Zambia has some of the highest international call tariffs in the world. And some of the poorest quality international calls.
  3. ZAMTEL’s infrastructure is aging; staff retention, morale and productivity is low; and the quality of its services is generally poor.

The foregoing are, of course, merely symptoms. The disease is state-owned enterprisitis. The cure is privatisation.

It has been estimated that every 10% increase in mobile penetration in a developing countryzamtel-10 produces a 1.2% increase in the annual GDP growth rate. In many African countries, where communications and transport infrastructure is generally poor, the full economic and social impact of such increases in telephony penetration is probably even greater. Thus the privatisation of ZAMTEL will contribute to the economic development of Zambia through increasing the penetration of telephony and other telecommunications services.

There are three objections that always tend to be raised against the privatisation of ZAMTEL.

The first objection is that ZAMTEL is a strategic asset in a strategic economic sector and should therefore not be privatised. But what does the term “strategic asset” really mean? Strategy is to do with the planning and direction of activities and resources to achieve an overall set of major objectives. So what the “strategic asset” argument is really doing is dressing up state ownership and state control in a new suit of clothes. By the criteria and reasoning of the strategic asset doctrine, there is no limit to the economic sectors that may deemed to be “strategic”: Transport is strategic; Agriculture is strategic; The media is strategic. And so is virtually any other sector of the economy.

The second objection is that the privatisation of ZAMTEL will compromise national security, since ZAMTEL currently runs the only international gateway. The apparent reasoning here is that government needs access to the international gateway for intelligence and national security purposes. As we noted earlier, ZAMTEL only has a monopoly on international gateway services for voice traffic (meaning all voice calls originating and terminating on telecommunications networks in Zambia must go through ZAMTEL’s satellite facilities at Mwembeshi earth station). International gateway services for data traffic are liberalised. Since voice calls can now be carried as data traffic in the form of Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) and other packet-based voice services, it is a serious mistake, as far as national or any other kind of security is concerned, to focus merely on traditional voice services. Another major problem with this objection is that it tends to ignore all the illegal or unlicensed telecommunications traffic entering and leaving Zambia. There are other ways to meet the nation’s intelligence and national security requirements on telecommunications such as lawful intercept (LI) laws and technologies.

The third objection is that if ZAMTEL is privatised, telecommunications services will not be rolled out to the rural areas, since these services are supposedly commercially unviable or unprofitable in such areas. There is one irrefutable answer to this objection: the commercial viability or profitability of an economic enterprise is not an option, it is a necessity. Any company that cannot operate profitably will not be in operation for very long (unless, of course, it happens to be state-owned, in which case government handouts can provide indefinite life support for a clinically dead patient). Without profits, no company can repay its cost of capital or generate surpluses for future investments. Any economic venture that violates the law of out-in-up-down is doomed (The law says: When your outgo exceeds your income, your upkeep will be your downfall). The correct response to an economically unviable venture is to scrap it, or otherwise redesign it so that it becomes economically viable. Interestingly, ZAMTEL’s privately owned competitors have done a pretty good job of taking telecommunications services to the rural areas. So this objection, like the previous two, is spurious.

How should ZAMTEL be privatised?

1. ZAMTEL should be fully privatised, i.e., 100% ownership should be transferred into private hands. The partial privatisation or “commercialisation” model being considered by government would be a serious mistake. We have well over a decade of empirical evidence from the Zambian telecommunications sector that clearly demonstrates that GRZ’s simultaneous roles an owner/operator (through ZAMTEL), policy maker (through the Ministry of Communications and Transport) and regulator (through the Communications Authority of Zambia (CAZ) and the Zambia Competition Commission (ZCC)) is a very bad idea. GRZ should completely withdraw from its role as an owner and operator in the telecommunications sector and focus on implementing its own declared set of policies, i.e. deregulation, liberalisation and privatisation. In addition, when we analyse all the companies that have been privatised by the ZPA and their subsequent fortunes (and misfortunes), we tend to find that those that were only partially privatised (with government retaining a “golden share”, for instance) have fared worse than those that were fully privatised.

2. ZAMTEL should be privatised in unbundled form. The company should be divided into separate operating units, each of which can be run as a viable business on its own. For example: mobile telephony; fixed telephony; terrestrial broadband transmission (including microwave transmission and optical fibre transmission); satellite services; directory services (including directory enquiries and yellow pages); Internet services; and events and training (via ZAMTEL’s conference and training college facilities). Privatising ZAMTEL in unbundled form should make the sector more competitive. How to optimally unbundle ZAMTEL is debatable. However, with a technology-neutral unified licensing regime in place, the buyers of the separate units can freely expand their service offerings into other areas. Some restrictions might be necessary to promote competition and new entrants e.g. the exclusion of the existing private mobile operators and their associates (such as parent global companies) from buying Cell Z.

3. ZAMTEL should be privatised as quickly as possible, without sacrificing integrity, transparency or efficiency. The apparent speed and urgency with which Ms. Siliya has set about the task of privatising ZAMTEL is commendable. (We should recall, in this regard, that the privatisation of ZAMTEL has been on the government’s agenda for well over a decade.) However, speed and urgency should not be allowed to trump integrity, transparency and efficiency.

4. ZAMTEL assets should be privatised using a properly designed auction. The alternative privatisation mechanism that is often used in such privatisation exercises, the so-called “beauty contest”, is frequently subject to bias, corruption and other defects, in a way that a well designed auction is not. It should be noted that the valuation exercise that has been commissioned by Ms. Siliya cannot really determine “the true value of [ZAMTEL] on the open market”. Strictly speaking, the notion of the “true value” of a telecommunications asset, or any asset for that matter, is meaningless in economic terms. If, however, Ms. Siliya was referring to the “market value”, this can only really be determined by the market itself (or, more precisely, a market itself, since differently designed markets can produce different valuations for the same good or service). Anything else is educated guesswork at best and mere speculation at worst. Take the example of the UK government’s auction of third generation (3G) mobile licenses in 2000. Prior to the auction, Her Majesty’s government worked out a total reserve price of GBP 500 million. By the end of the auction, the five 3G licenses had been sold for a total of GBP 22.5 billion. I leave it as an exercise for the reader whether this was an instance of educated guesswork or mere speculation. The valuation exercise will probably be more useful as an analysis of ZAMTEL’s assets and liabilities and a basic due diligence than as a “market valuation” exercise as such.

5. ZAMTEL assets should be privatised using a properly designed auction. Auction theory and design is a specialised field. Unless an auction is designed properly for the given scenario, it can lead to all sorts of unintended and undesirable effects such as collusion, deterrence of new entrants, “gaming” of the auction rules, and so forth. The objectives of the auction should be to: promote competition in the Zambian telecommunications sector; encourage (or at least not discourage) local participation in the sector; and get the highest prices (the proceeds of the auction can be used to settle some, or with luck all, of ZAMTEL’s huge liabilities).

6. The privatisation of ZAMTEL should be accompanied by other steps towards fully deregulating and liberalising the telecommunications sector: liberalisation of fixed line telephony; liberalisation of international gateway services for voice traffic; introduction of a unified and technology-neutral telecommunications licensing regime; and so forth.

Santayana’s Law of Repetitive Consequences states that “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it”. The one lesson of Zambia’s economic past is surely this: Government has no business in business. That’s the lesson. But has it been learnt?

When will Zambians be proud to be Zambians?

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By Mingeli Palata

I don’t even know what day of the week this is and when I normally don’t it goes to show how busy my life can get. Its wild, I doubt I even know what the headlines read. I am done with my work and Mr. Sililo, a charismatic Lozi uncle has just dropped me off at Kabwata Police for me to catch a bus on my way home. I am waiting and looking in both directions hoping that a bus comes my way. Oh yes, there comes one, sharks, the guy is off duty. Gee, what am I going to? Wait, didn’t I have something in my pocket, I should have, and knowing that February leaves the pockets in a better condition than January does (For obvious reasons). Yes, I can spare a K20, 000.00 so I stop a cab but little did I know I wasn’t the only one stuck up at 9 in the evening waiting for a bus and so we were three in that cab, this makes the fee burden lighter so its good.

As soon as the engine was started, one of the guys in the back starts to complain about the proposed sell of Zamtel shares to some company from God knows where. The taxi driver also joins in. The two gentlemen are bitter. The conversation is tempting but gee I haven’t read the news in ages and my participation is thus disqualified. So I chose to listen instead as the men wondered why Zamtel is being ‘sold’. In his own words, if people feel there is something wrong with the operations of Zamtel then why don’t they do a management restructure, refine strategies… you know the usual things that ailing companies do to survive.

Privatization has been one of the best things to happen to this country especially in the case of parastatals. Key industries have been closed and jobs have been lost. I for one have a bias towards government control over key industries and undertakings so my opinion even before we think about the lady with the red lipstick and her antics is obvious, I don’t support the partial privatization.

As I lingered with that thought, the conversation had already taken a different turn, my colleagues are now talking about the issue of shops, ‘how come very few Zambians own shops in town?’ they asked. They cited places like Kamwala and Freedom way; they wondered why Zambians are given second place in their own country. The other intelligent sounding one, even brought up the issue of the multi-economic zone and asked if Zambians would benefit from these or foreigners will be given first priority like has always been the case. More and more issues came out, tax cuts for investors and for local investors. I gathered so much discontent in the hearts of the ordinary Zambian with the efforts being put up by government, lost dreams, deluded hopes is all I hear every time I engage in political conversations with the people on the ground.

Well the rest that followed in that cab as we drove past Fair road up to Mwapona road visa-vies the guys claiming to have lost their cab fare and asking me to pay for them ‘since we are all Zambians’ is not for purposes of the is article. Often times I wonder whether the state of our economy has been affected by the Global economic crisis or by acute economic mismanagement.I expected a budget that reads better to a population that is stained with hunger and an embarrassing currency.I wonder if we will ever diversify our economy and stop our addiction to copper. I hope for a time when Zambians can be proud to be Zambians, when their government will start to believe that the panacea to economic prosperity is the same ordinary Zambians who own Katemba’s, the hardworking miners who wake up every morning to dig money from the ground, the restless teachers who reports for work despite their merger salary, the NIPA student who endures eating bread and drinking juice for three years hoping that one day he/she will be able to contribute to the development of Zambia….. I better stop here…. Because I think I am becoming emotional……

Mealie meal syphoned out of Luangwa

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A senior government official in Luangwa District has called on the Immigration Department and Zambia Revenue Authority to find ways of controlling the alleged illegal exportation of mealie-meal into neighboring Mozambique and Zimbabwe.

Luangwa District Commissioner, Captain Stanislaus Kalunga, made the call during a meeting held in the council chamber, saying he has observed that a lot of mealie-meal was going out of the district into neighboring Mozambique and Zimbabwe at the expense of Zambians.

Capt Kalunga said government is working tirelessly to ensure that its people have the staple food and it is its wish that the people of Zambia benefit from its policies.

He said there was a lot of mealie-meal going into Mozambique in exchange of fish that was denying the people of Luangwa access to the staple food.

The District Commissioner appealed to the Immigration Department and the Zambia Revenue Authority (ZRA) to put in measures of controlling this trend of Zambians taking mealie-meal into Mozambique in exchange for fish.

ZANIS/ENDS/MN/EML/EB

Government urged to make fuel affordable

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Government has been implored to make the price of fuel affordable in Northern Province in order to attract the much-needed investment.

The call was made by church leaders in Kasama when they met Provincial Permanent Secretary, Mwalimu Simfukwe recently.

The church leaders, who were drawn for various denominations, wondered why the price of fuel should continue to be higher than in other parts of the country when the province was just next to Tanzanian where government imports some refined fuel.

The church leaders charged that it was unfair for the province to be subjected to high fuel prices when it was near the source.

They appealed to the Permanent Secretary to take up the matter with relevant government institutions, such as the Energy Regulation Board, so that possibilities of establishing a fuel depot for refined fuel in Kasama can be explored.

They noted that the province has adequate fuel storage facilities in Kasama which were once being used by the British Petroleum (BP) company.

The church leaders also pledged to work with the Government in addressing the many challenges facing the people.

They urged the new Provincial Administration to involve them in government programmes as they were better placed to know how best some of the challenges the people were facing could be addressed.

Provincial Permanent Secretary, Mwalimu Simfukwe, has assured the church that his administration will not discriminate on the basis of one’s religion or political affiliation in its effort to spearheard development in the province.

Mr Simfukwe said they were committed to ensure that each of the 12 districts in the province received an equal share of the available resources.

ZANIS/ENDS/HM/EB