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Tempers flare

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Election agents from different political parties clash during the presidential ballot verification exercise at Lusaka international airport
Election agents from different political parties clash during the presidential ballot verification exercise at Lusaka international airport

The verification of ballot papers for presidential elections delayed to take off in Lusaka on Tuesday morning as stakeholders demanded for the immediate withdrawal of extra ballots.

Representatives of various interest groups threatened to pull out of the exercise if the extra ballot papers were not withdrawn and destroyed.

The stakeholders demanded that the excess ballot papers should be destroyed in their presence.

Electoral Commission of Zambia -ECZ- Principal Electoral Officer, Wina Mwanamoonga, could not withstand pressure and called for help from the head office.

UPND National Trustee, Captain Walusiku Lyambela, argued that there is no basis in sending extra ballot papers to polling stations.

Patriotic Front Member of the Central committee, Samuel Mukupa, demanded that the extra ballots be burnt before the exercise could start.

The situation only normalised after ECZ Deputy Information Technology Director, Brown Kasaro, arrived at the ECZ warehouse at the Lusaka International Airport.

Heritage Party members arriving at Lusaka international airport for the presidential ballot verification. They arrived almost 4 hours late
Heritage Party members arriving at Lusaka international airport for the presidential ballot verification. They arrived almost 4 hours late

Mr. KASARO told the angry stakeholders that there was no need for tempers to flair because aspiring presidental candidates will meet the ECZ on Wednesday to resolve the issue.

The verification exercise only started around 12 hours after the confusion which lasted for over two hours.

The four presidential candidates are on Wednesday expected to meet with ECZ officials to resolve the impasse created by the printing of 600 thousand extra ballot papers.

ZNBC

Withdraw if you’re not ready to accept defeat – Rupiah advises opponents

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Acting President, Rupiah Banda, has challenged his opposition counterparts in the October 30th elections who are indicating that they will not accept the outcome of results if they are not elected, to withdraw from the race immediately.

Mr. Banda said in a democracy presidential candidates should be willing to accept the outcome of the elections whether they loose or win.

He assured the opposition presidential candidates that he will offer them a big democratic fight in the forth coming polls.

Mr. Banda said he is confident of winning the elections democratically based on the fact that he has vigourously campaigned almost in all parts of the country.

He was speaking at the campaign rally held in Mansa on Friday.

Mr. Banda also challenged a named opposition political party leader to instill a face of discipline and good manners in the youth in the interest of promoting democracy in the country.

He said Zambia is a democratic nation where all parties are free to hold public gatherings without undue interference from political party opponents.

He advised the ruling MMD members to remain disciplined and never engage in any conduct likely to disrupt any gathering of political opponents.

Mr. Banda said in the spirit of democracy he has invited many foreign observers to come and observe this month’s presidential elections in order for them to prove that the MMD is a democratic party which is determined to lay a level playing field.

Earlier, opposition ULP leader, Sakwiba Sikota, feared that the country risked suffering a constitutional crisis if electorates elected the opposition in the forth coming elections.

Mr Sikota told Mansa residents that the opposition political parties which are fielding candidates in the elections have minority representatives in parliament and can therefore enact and puff the national constitution.

Mr. Sikota charged that development in Luapula and other parts of the country could suffer if the national budget could be rejected by majority MPs in parliament.

He cited a neighbouring country that could not approve a national budget for a period of ten months because the sitting president had no representation in parliament.

And former Vice President, Nevers Mumba, advised people of Luapula not to heed to the fake promises that some opposition presidential candidates were making in the hope of winning the support ahead of the elections.

Dr. Mumba appealed for the church’s support and embrace Mr. Banda as next president of Zambia.

And Zambia National Marketing Association ZANAMA chairman, Elvis Nkandu, advised Zambians not to vote for politicians who based their campaigns on insults and character assasination.

The Acting President wound up his campaign trail of Luapula Province with promise that he will not respond to insults from opponents, hence urged the electorates to vote wisely.

He was accompanied by ULP leader Sakwiba Sikota, Dr. Nevers Mumba, NDP leader Benny Mwila and MMD National Chairman Michael Mabenga and other party officials.

Mr. Banda returned to Lusaka immediately after addressing the rally.

Zambia in Pot 3 of 2010 World/Africa Cup Qualifiers Seedings

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Zambia have been placed in Pot 3 ahead of the final qualifying group phase draws for the 2010 World/Africa Cup to be made in Zurich on October 22.

Zambia, who have never been to the World Cup finals since taking part in their first qualifiers in 1968, are in Pot 3 together with Gabon, Burkina Faso, Kenya and Benin.

The seedings for the 20 teams that have qualified to the final group qualifying phase on the road to Angola and South Africa were made according to the teams current Fifa rankings for the top seeds with the remaining 15 seeded according to their current qualifying run and recent past Africa Cup performance.

Pot 1 at next Wednesdays draws will comprise African champions Egypt, Ghana, five-time World Cup campaigners Cameroon and Nigeria, with three World Cup outings, including rising power and 2006 World Cup debutants Cote d’Ivoire.

This mean the prospect of a big west African derby is out thanks to the top seeding acquired by the four powerhouses from that region.

However, Egypt faces the possibility of playing their first North African derby in the World Cup qualifiers since 2001.

Egypt will be hoping to avoid Tunisia, Algeria or Morocco (Whom they faced in the final group stage during the 2002 World Cup qualifiers) who are all in Pot 2 that also includes Mali and rebounding nation Guinea.

Pot 4 has Rwanda who are hoping to make their second Africa cup final appearance since their 2004 debut in Tunisia where they had a modest preliminary stage showing.

Togo could get a chance to face Zambia again after losing out to finishing top in group 11 from the last qualifying stage and are also in Pot 4.

The rest of Pot 4 includes Sudan who are hoping to continue on their resurgent run from the 2008 Africa cup qualifiers plus rare birds in final round campaigns Malawi and Mozambique.

The teams will be placed in five groups of four with the group winners at the end of the Africa zone qualifiers, qualifying for the World Cup finals in South Africa while the 2nd and 3rd placed finishers will join them at the Africa Cup finals in Angola.

2010 World/Africa Cup Qualifying Seedings

Pot 1 (Seeds):Cameroon, Egypt, Ghana, Nigeria, Cote d’Ivoire
Pot 2:Guinea, Morocco, Tunisia, Mali, Algeria
Pot 3:Burkina Faso, Gabon, Zambia, Kenya, Benin
Pot 4:Rwanda, Togo, Mozambique, Sudan, Malawi

Source: Fifa.

Did mysterious illness really originate from Zambia?

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Zambian health authorities are not convinced that the causative agent for the mysterious illness is the  deadly “rodent-borne arenavirus” identified by South African experts as no cases of the illness have been reported in Zambia.

Zambian authorities are seeking a second opinion from laboratories in the US and Japan.

On Sunday, the National Institute for Communicable Diseases said the virus has been found in rodents in Africa, but has not previously been found to cause disease in humans — other than in West Africa.

Dr Canisius Banda, a spokesman for Zambia’s health ministry, said: “ Though it is good that they have identified the cause of death, it is also important to note that we have not seen a single case here or a record of a death.”

Investigations began after an office employee of a safari tour company in Zambia died on September 14 in a hospital in Johannesburg, South Africa, two days after being transferred from Zambia.

Cecilia van Deventer, 36, a South African who was resident in Zambian , contracted the virus and infected paramedic Hannes Els, who accompanied her when she was airlifted to the Morningside Medi-Clinic.

Banda said: “We are expecting results this week. We also tested blood samples of Van Deventer at the University of Zambia. Tests were conducted for the Ebola and Marburg viruses, and these came back negative.

“All the contacts who interacted with them [Van Deventer and Els] a month ago are healthy so far.”

Dr Robert Swanepoel, of the special pathogens unit at the National Institute for Communicable Diseases, said the types of rodent that carry the virus are not found in urban areas. He said that it was likely that there were rats on the smallholding, outside Lusaka, where Van Deventer had lived.

Dr Simon Miti, the permanent secretary in the Zambian Health Ministry, said that no other cases had been reported.

“It is still quiet here. We have checked all the places the woman [Van Deventer] passed through and no one has presented with any of the symptoms or died with similar condition. Out of the 12-million Zambians no one has presented with these symptoms,” Miti said.

Zambia Police not used in rigging elections, Inspector General

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Inspector General of Police, Ephraim Mateyo, has challenged some political leaders to substantiate claims that police officers are used in rigging elections.

Mr. Mateyo says apart from controlling queues and maintaining order during voting, police officers do not get into direct contact with ballot boxes.

He is wondering how the police can rig election, when they do not handle ballot papers or ballot boxes.

Mr. Mateyo was speaking in Ndola when the Zambia/Somalia Friendship Association handedover a refurbished police station to the ministry of home affairs.

He said it is sad that some politicians are making statements which lack facts.

Mr. Mateyo also warned of stern action against politicians who are saying they will engage in violence as a way of disputing the outcome of the October 30 election.

He said politicians should use legal channels to air their grievances.

[ZNBC]

Ghosts of Dag visit Independence Stadium

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Place where the grandstand once stood
Place where the grandstand once stood

A year after rehabilitation works began at Independence Stadium in Lusaka, the facelift is making a slow and anxious progress.

Firstly ,work has stalled on 44-year-old venue with an indefinite delay in the laying of a new artificial turf to replace the old grass surface.

Then it is still uncertain when the new grandstand will be built after the four-decade-old structure from where the legendary Dennis Liwewe made his famous football radio commentaries high-up in an orange press cubicle.

Exorbitant bids received by the stadium landlords, the Government, will see the iconic venue remain closed for at least the foreseeable future.

A scar remains where the grandstand once stood at Independence as the ghost of Dag Hammarskjöld Stadium in Ndola resurfaced.

Dag was raised in the mid 1980’s to make way for a new venue for Zambia’s failed hosting of the 1988 Africa Cup finals.

However, while construction delays continue to haunt Independence stadium, people building houses  continue to creep closer and closer to the perimeter of the venue, that has given both joy and painful memories for soccer fans over the years.

No longer will spectators, unable to pay the required entry fee  to watch a sports event, have the privilege of a panoramic view of the arena on match-day from Humanism Hill located on the south-side of stadium.

The famous Humanism Hill now with houses under construction
The famous Humanism Hill now with houses under construction

The rocky outcrop is now dotted with private housing developments that have spread across the hill like a cancer and also encroached onto the western side where homes now stride between the stadium and the old Chingwere cemetery.

Meanwhile, the Gabon air disaster grave yard just south of the Stadium is with each year that goes by adopting semblance of a dignified and pristine stature,15 years after that dark April tragedy.

Adding to the pain is the last game Zambia ever played there is one fans would rather forget.

October 8, 2006, archrivals South Africa’s Bafana Bafana won their first international match there beating

The Dressing Room
The Dressing Room

Zambia 1-0 in a 2008 Africa Cup Group 11 qualifier.

With that, a refreshing but now seemingly drawn-out new era at Independence is awaited to erase the old errors and sorrows

No Registration of all eligible voters for October polls, Court

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The Anti Rigging Zambia Limited has lost a bid to compel the Electoral Commission of Zambia-ECZ- to register all eligible voters before the October 30, presidential election.

The organisation was seeking a declaration that the decision by ECZ to rely on the 2006 voters register is ultra vires to the constitution and null and void.

The Anti Rigging Zambia Limited had sued the ECZ and the Attorney General in the Lusaka High court, seeking redress in the matter.

It argued that the ECZ has the obligation to ensure that all those who are eligible to vote in the coming election are registered before the poll.

But Lusaka High Court Judge, Phillip Musonda, rejected the application saying it is not possible to prepare a fresh voters roll because of lack of time.

Judge Musonda also said Zambia does not have resources to immediately carry out such an expensive exercise in the remaining few days before the poll.

The Judge further pointed out that the court has taken judicial notice of the fact that the donor,the Treasury and the ECZ never anticipated the presidential by-election.

He said the decision would have been different if this was an election which was anticipated like the 2011 General elections.

He said the court also takes judicial notice that government went to the European Commission to request for two Hundred and Twenty One million Pounds to fund this sudden presidential elections.

Judge Musonda said there has been no willful neglect or serious failing on the part of the electoral commission of Zambia as alleged.
[ZNBC]

UNIP wants to change name

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The opposition United National Independence Party -UNIP- intends to change its name to United National Integrated Party.

This is contained in resolutions of the just ended UNIP National Leadership meeting held in Lusaka.

The meeting observed that there is need to change the name of the party taking into account the many changes that have taken place in the country.

The Meeting recommended to the National Congress of the Party to ensure that the change is effected as soon as possible.

The meeting also ratified the decision of its central committee to endorse the candidature of Acting President, Rupiah Banda, in the October 30 presidential election.

And Acting UNIP Deputy Secretary General, Reverend Alfred Banda, said the meeting also proposed to the government to declare first Republican President, Kenneth Kaunda’s birthday a public holiday.

He said this is because Dr. Kaunda is the father of the nation.

[ZNBC]

Under a new colonial whip

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By Peter Hitchens

I thought I was going to die. An inflamed mob of about 50 desperate men had crowded round the car, trying to turn it over. They were staring at me and my companions with rage and hatred such as I haven’t seen in a human face before.

Those companions, Barbara Jones and Richard van Ryneveld, were – like me – quite helpless in the back seats. If we got out, we would certainly be beaten to death. But our two African companions had indeed got out to try to reason with the crowd.

Finally one of them leapt back into the car and reversed wildly down the rocky path. By the grace of God we did not slither into the ditch, roll over or burst a tyre. He told us it was us they wanted. We ought to be dead.
Why did they want to kill us? What was the reason for their fury? They thought that if I reported on their way of life they might lose their jobs.

We were in Katanga province in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and had seen a Chinese supervisor cajoling local workers as they dug a trench.

The workers were grubbing for scraps of cobalt and copper ore in the dust of abandoned copper mines, sinking perilous 25m shafts by hand, washing their finds in cholera-infected streams full of human filth, then pushing enormous loads uphill on ancient bicycles to the nearby town of Likasi, where middlemen waited to sell the metals to Chinese businessmen.

To see the workers as they plodded miserably past was to be reminded of pictures of unemployed miners in Britain in the 1930s, stumbling home in the drizzle with sacks of coal scraps gleaned from spoil heaps. Except that, here, the unsparing heat made the labour five times as hard and the conditions were worse by far than any known in England since the 18th century.

Many of these workers perish as their primitive mines collapse on them, or are horribly injured without hope of medical treatment. Many are little more than children. On a good day they may earn $3.

We had been earlier to this awful pit, which looked like a penal colony in an ancient slave empire. We had been turned away by a fat, corrupt policeman who had pretended our papers weren’t in order, but who was really taking instructions from a dead-eyed, one-eared gang-master who sat next to him.

By the time we returned with more official permits, the gang-masters had readied the ambush. The diggers feared – and their bosses had worked hard on that fear – that if people like me publicised their filthy way of life, then the mine might be closed and the $3 a day might be taken away.

China’s cynical new version of imperialism in Africa is a wicked enterprise.

Much of the continent is selling itself into a new era of corruption and virtual slavery as China seeks to buy up all the metals, minerals and oil it can lay its hands on.

China offers both rulers and the ruled in Africa the simple, squalid advantages of shameless exploitation. For the governments, there are gargantuan loans, promises of new roads, railways, hospitals and schools – in return for giving Beijing a free run at Africa’s rich resources.

For the people, there are these wretched leavings, which, miserable as they are, must be better than the near-starvation they otherwise face.

Persuasive academics advised me before I set off on this journey that China’s scramble for Africa has much to be said for it. They pointed out that China needs African markets for its goods and has an interest in real economic advancement in that broken continent.

For once, they argued, foreign intervention in Africa might work, precisely because it is so cynical and self-interested. They said Western aid, with all its conditions, did little to create real advances in Africa.

Why get so het up about African corruption anyway? Is it really so much worse than corruption in Russia or India? Is it really our business to try to act as missionaries of purity? Isn’t what we call “corruption” another name for what Africans view as looking after their families?

And what about China? Despite the country’s convulsive growth and new wealth, it still suffers from poverty and backwardness. After the murderous disaster of Mao, and the long chaos that went before, China longs above all for prosperity.

And, as one genial and open-minded Chinese businessman said to me in the Congo as we sat over a beer in the decayed colonial majesty of Lubumbashi’s Belgian-built Park Hotel: “Africa is China’s last hope.”

I find this argument quite appealing, in theory. Britain’s own adventures in Africa were not especially benevolent, although many decent men did what they could to enforce fairness and justice amid the bigotry and exploitation.

It is noticeable that in much former British territory we have left behind plenty of good things and habits that are absent in the lands once ruled by rival empires.

Even so, with Zimbabwe, Nigeria and Uganda on our conscience, who are we to lecture others?

I chose to look at China’s intervention in two countries, Zambia and the Congo, because they lie side by side, because one was once British and the other Belgian.

Also, in Zambia’s imperfect but functioning democracy, there is opposition to the Chinese presence, while in the despotic Congo, opposition to President Joseph Kabila is unwise, to put it mildly. The Congo is barely a state at all, and still hosts plenty of fighting.

I have decided not to name most of the people who spoke to me, even though some of them gave me permission to do so, because I am not sure they know just how much of a risk they may be running by criticising the Chinese in Africa.

I know from personal experience with Chinese authority that Beijing regards anything short of deep respect as insulting and it does not forget a slight. I also know that this over-sensitive vigilance is present in Africa.

Our team was reported to the authorities in Zambia’s copper belt by Chinese managers who had seen us taking photographs of a graveyard at Chambishi, where 54 victims of a disaster in a Chinese-owned explosives factory are buried. Within an hour, local “security” officials were buzzing around us trying to find out what we were up to.

Beijing regards Zambia as a great prize, alongside its other favoured nations of Sudan (oil), Angola (oil) and Congo (metals).

It has cancelled Zambia’s debts, established a “special economic zone” in the Copper Belt, offered to build a sports stadium, schools, a hospital and a malaria treatment centre as well as providing scholarships and sending experts to help with agriculture. Trade is growing rapidly.

All this has aroused the suspicions of Michael Sata, a populist Zambian opposition politician famous for his combative manner and his biting attacks on opponents. He was once a porter who swept the platforms at Victoria Station in London. Now he’s the leader of the Patriotic Front, with a respectable chance of winning a presidential election set for the end of this month.

“The Chinese are not here as investors; they are here as invaders,” he says. “They bring Chinese to come and push wheelbarrows, they bring Chinese bricklayers, they bring Chinese carpenters, Chinese plumbers. We have plenty of those in Zambia.”

This is true. In Lusaka and in the Copper Belt, Chinese workers are a common sight at mines and on building sites, as are Chinese supervisors and technicians. There are Chinese restaurants, Chinese clinics and Chinese housing compounds – and a growing number of Chinese flags flapping over factories and smelters.

“We don’t need to import labourers from China,” Sata says. “We need to import people with skills we don’t have in Zambia. The Chinese are not going to train our people how to push wheelbarrows.

“Wherever our Chinese ‘brothers’ are, they don’t care about the local workers. They employ people in slave conditions.”

He accuses Chinese overseers of frequently beating up Zambians. His claim is given force by a story in that morning’s Lusaka newspapers about how a Zambian building worker in Ndola, in the Copper Belt, was allegedly beaten unconscious by four Chinese co-workers angry that he had gone to sleep on the job.

I later checked this account with the victim’s relatives in an Ndola shanty town and found it to be true.

Denis Lukwesa, the deputy general secretary of the Zambian Mineworkers’ Union, backed Sata’s view, saying: “[The Chinese] just don’t understand about safety. They are more interested in profit. They are harsh to Zambians and they don’t get on well with them.”

Sata warns against the enormous loans and offers of help with transport, schools and health care with which Beijing sweetens its attempts to buy up Africa’s mineral reserves.

“China’s deal with the Democratic Republic of Congo is, in my opinion, corruption,” he says, comparing it to Western loans, which require strong measures against corruption.

Everyone in Africa knows that China’s Congo deal – worth almost £5 billion (R77,3 billion) in loans, roads, railways, hospitals and schools – was offered after Western experts demanded tougher anti-corruption measures in return for increased aid.

Sata knows the Chinese are unpopular in his country. Zambians use a mocking word – choncholi – to describe the way the Chinese speak. Zambian businessmen gossip about the way the Chinese live in separate compounds, where – they claim – dogs are kept for food.

Some Africa experts tend to portray Sata as a troublemaker. But his claims were confirmed by a senior worker in Chambishi, the scene of an accident in 2005 at the Beijing General Research Institute of Mining and Metallurgy explosives plant, in which 54 people died.

The worker recalls the aftermath of the blast: “Zambia, a country of 11 million people, went into official mourning for this disaster. A Chinese supervisor said to me in broken English: ‘In China, 5 000 people die, and there is nothing. In Zambia, 50 people die and everyone is weeping.’ To them, 50 people are nothing.”

Many in Africa also accuse the Chinese of unconcealed corruption. A North American businessman who runs a copper-smelting business in Congo’s Katanga province explained that his company is constantly targeted by official safety inspectors because it refuses to bribe them. Meanwhile, Chinese enterprises get away with huge breaches of the law because they pay bribes.

There is a lesson for colonial pride and ambition in the streets of Lubumbashi – 80 years ago an orderly Art Deco city full of French influence and supervised by crisply starched gendarmes, now a genial but volatile chaos of scruffy, bribe-hunting traffic cops where it is not wise to venture out at night.

Outsiders come and go in Africa, some greedy, some idealistic, some halfway between. Time after time, they fail or are defeated, leaving behind scars, slag heaps, ruins and graveyards, disillusion and disappointment.

We have come a long way from Cecil John Rhodes to Bob Geldof, but we still have not brought much happiness with us. Even Nelson Mandela’s vaunted “Rainbow Nation” in South Africa is careering rapidly towards banana republic status.

Now a new great power, China is scrambling for wealth and influence in this sad continent, without a single illusion or pretence.

Perhaps, after two centuries of humbug, this method will work where all other interventions have failed. But after seeing the bitter, violent desperation unleashed in the mines of Likasi, I find it hard to believe any good will come of it.

Source: IOL

Mugabe swears in vice-presidents before talks

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Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has sworn in two vice-presidents ahead of talks on forming a cabinet, a government official said on Monday, a move that could further endanger power-sharing negotiations.

It follows Mugabe’s allocation of important ministries to his ZANU-PF party at the weekend, angering the opposition. The MDC said it doubted mediation by former South African President Thabo Mbeki on Monday would be able to get ZANU-PF to compromise.

A senior government official told Reuters “The two vice-presidents were sworn in this morning because their positions are not in dispute.”

Opposition Movement for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai said on Sunday his party could walk away from a power-sharing deal he signed with Mugabe if Mbeki’s latest mediation effort failed to end a deadlock on how to divide key ministries.

“The visit provides a platform and opportunity for ZANU-PF to reverse its unilateral action,” MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa said. “The ZANU-PF mindset is not consistent with power-sharing. It cannot be power-sharing when one party controls all key ministries.”

Mbeki, who scored his biggest diplomatic coup last month when he nudged Zimbabwe’s bitter political rivals to sign a power-sharing deal, is expected in Harare later on Monday.

A government notice on Saturday showed Mugabe had allocated three key ministries to his ZANU-PF party, drawing fire from the opposition and threatening the fragile pact.

Zimbabwe’s economy has continued to implode, with the number of people in need of food aid rising by the day, adding to the woes of a country suffering staggering inflation of 230 million percent, the highest in the world.

Tsvangirai said on Sunday he would continue negotiating to try to reach an agreement but added that the country’s 10 posts of provincial governors should be shared between ZANU-PF, a splinter MDC group and his party.

While the parties have been at loggerheads since the signing of the September 15 pact on how to divide up 31 cabinet posts, this has angered Zimbabweans who had hoped the deal would bring an end to years of economic misery.

Under the deal, Mugabe, in power since Zimbabwe’s independence from Britain in 1980, retains the presidency and chairs the cabinet. Tsvangirai, as prime minister, will head a council of ministers supervising the cabinet.

ZANU-PF will have 15 seats in the cabinet, Tsvangirai’s MDC 13 and a splinter MDC faction led by Arthur Mutambara three posts, giving the opposition a combined majority.
Reuters

Mysterious illness caused by Arena virus

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The disease that has killed three people in South Africa and forced others into isolation wards may be rodent borne, a health official said Sunday, SAPA news agency reported.

The causative agent has been identified as Arena virus. The members of the family of viruses named Arenaviridae are the viruses that are associated with rodent transmitted disease in humans. Arenavirus infections are relatively common in humans in some areas of the world and can cause severe illnesses. The Arenaviridae are a family of viruses responsible for diseases such as hemorrhagic fevers.

In the nature, arenaviruses are found in animals associated with either one species or a few closely related rodents that are natural reservoir for the viruses. Only a portion of the rodents in each host species is infected at any one time. The viruses are shed into the environment in the urine or droppings of infected hosts.

Human infection is incidental, and occurs when a person comes into a contact with excretions or materials contaminated by an infected rodent.

The first victim Cecelia van Deventer who was a safari tour guide in Zambia is known to have walked barefoot most of the time and traveled within Africa frequently without seeking medical attention.

TD Jakes cancels trip amid fears of mysterious illness

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RENOWNED American televangelist TD Jakes who was expected in Zambia and was scheduled to officiate at the Africa Global Summit has postponed his coming for fear of a mysterious disease that was reported last week to have killed some people.

Efforts by summit organizers to reassure Bishop Jakes and his team through the ministry of Health, Foreign Affairs and American embassy in Zambia that there was no such a disease in the country proved futile.

According to a statement released by the summit organizers in Lusaka yesterday, the decision by Bishop Jakes and his team to postpone their trip to Zambia was as a result of concerns regarding a disease they understood to have originated from Zambia.

“Please, take this as official notification by the African Global Summit planning team for the postponement of the 2008 Africa Global Summit with Bishop Jakes, which was scheduled to take place today at Mulungushi International Conference Centre.

“This decision was made by Bishop Jakes and his team because of their concerns regarding a disease they understood to have originated in Zambia,” the statement reads.

The organizers apologised for the inconvenience and for missing the opportunity the country could have received from the ministry of Bishop Jakes.

The statement appealed to people who bought tickets for the event to take the documents back to where they were purchased for refund.

While in the country, Bishop Jakes was expected to pray for the Zambian presidential aspirants ahead of the October by-election.

Experts recently said a woman from Zambia who died in South Africa from a mysterious disease was in fact afflicted by cerebral edema and multi-organ failure, putting to rest suspicions that she was hit by the deadly Ebola.

Five experts who carried out investigations on two of the four deceased people revealed that the woman could have died from suspected viral infection from a tick bite that she incurred in Lusaka.

Experts from Specialty Emergency Services, Corpmed Medical Centre and Wilderness Safari said that the first victim of the disease that had so far claimed four lives owned horses and attended polo matches in Lusaka.

The woman is known to have walked barefoot most of the time and travelled within Africa frequently without seeking medical attention.

Times of Zambia

Extra ballots for unseen eventualities- Justice Mumba

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Ground handling personnel off-loading ballot papers
Ground handling personnel off-loading ballot papers

THE Electoral Commission of Zambia (ECZ) has justified the printing of an extra 600,000 presidential ballot papers that they are meant for unseen eventualities, and that this is an electoral trend practiced throughout the world in democratic elections.

The ECZ has also dismissed claims that 400,000 voters have been removed from the voters’ register.

ECZ chairperson Justice Florence Mumba said in a statement issued in Lusaka yesterday that the printing of ballot papers was done in such a manner that caters for unforeseen eventualities like spoilt ballot papers.

“The printing of ballot papers has been such that it caters for unforeseen eventualities such as spoilt ballot papers and this is an electoral trend which is practiced throughout the world where there are democratic elections and Zambia is not an exception,” Justice Mumba says.

In apparent reference to concerns by some political parties over the printing of the extra ballot papers, she said: “Thus the Commission will go ahead as per programme.”

Police officers guarding the Presidential ballots papers at a warehouse at Lusaka international airport
Police officers guarding the Presidential ballots papers at a warehouse at Lusaka international airport

She said, however, that the Commission and stakeholders would ensure that there was optimum accountability for the ballot papers at each polling station in accordance with the regulations.

In the spirit of transparency, ECZ invited stakeholders to witness the printing of ballot papers in Durban, South Africa by Universal Printing Company.
The ballot papers arrive today aboard a South African Airways cargo charter and the Commission has called on political party representatives, civil society and the media to witness the arrival.

Justice Mumba said that to ensure a level playing field, it has been the practice of ECZ to give a full set of voters’ register to presidential candidates at no cost.

“To date, copies of the voters’ register for the 2008 presidential election have been printed and so far the UPND (United Party for National Development), Heritage Party and MMD have collected their copies of the voters’ register with the 3.9 million registered voters that were certified in 2006,” the statement reads in part.

She said it was not true that ECZ has removed 400,000 voters from the voters’ register that was certified in 2006.

The UPND, Patriotic Front (PF) and Heritage Party (HP) are opposed to the printing of extra ballot papers, alleging that they were meant to rig elections.
PF president Michael Sata also charged that the Commission had removed 400,000 people from the 2006 voters’ roll.

UPND elections agent Tiens Kahenya engages in an argument with ECZ chairperson Justice Florence Mumba over the arrival of Presidential ballot papers in batches from South Africa
UPND elections agent Tiens Kahenya engages in an argument with ECZ chairperson Justice Florence Mumba over the arrival of Presidential ballot papers in batches from South Africa

Meanwhile, Justice Mumba has said that over 50,000 people made submissions for replacement of their respective voters’ cards, but that these would collect their cards on October 30, the polling day.

She said the replaced voters’ cards were currently being printed upon verification of the submitted particulars and would be dispatched to the respective districts.

“It is not logically possible for the Commission to distribute the replaced voters’ cards to all polling stations before poll day. As such there will be a table at each polling station from which voters will be able to collect their voters’ cards upon positive identification with their green national registration cards,” Justice Mumba said.

Daily Mail

Zesco, Dynamos Advance to 2008 BP Top 8 Final

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ZANACO's Luka Tembo catches the ball under the pursuit of Lusaka Dynamo's William Njovu during the BP Top eight quarter final match played at Lusaka's Nkoloma Stadium in Lusaka yesterday.
ZANACO's Luka Tembo latches onto the ball under the pursuit of Lusaka Dynamo's William Njovu during the BP Top eight quarter final match played at Lusaka's Nkoloma Stadium in Lusaka yesterday.

Zesco United today reached the final of this years BP Top 8 competition after beating Young Arrows 1-0 in the semifinals played at Nchanga Stadium in Chingola.

Zesco will face Lusaka Dynamos in this years BP Top 8 final after the latter beat Zanaco 2-1 at Nkoloma Stadium in Lusaka this afternoon on their way to making a debut final appearance in the same competition.

Zesco secured their first BP Top 8 final place in 21 years thanks to a second half-goal from midfielder Innocent Mwaba.

At Nkoloma, Dynamos were made to work hard for their win by Zanaco in a semifinal match that saw all three goals come in the opening 45 minutes of the game.

Mwelwa Sakala put Dynamos ahead in the 30th minute before Zanaco’s Zambia international striker Roger Kola equalized 8 minutes later for the 3-time BP Top 8 champions.

Ex-Zambia international striker Philemon Chipeta secured Dynamos passage to the finals with the winner

Lusaka Dynamos' Hichani Homoonde pursues the ball against ZANACO's Vincent Magama during the BP Top eight quarter final match played at Lusaka's Nkoloma Stadium in Lusaka yesterday.
Lusaka Dynamos' Hichani Homoonde pursues the ball against ZANACO's Vincent Mangamu during the BP Top eight quarter final match played at Lusaka's Nkoloma Stadium in Lusaka yesterday.

just before the half-time whistle.
Zesco and Dynamos will face-off in the BP Top 8 final on November 8 at Nchanga Stadium in Chingola.

2007 champions Kabwe Warriors failed to defend their title this year after Young Arrows beat them 2-1 in the quarterfinals played on September 20 at the Trade Fair Grounds in Ndola.

RB commissions bridge

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The Mwanawasa bridge across the Luapula river, which Zambia's acting President Rupiah Banda inaugurated on Saturday.
The Mwanawasa bridge across the Luapula river, which Zambia's acting President Rupiah Banda inaugurated on Saturday.

The Levy Mwanawasa bridge across the Luapula River in Chembe has been officially commissioned.

Acting President, Rupiah Banda, commissioned the bridge which was constructed by a Chinese firm at a cost of forty Six billion Kwacha.

The project was funded by the Zambian government.

And speaking when he commissioned the bridge on Saturday, Mr. Banda said the project will play an important role in the development of the region.

Mr. Banda said the bridge provides a vital link between the Coppebelt and Luapula provinces.

He said the project opens an avenue for people in these areas to engage in profitable business activities.

Mr. Banda thanked the government of the Democratic Republic of Congo for its support towards the construction of the bridge.

He said the cooperation demonstrates the desire of the two countries to provide quality infrastructure to their people.

[ZNBC]