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Jailing of Singogo cheers government

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Transparency International Zambia (TIZ) chapter president Reuben Lifuka (l) with Attorney General Mumba Malila during the TIZ advocacy workshop in Lusaka
Transparency International Zambia (TIZ) chapter president Reuben Lifuka (l) with Attorney General Mumba Malila during the TIZ advocacy workshop in Lusaka

Government has welcomed the conviction of former Zambia Air Force (ZAF) Commander Christopher Singogo on charges abuse of authority of office and theft by public servant.

Lieutenant General Singogo was yesterday sentenced to six years imprisonment with hard labour by the Lusaka Magistrate Court.

Attorney General Mumba Malila said government was satisfied with the verdict, which he said would send a warning signal to corrupt leaders serving in both private and public institutions.

Mr. Malila said this when he responded to the questions from the press at Court Yard Hotel in Lusaka today.

He said even though the convict filed in an appeal against the verdict, government will ensure that the final verdict does not change in the appeal case.

Attoney General Mumba Malila during the Transparency International Zambia workshop on advocacy in Lusaka
Attoney General Mumba Malila during the Transparency International Zambia workshop on advocacy in Lusaka

He said government would ensure that corrupt leaders were brought to book.

Mr. Malila said government was working out modalities of enhancing accountability and transparency in both private and public institutions.

He has meanwhile welcomed calls by some sections of society to audit the Task Force on Corruption.

He said auditing the Task Force on corruption would help build transparency and accountability in the administration of public resources especially that the Task Force was handling huge government resources.

Meanwhile, Mr. Malila has called for effective collaboration in the fight against corruption in the country.

Mr. Malila, who has described effects of corruption in the country as far-reaching and disastrous, said close collaboration in the fight against corruption will increase knowledge among citizens on their involvement in curbing the scourge.

He said this in Lusaka today when he officiated at the three day workshop for Transparency Zambia International Zambia’s Advocacy and Legal Advice Centre (ALAC).

Mr. Malila said although Zambia performed well last year on the Corruption Perception Index, there was need for the members of the public to demand for high levels of integrity and accountability from public officers in order to stamp out corruption in the country.

And Transparency International Zambia president Reuben Lifuka, called on the current government to put in place extra remedial measures in order to curb corruption in all the sectors of the economy.Mr. Lifuka said as the country addresses the various challenges associated with the global economic and financial meltdown, there was need for Zambia to come up with innovative approaches of fighting corruption in the country.

He also welcomed the conviction of General Singogo saying it will act as a deterrent to would be corrupt leaders.

Mr. Lifuka said the conviction of General Singogo was a victory of justice.

He hoped that the other corrupt leaders could also receive stiffer punishment from the Courts of Law to ensure accountability and transparency in the administration of public resources.

The TIZ President further said that corruption in both the private and public sector was a major concern which needed concerted efforts to address.

He added that there was need for government to devise various interventions and strategies aimed at fighting corruption in the country.

ZANIS/TK/KSH/ENDS

Corruption is not necessarily immoral

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By Philos Zambianos ([email protected])

You apply for land or title deeds and your file mysteriously goes missing and when you offer to pay the clerk something, they suddenly remember that they saw your file the other day and in five minutes they find it. You need a passport for a trip in 48 hours and you find yourself forking out two hundred pin to get it because it will normally take several weeks to get it. Then there is tender procedure which is always circumvented, behind-the-scenes deals having been struck prior to the advertisement of the tender. This is the reality of corruption in Zambia.

Despite the late president Levy Mwanawasa’s gallant “fight against corruption” crusade, the problem has become more entrenched and as was revealed in a 2007 publication called “Show Me The Money! : How government spends and accounts for public money in Zambia.” by Transparency International Zambia (co-authored by the Post Newspaper columnist Edem Djokotoe and Pamela Chama),it is alleged more money went missing in government during Mwanawasa’s first term in office than the entire ten years of former president Frederick Chiluba.

We all heard last year about the 36 billion Kwacha (more than US $7million) that was unaccounted for and for me, the funniest part (which is not so funny) was that in 2006, K40 million allegedly went missing from the Auditor General’s office! I seriously think that GRZ should be renamed CRZ (Corrupt Republic of Zambia).

Most of us Zambians believe that corruption is wrong, even though we engage in it in various forms during our lives. Whether it is paying off a traffic cop after over speeding or getting a drivers license without getting tested, we have all gone though the CRZ system. But I have come to the conclusion that engaging in corruption in a society like Zambia is not necessarily always wrong or immoral.

Now before you cast stones at me for promoting or tolerating corruption, let me hasten to say that I am resolutely against it. I have been the victim of it many a time during government tender procedures in which a three-month-old company is awarded the contract despite my company being vastly superior and more experienced. Moreover, corruption is wrong on moral grounds as it gives one party unfair advantage (which they did not earn by merit) over others.

I may appear to contradict myself since I have also stated that it is not necessarily wrong to sometimes engage in corruption in a country like Zambia. There is no contradiction and the reason is simple; you cannot practice full morality when force is used against you. The normal rules of morality cannot be fully applied to an immoral situation or system. A few examples will suffice to make this point clear.

Someone related a story of how he made a stop over in Lagos, Nigeria sometime in the early 80’s during a flight to Europe. He presented his passport to the immigration officer who flipped through it and gave it back saying “There is a page missing in your passport”. “What do you mean?” he asked the officer. “Next please!”

As the person stood there confused wondering that was going on, a Catholic priest behind him whispered in their ear, “He wants you to put some money inside your passport”. “Why should I bribe him just to stamp my passport when it is part of his job?” he asked. “Just do it unless you want to be here locked up for days”, came the reply. He grudgingly did what they were told and voila, the officer stamped the passport in triple quick time with a grin on his face.

Imagine you are arrested and detained by the police on some trumped up charges by someone who has paid the cops to lock you up. You know whatever they are holding you for is false and you are innocent. Do you sit it out in Zambian jails full of disease and starvation or do you also bribe the same (or more senior) cops to let you out?

You apply for a mining license and follow all procedures to the letter but some bureaucrat who wants a bribe sits on your application for months (or years) and in the meantime your preliminary operational costs keep increasing and all your competitors get their licenses quickly (having paid the bribe).

As you can see in all these examples, the common principle is that the situations fall outside the normal rules of morality because someone is using force against you. As one philosopher put it, “Morality ends at the barrel of the gun”.

If someone runs at you with a huge knife with the express intention of killing you, you have a right to self defence that supersedes the right to life of the person trying to kill you. If you kill them in defending yourself, we cannot say you have done an immoral thing by taking the life of another human being.

The bad guy lost his right to life the moment he decided not to respect your right to life by trying to kill you. This goes back to the principle of morality application I have explained above. The attempted murder situation is an immoral situation and we cannot apply normal morality rules. Otherwise every murderer would simply go out and kill everyone knowing that the victims could not fight back to defend themselves.

So the crux of the matter is this. If you live in an immoral system like Zambia where you have to bribe people to get things done (something which is not your fault), stop feeling guilty about it and start playing by the rules of the system. If you are a company, open a special “oil and grease account” and make it very fat because the higher up the food chain you go, the more rusty bureaucrats and other decision makers are. If you do not agree, get the hell out of Zambia. If you stay and decide not to play, be prepared for lifelong misery to your grave.

But this does not mean your soul should become corrupt by thinking it is normal to bribe people in all situations. Always avoid corrupting people if you can and only do it when force is used against you. If you are caught over-speeding on the road, pay the fine as an honest person and refuse to pay the traffic cop if they try to solicit a bribe from you (there is no force being used against you in this situation).

If you leave Zambia and go to a normal civilized society where merit is what counts, never try to bribe anyone.

Members of Opposition political parties mock farmers

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Farmers in Serenje have urged politicians to desist from politicizing  the fertilizer issue.
The farmers who have been spending nights at the bus station waiting for their allocations of fertiliser complained to the District Agriculture Coordinator (DACO) Kennedy Mulenga, that some members of the opposition political parties were mocking  them  over the delayed arrival of the commodity.

Mr. Justine Mwape of Muchinka area said politicians were laughing at them saying they deserved to suffer  in order to obtain  agriculture inputs  because they  have  allowed  the MMD to continue ruling.

He said it had been unfortunate that the fertilizer issue had become political when it was a cross cutting issue.

The farmers appealed to government to quickly clear them with their allocations so that they could apply the commodity in their fields.

Another farmer, Mr. Noble Chita said the delay had adversely affected the crops in the fields which would consequently  affect the yields.

And district commissioner Stanley Chibwana, has said some more fertilizers have arrived to cater for the farmers who already paid for the commodity.

Mr. Chibwana said 2000 by 50kg bags of top dressing and 4000 by 50kg bags of basal dressing arrived by a Tazara wagon and was  being offloaded at Tazara railway station.

He said the 2000 bags of urea completes the allocation for the district while 500 more bags of D-compound was still being expected to complete the allocation.

Mr.Chibwana appealed to the farmers to allow Nyiombo Serenje office off load fertilizer today so that distribution can be done.

Meanwhile the DACO said over 4000 farmers in Serenje had so far received fertilizer since the distribution started this season.

Mr.Mulenga said his office received money from farmers according to the allocation given adding that no farmer who paid for the fertilizer would be left out.

ZANIS/CC/MKM/ENDS

Zambia collects less tax

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Secretary to the treasury Likolo Ndalamei says the global financial crisis will lead to lower revenue collection in Zambia this year.

Mr. Ndalamei said government is currently working on diversifying the economy from copper mining to other sectors of the economy.

The secretary to the Treasury was speaking during the opening of the second budget annual poverty review workshop in Lusaka.

And European Union Country representative Dereck Fee said budget support will remain important to government and the EU.

Meanwhile the IMF on Monday urged Zambia not to cut taxes amid pressure from copper mines to abolish controversial mining taxes introduced last year because of a need to increase spending on infrastructure development.

International Monetary Fund (IMF) resident representative in Zambia, Birgir Anarson, said the agreement between the Fund and Zambia reached in December was to increase spending in infrastructure development and to diversify the economy, while safeguarding macroeconomic stability.

“There would thus be no scope for increasing current expenditure as a proportion of total spending or for weakening the revenue effort through tax cuts,” Anarson said at a meeting with senior government officials in the capital Lusaka.

Foreign owners of copper mines in Zambia have been piling pressure on the government to scrap a 25 percent windfall tax and 15 percent profit variable tax on taxable income above 8 percent, and also to reduce the 30 percent corporate tax to 25 percent.

Revenue is projected to decline by 0.5 percentage points of GDP (gross domestic product), reflecting lower mining tax revenue but higher trade related taxes,” he said.

He added that expenditures were projected to rise by 0.6 percent of GDP, mainly because of higher domestically financed capital spending, current expenditure would be kept constant as a percentage of GDP.

Anarson said Zambia, which loosened monetary policy in 2008 to accommodate effects of the fuel and food prices shocks, “needs to stay firm enough” to keep inflation on the downward trend in the medium term.

He said Zambia should also slow reserve money growth and expand credit to the private sector to achieve lower inflation at targets of 10 percent in 2009 and 7.0 percent in 2010.

“In view of weak demand for government securities, the BoZ’s (Bank of Zambia) net claims on government may have to rise substantially necessitating significant net sales of foreign exchange by the BoZ to contain excess liquidity,” he added.

Anarson said the IMF aimed to conclude its first and second reviews of the Zambia economy under a $79.3 million poverty reduction growth facility (PRGF), a three-year IMF lending programme signed with Zambia before the end of May 2009.

Zambia is expected to adopt a single account system at the Treasury and to implement an electricity strategy, which would enable the country to carry out reforms in the energy sector, including raising power electric tariffs as part of the Fund’s lending programme, officials say.

Anarson said Zambia’s efforts to maintain economic growth at higher levels would continue to be undermined by the external environment following the global financial crisis.

He said the structural reforms in telecommunications, energy, transport and agricultural sectors would have to be enhanced to mitigate these effects.

ZNBC/REUTERS

Govt. acts on Zambian Airways

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The Minister of Communication says Government is making efforts to contact shareholders of Zambian Airways to establish efforts being made to ensure the airline fulfills the International Air Transport Association regulations.

Dora Siliya said government is also making efforts to get in touch with Zambian embassies in South Africa and Tanzania to ascertain the number of Zambians stranded following the suspension of operations by Zambian Airways.

In a statement issued to ZNBC news in Lusaka, Monday, Ms. Siliya said Zambian Airways has not officially notified government why it has suspended its operations.

Ms. Siliya said government has learnt of the suspension of the airline’s operations from the press.

She said government wants to know what efforts the shareholders have made to ensure that all stranded passengers holding Zambian Airways tickets are safely transported to their destinations.

On Saturday Zambian Airways suspended its operations indefinitely.

Zambian Airways Chief Executive Officer Mutembo Nchito cited high fuel prices as one of the reasons for suspending operations.

[ZNBC]

Former ZAF Commander jailed

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Former Zambia Air Force Commander General Christopher Singogo (r) exchanging notes with his lawyer Kelvin Bwalya at the Lusaka magistrate Court after he was convicted for abusing the authority of his office
Former Zambia Air Force Commander General Christopher Singogo (r) exchanging notes with his lawyer Kelvin Bwalya at the Lusaka magistrate Court after he was convicted for abusing the authority of his office

Former Zambia Air Force (ZAF) Commander Christopher Singogo has been sentenced to six years imprisonment with hard labour.

Lieutenant General Singogo has been convicted on two counts of charges of theft by public servant and abuse of authority of office.

On the first count General Singogo has been convicted on charges of theft by public servant contrary to section 272 and 277 of the law of Zambia.

On the second count the former ZAF commander has been convicted on charges of abuse of authority of office contrary to section 37 and 41 of the Anti Corruption Commission Act of 1996.

He will serve the sentence concurrently.

Former Zambia Air force Commander Christopher Singogo’s co-accused Captain Joseph Phiri celebrating after he was acquitted on corruption charges by the Lusaka magistrate Court
Former Zambia Air force Commander Christopher Singogo’s co-accused Captain Joseph Phiri celebrating after he was acquitted on corruption charges by the Lusaka magistrate Court

Chief Resident Magistrate Charles Kafunda delivered the sentence Monday afternoon.

Earlier, magistrate Kafunda sentenced General Singogo to eight years imprisonment with hard labour.

He however reduced the sentence to six year’s after mitigation from the defense counsel.

Meanwhile General Singogo’s defense counsel has filed a notice of appeal.

The defense counsel comprising lawyers Kelvin Bwalya and Ganje Muhango also applied for bail.

Magistrate Kafunda however threw out the bail application, stating that there is no likelihood that the appeal will succeed.

And magistrate Kafunda has acquited General Singogo’s co-accused Captain Joseph Phiri.

Magistrate Kafunda alleged that General Singogo used deceptive means to buy two generators for the air force at a cost of K110 Million.

He said the former ZAF chief later installed the two generators at his private lodges in Livingstone and Lusaka.

ZNBC

Zesco United Leave For Tanzania on Tuesday

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Zesco United leave for Tanzania tomorrow, Tuesday January 13 to play a series of pre-season international club friendly matches with three local clubs there.

The defending Faz Premier League champions will leave at midday from Dar-es-Salaam via Nairobi on a Kenya Airways flight.

While in Tanzania, Zesco will play Patrick Phiri’s Simba SC including their arch-rivals Young Africans and Prisons FC.

The three international club friendly matches are part of Zesco’s preparations for their Caf Africa Champions League preliminary round first-leg home tie against Kenyan champions Mathare United on January 31 at the Trade Fair grounds in Ndola.

The trip to Tanzania will also mark new coach Fighton Simukonda first feel on the bench with Zesco since his appointment as coach at the 2007 and 2008 league champions on Friday.

Simukonda replaced Wedson Nyirenda who is leaving Zesco after to seasons to take up the head coaching job at Zanaco last week.

Will Zambian Airways directors face the music?

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ZAMBIAN Airways planes grounded at the Lusaka international airport

The suspension of Zambian Airways operations has largely been attributed to the huge amounts of money it owes its creditors which now amounts to about US$25 million.

According to the latest edition of Executive Issues obtained in Lusaka yesterday, the airline had become bankrupt and its board and management had tried several rescue measures to resuscitate its operations but to no avail.

“Liquidation is the only answer, but even then the creditors will not recover their monies,” said a risk compliance manager of a local commercial bank.

The commercial bank for which the senior manager works is among other financial institutions that have been loaning the airline millions of dollars.

He said the US$25 million debt was mainly from big creditors and if other smaller suppliers added what they were owed, the whole amount could go beyond US$30 million.

“They will need a Government bail-out for them to survive but it is very unlikely that the Ministry of Finance will use State resources to keep a private airline in the midst of various problems affecting the country especially in the mining industry,” he said.

The directors of the airline are Post Newspaper editor, Fred Mmembe, Task Force on Corruption prosecutor and Lusaka lawyer, Mutembo Nchito, hotelier Gaudensio Rossi and Passmore Hamukoma who is board chairman.

“We hear three commercial banks are contemplating lifting the corporate veil on the airline so that directors and shareholders should be made accountable for the debts which have accumulated in recent years,” the manager said.

The shareholders of the airline are JCM Holdings owned by Mr Nchito and his brother Nchima, Seaboard which is a United States firm that owns and manages National Milling Corporation and the Post Newspapers.

The Post Newspapers injected US$3 million in the airline using a loan facility from Investrust Bank.

Executive Issues reports that attempts had been made to attract investors to buy the airline but most of them have not been impressed with its financial position which got worse when the global oil prices tumbled on the international market.

[Zambia Daily Mail]

Chinese miner killed in unsafe mine in Sinazongwe

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A Chinese national has died in a mine accident at the Chinese Collum Coal Mine (CCCM) in Sinazongwe district in Southern Province.

Sinazongwe District Commissioner (DC) Mungoni Simulilika confirmed the development to ZANIS that Wu Ping aged 50 died yesterday.

Mr Simulilika said Mr Ping was trapped underground at shaft three as he was coming out of the mine.

He disclosed that his body was taken to Choma Hospital Mortuary.

Nkandabwe ward Councilor Partson Mangunje who was at the scene of the accident when they were retrieving the body the underground said the incident occurred at 17 hours.

Mr Mangunje explained that the stones underground collapsed, trapping Mr Ping, who died on the spot.

He said safety measures at the mine were not being followed as the pillars put underground were not strong enough to support the weight of the stones.

The Nkandabwe ward Councilor has called on the Safety Department under the Ministry of Mines to close CCCM until proper safety measures were put in place to protect people’s lives.

On 29 December one person died in a mine accident while the other one was seriously injured at the CCCM.

Weddy Kantolo 24 died in the underground when the top layer in the tunnel collapsed on him as he was building it.

Shadrick Siandima 29 was also injured and admitted at the Maamba Hospital.

ZANIS/TN/ENDS/MM

Zambia to upgrade townships

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The Zambian Government says it will in the next two years improve water and sanitation.

Local Government and Housing minister, Ben Tetamashimba said this will help prevent the outbreak of water borne diseases.

Mr. Tetamashimba disclosed that President Rupiah Banda directed his ministry to ensure that all townships are upgraded.

He was speaking on a live ZNBC Television programme, National Watch.

And Health minister, Kapembwa Simbao said government has intensified its efforts to contain the spread of cholera in the Southern African nation.

He however expressed fears that cholera will continue if people do not change their personal hygiene.

Meanwhile Education minister, Geoffrey Lungwangwa said schools in the cholera infested areas will soon open after improving their environment.

He says government will not put the health of over sixty-two thousand pupils from different schools at risk.

Meanwhile Cholera has broken out in Chief Hanjalika’s Chivuna area in Mazabuka where health authorities have turned the clinic into a Cholera centre.

Confirming the development to ZANIS, today, Mazabuka Mayor, Edmund Cheelo told the Mazabuka District Health Management Team (MDHMT) to seriously move in and protect people in villages who lack knowledge on hygiene.

He said the Ministry of health should provide necessary drugs and equipment to enable staff provide disinfection facilities.

Mr Cheelo who visited the centre this morning said five patients are admitted to Chivuna clinic which has since been turned into a Cholera centre.

The Mayor also urged education authorities to extend the closure of schools in Chivuna area to protect lives of both pupils and teachers.

Meanwhile, all Cholera patients at Ndeke Clinic Cholera centre in Mazabuka have been discharged from the centre.

Health Staff at the centre who confirmed the development to ZANIS in Mazabuka today said all the patients were discharged yesterday.

ZNBC/ZANIS/HC/Ends/MM

ANASA nods ‘bullet proof vests’ for Police officers

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Action Network Advisory on Small Arms, ANASA, has welcomed government’s response to calls of purchasing bullet proof vests for Police officers.

ANASA Director, Charles Mulenga, said the introduction of bullet proof vests is a milestone in efforts of securing the lives of Police officers.

Mr. Mulenga told ZANIS in Lusaka that his organisation is confident that the bullet proof vests would help improve the response from officers to criminal activities in all parts of the country.

“As an NGO that is involved in educating and disseminating the public about peoples rights on the use of small and light weapons, we are very much happy about government’s move to consider introducing bullet proof vest to the security personnel because this will help police officers to respond to and combat crime,” he said.

“In this case there will be less killing of Police officers and instead more action by officers to arrest criminals,” he observed.

Mr Mulenga also commended the Zambia Police Service for its courage in the fight against crime in all parts of the country.

Further, Mr Mulenga called on both the local and international non-governmental organisations to take keen interest in educating the public on the dangers of exposing small and light weapons to the public.

He said the use of small and light weapons should be discouraged at all levels of society as they could be used in committing criminal offenses.

ZANIS /GS/ENDS/SJK

Filth and Lawlessness overtake Chilenje Police Camp

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To whom it may concern,

I am a youth leader in the Patriotic Front (PF). My concern is the behavior by which the Police Club in Chilenje has been operating.I have witnessed so many times that this place opens the tavern as early as 06:00hrs.This I strongly condemn. It seems that the Police have taken the law in their own hands by selling opaque beer [brown and white chibuku].I am therefore asking the local authority where ever they might be to immediately enforce the law at this Chilenje Police Tavern.

The drum used to store the opaque beer is so filthy.Even the toilets are very dirty and looking at the season in which we are I think people who drink from there are at risk of suffering from waterborne diseases among them cholera.The surroundings looks like the place where retrenched workers who have not been given their terminal benefits stay.

This is the place where the security personnel have been subjected to using [ulusasa].They have made for themselves thatched bathing rooms outside their houses.When you look at the walls of their houses you even wonder where the charges they collect goes to.

It would be nice to have the drainpipes connected so as to have running water. Lower ranked police officers should also be entitled to have nice bathing rooms.Lets have cabins scraped off as this contributes to the filth in the camp.There should be sanitation in all police camps.Now it is only few individuals who are on higher ranks who enjoy cleanliness.
Please I am appealing to the council to apply the law where it is due.Do not let corruption and fear of the unknown kill our country.The council should work hand in hand with the Chilenje Police Sub Inspector. Lets not act as if when burying our late president at embassy park we also buried the laws.It is only discipline to the law that can help the nation to move forward.Lets keep our country clean.

Yours

Concerned Zambian

Zain Zambia hands over second Abaleya vehicle

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Zain Zambia  officially handed over one of the Toyota corollas in the on going Abaleya Zain promotion to the Lusaka based winner last Saturday.

Eunice Maloni from Lusaka’s Ballastone won the car in the second draw of the three months promotion.

Officially handing over the vehicle Zain Zambia Marketing director Evans Muhanga congratulated the winner of the car and urged other Zain subscribers to continue texting into the promotion.

‘The prizes are real and the winners are real and the only secret is sending the word Zain to 4111. We have moved a step further from the studio hand over of keys to providing necessary papers in the owners name, this should serve as proof to people that have been doubting the promotion’.

He added that Zain will remain committed to fulfilling its promise to the people of Zambia that of creating a wonderful world.

And speaking when receiving the car Eunice Maloni thanked Zain Zambia for making her dreams come true and empower her and her family with transportation.

‘This should serve as a testimony that Zain means what they say, that the will create a wonderful world for their customers, I am a leaving testimony that people win in this promotion’. She said

She also urged other customers to take part in the promotion and enjoy the amazing prizes Zain is giving.

Three cars of the five on offer have been won in the promotion. Ndola’s Rabecca Nayame won the first one while Malumo Ng’uni of Livinsgtone was the third to drive off the third Toyota Corolla.

The grand prize in the promotion is a 60 seater luxury Marc ‘O polo coach. Other prizes include Samsung Home Theatre systems complete with plasma screen, DVD Player, music system and state of the art 3D surround sound speakers.

The K2 Billion worth Abaleya Zain promotion which comes to an end on 17th February, airs live on ZNBC TV every Thursdays at 20:00 hours.

Zambian Airways suspension of operations to affect tourism

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ZAMBIAN Airways planes grounded at the Lusaka international airport

The Tourism Council of Zambia says the suspension of Zambia Airways operation will negatively impact ON the tourism industry in the country.

Tourism Council of Zambia, Executive Director, Josephine Sampa Mehl, regretted the suspension in operations of Zambian Airways, saying the development would negatively impact on efforts to develop the tourism sector.

Ms. Mehl told ZANIS in an interview in Lusaka yesterday that Zambian Airways was instrumental in linking both local and international tourists to various tourists’ destinations in the country.

She said Zambian Airways significantly contributed to the opening up of tourism destinations as it linked Livingstone to Johannesburg, and other cities.

She appealed to government to consider measures that could help revamp operations at Zambia Airways and other operators who are supplementing government efforts of promoting growth in the tourism sector.

Zambian Airways on Saturday suspended its operations on both local and international routes citing the increase in jet fuel in the last 18 months as having pushed up the operational costs for the company.

Hundreds of passenger were stranded in Ndola, Lusaka, Livingstone and Johannesburg after Zambian Airways announced suspended operations.

ZANIS/GP/ENDS/SJK

South BETUZ suspends chairman

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Southern Province Basic Teachers Union of Zambia, BETUZ, Chairman, Chris Sinkala, has been indefinitely suspended from the union barely two months after his election.

According to the letter of suspension dated January 5, 2009 which was signed by the Union Deputy Director, Lyson Munsaka, and obtained by ZANIS in Mazabuka, Mr. Sinkala has been suspended for alleged insolence and insubordination.

Mr Munsaka charged that Mr Sinkala failed to adhere to the channels of communication by phoning the union headquarters each time there were grievances in the district.

“You are still adamant to your position of not following my orders by making secretive phone calls to the union headquarters with the sole aim of making my leadership unpopular to my superiors,” the letter read in part.

He indicated that the conduct of Mr Sinkala had the potential of destabilizing the union leadership in the province.

And when contacted, Mr Sinkala confirmed receiving the letter of suspension from the union.

He said he take up the matter with the Provincial Executive Committee, PEC, and the district union officials, who gave him the mandate to manage the affairs of the union in the province.

Mr Sinkala claimed that that his suspension has been triggered by his insinstance on the need to define the roles of Deputy Director and the Provincial Chairman, in the management of the union in the province.

But Betuz Provincial Displinary Committee Vice Secretary, Justin Wakumelo, said the suspension of Mr Sinkala is not in order and that it should be lifted immediately to safeguard the integrity of the union.

“It will give a wrong face of the union if elected officials are suspended at will and members might lose confidence in the union,” Walumelo said.

He said failure to lift the suspension could cost the union a great deal.

Mr Wakumelo appealed to the union headquarters to quickly intervene in the matter.

End/JN/ZANIS/SJK