Minister of Information and Broadcasting Services, Ronnie Shikapwasha said reports in The Post newspaper that Government had increased emoluments for the President, constitutional office-holders and senior Government officials were misleading as it had actually reduced the proposals compared to the earlier ones.
He said there was need for Zambians to commend Government as it had reduced the emoluments to 15 per cent in line with the increment awarded to public service workers early this year.
Lt-Gen. Shikapwasha said the recently amended allowance and salary increases for the President had translated into a saving of K250 million per annum.
Lt-Gen. Shikapwasha said the President’s annual special allowance had been reduced from K157,210,523 per annum to K59,194,734 per annum while the annual responsibility allowance of K150 million per annum had been scrapped.
He said in comparison to the earlier proposed increments, the amended emoluments indicated a reduction of over K150 million per annum across the board.
“The reduction should, therefore, be appreciated as an act of sacrifice on the part of the constitutional office-holders.
“The parliamentarians collectively supported President Banda’s statement that the State can not manage to pay the earlier proposed emoluments because of the dwindled coffers resulting from the two major national events (State funeral and presidential election),” Lt-Gen. Shikapwasha said.
He said it was malicious for some sections of the media to further suggest that President Banda passed the salary increments when it was members of all the political parties represented in Parliament who overwhelmingly supported the bills.
Lt-Gen. Shikapwasha said it was wrong for the media to quote Vice-President, George Kunda, as having said Government had sufficient funds to meet the earlier proposed salary increments.
He said Mr Kunda stated in the House that the treasury currently had insufficient resources to cover the proposed emoluments payable to the President in full due to the heavy expenditure Government incurred on the just-ended presidential election and the funeral of President Mwanawasa.
Meanwhile, Lt-Gen. Shikapwasha said reports in The Post quoting Southern Province minister, Daniel Mukombwe, as suggesting that some churches in the country were becoming political agents of genocide were misleading.
He said the reports were incorrect and that Mr Mukombwe only referred to people who were agitating confusion in the country.
The minister said Mr Mukombwe was an experienced politician who understood the important role the church played in national development.
Lt-Gen. Shikapwasha urged those calling for the condemnation of Mr Mukombwe to critically analyse his statement and not rush to conclusions.
“As a nation with established institutions and channels of communication, we should avoid issuing inflammatory statements on unsubstantiated claims.
“Let all those who have chosen to deliberately misinterpret Mr Mukombwe’s statement read the verbatim report from Parliament because as Government, we shall not condemn him over a statement that has been deliberately misinterpreted and taken out of context,” he said.
Radio Icengelo station manager, Father Frank Bwalya, is quoted in yesterday’s edition of The Post as condemning Government and the MMD’s failure to condemn Mr Mukombwe’s alleged negative utterances on the Church.
[Daily-Mail]