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League Reaches Half-Way Point

15

The Faz League has arrived at its midway point with Week 15 Premier League matches taking place on Saturday before the campaign takes a two-week breather.

There will be no league games for the next fortnight as the football season takes its mandatory mid-year, two-week break for club’s to regroup, replenish and reflect before the rundown to the final set of 15 games.

Leaders Young Arrows are home where they host 12th placed Nkana who are searching for their first league win after collecting 2 points from their last 4 league games.

2nd placed Green Buffaloes who are level on 24 points with Young Arrows, but have an inferior goal difference, host 13th positioned Nkwazi.

The match will be part of a Woodlands Stadium doubleheader with the other match being between landlords City of Lusaka and bottom of the table Chambishi.

3rd positioned Red Arrows on 23 points are away to play Power Dynamos in Kitwe.

Defending league champions Zesco United are home at the Trade Fair Grounds in Ndola where they host Konkola Blades.

Kabwe Warriors and Zanaco face-off in the weekend’s match of the day when they meet in their big Midlands derby at Railway Ground in Kabwe.

Elsewhere, Lusaka Dynamos host Green Eagles, while Roan United travels to Chingola to play Nchanga Rangers at Nchanga Stadium.

In other football news, Mauritius Under-20 national team arrived in the country on Thursday evening ahead of Sunday’s 2009 Africa Youth Championship qualifier 1st round, 1st leg match against Zambia Under-20.

The game will be played at Woodlands with the return leg to take place in a fortnight’s time on the Indian Ocean Island.

Parley Committee counsels UNZA

11

The Parliamentary Committeee on Education has asked the University of Zambia to address their internal problems before asking for external assistance.

Committee Chairperson Ms Faustina Sinyangwe made the remarks and wanted to know how the University of Zambia would maintain the standards of Education and also boost the moral of the staff at the institution.

Ms Sinyangwe said this when UNZA Vice Chancellor Stephen Simukanga presented the institutional ‘annual budget report allocation to the committee at the University of Zambia in Lusaka today.

During the presentation the UNZA Vice Chancellor told the Committee that out of a budget of K50 billion per year, Government only allocated a total of K4 billion to the institution.

The Vice Chancellor said the funds were inadequate to enable the institution meet its budgetary needs among payments of outstanding terminal benefits for retirees and workers’ emoluments.

Prof Simukange said the University also faced a number of problems such as the staffing levels have gone down from 50 % to about 30% in most departments which has in turn put a lot of pressure on the institution, adding that staff development programmes have also suffered.

And UNZA Registrar ,Alvert Ng’andu said there was need for Government to inject more funds towards the operations of the institution.

Mr Ng’andu noted that challenges that the Unversity is facing can not be solved without government involvment and intervention at the highest level which require a review of the polices on funding of Higer Education in Zambia.

He further emphasised the need for a national vision for development as detailed in the development plans which also requires a review of the governance framework in which higher Education operates.

Meanwhile, the Copperbelt University (CBU) owes the Zambia Revenue Authority (ZRA) over K80 billion in unpaid Pay As You Earn (PAYE) statutory contributions.

Bursar, Fanwell Musonda said CBU has not been able to remit workers contributions to ZRA due to limitations in funds from central Government.

Mr. Musonda said this in Kitwe, when the parliamentary Committee on Education toured the university.

He said the institution presented a K212 billion budget to government for the financial year 2008 but only K62 billion was approved.

Mr. Musonda observed that the K150 billion shortfall will make it difficulty for the institution to meet some of its obligation’s.

And parliamentary Committee Chairperson, Faustina SInyangwe called for patriotism from academic staff at the institution if educational standards are to be enhanced.

ZANIS/ENDS/AH/CLM

Mwanawasa to Attend AU Summit

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President Levy Mwanawasa is expected to arrive in Egypt’s tourism resort city of Sharm-el-Sheikh on Sunday to attend the 11th Ordinary African Union (AU) Heads of State and Government Summit which opens on Monday, June 30th, 2008.

And the two-day13th Ordinary Session of the Executive Council, comprising Foreign Affairs Ministers opened today in Sharm-el-Sheikh, Egypt with concern raised over the global increase of food and oil prices.

Foreign Affairs Minister Kabinga Pande confirmed that President Mwanawasa, who is also Southern African Development Community (SADC) Chairman, would arrive in Egypt on Sunday to ZANIS in Egypt today.

Mr. Pande, who is leading the Presidential advance party, said the Egypt summit would discuss among other things the raising global food prices which were affecting every one on the continent.

The Minister said the summit would also discuss water and sanitation, progress on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), economic integration of the continent among others.

Mr. Pande said the summit would also discuss the issue of water because in the near future, the commodity might become as expensive as oil was today.

The 11th AU summit, whose theme is “Meeting the Millennium Development Goals on Water and Sanitation”, will take place from June 30 to July 1 this year.

Finance Minister Ng’andu Magande, Tourism Minister Michael Kaingu, Local Government Minister Silvia Masebo, Justice Minister George Kunda and Lusaka Province Minister Lameck Mangani are among the members of the presidential delegation.

And the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) has said that the continent faces a lot of challenges from the impact of current developments in the international economic scene.

ECA Executive Secretary, Abdoulie Janneh, said during the opening of the 13th Session of the Executive Council of the AU in Sharm-el-Sheikh that recent positive economic performance of Africa was being threatened by global economic emergencies in food and energy markets.

Mr. Janneh, who is also the United Nations under Secretary General, said the above problems which were closely linked with the negative effects of climate change had potential to undermine political stability and scaling up of efforts aimed at achieving the MDGs.

He called for use of common solutions and benefits of regional and international cooperation to drive and guide national actions aimed at addressing the problems.

Mr. Janneh urged the international community to reduce trade restrictions and distorting agricultural support policies as a way of addressing the escalating food prices in Africa.

He said similar attention should be paid to soaring oil prices and called for solidarity between oil producing and consuming African countries.

ZANIS/MB/KSH/ENDS

Govt to Give NCZ K58 Billion for Recapitalisation

10

Agriculture and Co-operative Minister, Sarah Sayifwanda, has assured Nitrogen Chemicals of Zambia (NCZ) workers and retirees that government would release K58.3 billion in the next two weeks for recapitalization of the company.

Mrs. Sayifwanda disclosed this in Kafue today when she addressed scores of angry NCZ workers at the Kafue District Commissioner’s office during a meeting.

Three days ago, the workers gave the minister a three day ultimatum in which to address them and tell them the future of the company.

Mrs. Sayifwanda told the workers that the three days which she was given was not enough to source for the required funds, saying President Levy Mwanawasa and the Minister of Finance and National Planning, Ng’andu Magande, were busy with other issues of national interest.

Mrs. Sayifwanda, who was accompanied by her deputy minister, Daniel Kalenga, and Lusaka Police Commanding officer, Greenwell Nguni, pleaded with the workers to give her time to effectively deal with the issue.

She said government would not close NCZ because President Mwanawasa and the MMD government attached great importance to the plant.

Mrs. Sayifwanda commended the workers for their patience despite numerous problems they were going through.

She pointed out that she was not a liar and she will ensure that the company is recapitalized so it continues operations.

Speaking earlier, NCZ Nation Union of Commercial and Industrial Workers ( NUCIW) branch Chairman Robert Musanje expressed disappointment with the government for failing to deal with the issue of NCZ prudently.

Mr. Musanje urged the workers not give up but continue fighting so that their plight can be heard.

He appealed to government to sort out the problems of NCZ once and for all stating that government’s release of funds to the company in piece meal was not solving anything.

The meeting which was attended by hundreds of workers was characterized by heavy presence of police and paramilitary officers in riot gear and gas canisters to maintain order in the event of any riotous behavior by the workers.

The workers demanded that government pays them off their terminal benefits saying they are tired of going to the streets every time they are not funded for production and salaries.

They lamented that many of them have become destitutes and are no longer able to sponsor their children to school.

The workers expressed fears that National Housing Authority (NHA) will anytime start reposing houses from them as the company has failed to buy the houses on their behalf due to lack of funds.

ZANIS/BS/MKENDS

LWSC calls for legal allocation of land

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The Lusaka Water and Sewerage Company (LWSC)has appealed to the Ministry of Lands to ensure that plots are not allocated illegally.

LWSC Public Relations Manager Simon Mwale said this when the company demolished an illegal wall fence that an unnamed Asian national is building around a 10 acre portion of land said to belong to the water utility company.

The company has four established boreholes on the land which supply water to over 300, 000 residents in George and Chunga compounds.

The Asian national who represents NISCO industry is said to be planning to set up a factory on the land.

Mr. Mwale stated that the Asian man illegally obtained title deeds to the land and has since called on the Ministry of Lands and all investigative wings of Government to thoroughly investigate the matter.

He said it is illegal for any individual or company to put up structures within 500 meters from the water source as this may cause water contamination.

And LWSC Area Manager Lwenga Mwape said the excavation works that the Asian man is carrying out on the land are risky because they may puncture water lines which would in turn cause water contamination.

Mr. Mwape said one bore hole has since been closed because of water contamination allegedly caused by a brewery in the area.

ZANIS/ENDS/BK/CLM…………..PIX

Recapitalise NCZ-UPND Prods Govt

30

United Party for National Development (UPND) has called upon Government to immediately re-capitalise Nitrogen Chemicals of Zambia in order to mitigate the local fertiliser prices.

UPND Chairperson for Information and Publicity Charles Kakoma said re-capitalizing NCZ is inevitable following the increase in world prices of fertiliser by more than 300 per cent as announced in the international media recently.

This is contained in a media statement made available to ZANIS in Lusaka today.

Mr. Kakoma noted that NCZ is a strategic institution for the development of the country’s agriculture sector.

He said although the Government has no control on the world prices of raw materials for the manufacture of fertiliser, there is need for it to quickly find a solution to the rising fertiliser prices as most peasant farmers cannot afford to buy the commodity at the newly announced prices.

Mr. Kakoma said the UPND is concerned with the manner in which the ruling MMD government is addressing the agriculture sector at the time the world is faced with the challenge of increased food prices.

He said President Levy Mwanawasa’s government should make decisive steps to ensure that Zambian farmers have affordable inputs that would help them keep food prices low.

Mr. Kakoma has also urged Government to quickly resolve and take into consideration the plight of NCZ workers and retirees believed not to have been paid their dues.

He said Government should always ensure that institutions such as NCZ are recapitalized in order for farmers to benefit from relatively cheaper fertiliser and to ensure that its workers in Kafue District have employment to enable them support their families.

ZANIS/ENDS/CM/CLM

High School Pupils in Illicit Sex Drama at the Games

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Nchelenge District HIV/AIDS Task Force in Luapula (DATF) has slammed the high number of illicit sex cases recorded among pupils during the Provincial High School games held in the District recently.

The Taskforce has also taken a swipe at some teachers who took advantage of the games popularly known as Buffalo to have carnal knowledge of pupils.

The development came to light during a DATF stakeholder’s meeting held at the Nchelenge District Council yesterday.

Presenting a Quarterly report to the meeting, DATF HIV/AIDS Prevention Theme Group Secretary, Jedidiah Mumba said during the games Kashikishi was flooded by both pupils and teachers at night who were in most cases drunk.

Mr. Mumba said several named Guest Houses in Kashikishi were reportedly offering their premises to the pupils and teachers to use for their sexual activities.

He said the demand for places from which to have sex was very high such that some unscrupulous business people even put up makeshift structures using reed mats which they rented out to pupils and some teachers who wanted to indulge in the practice.

Mr. Mumba expressed worry that despite the high number of sexual activities recorded in the four days that the games were held there was no significant increase in the usage of condoms as sales remained low in shops and other condom sales outlets.

And Nchelenge District HIV/AIDS Advisor, Monze Muleya called on the Ministry of Education to put up measures to ensure that School games were not turned into an HIV infection activity.

He appealed to the Luapula Provincial Education Officer, Florence Kanchebele to take disciplinary action against teachers who were found abusing the pupils.

But Nchelenge High School Head teacher, Bernard Chimba defended the organising committee of the games saying all measures were put in place to ensure that pupils did not go out at night.

He said the games attracted a lot of people in Nchelenge District who could have been mistaken for the pupils, adding that some of the girls and prostitutes from the surrounding villages could have masqueraded as pupils.

He however said out of the 24 participating schools there was an additional 1 700 pupils at Nchelenge High School which made the number of pupils too big to easily control.

Mr. Chimba said starting next year the games will be played in zones namely Nchelenge, Kawambwa, Mansa and Samfya.

He said this will greatly reduce the number of participating pupils and will make it easy to contain them.

Mr. Chimba expressed disappointment that some teachers were also involved in abusing the pupils instead of protecting them.

He said there is need for Authorities to take stern action on the teachers and also on the guest house owners who allowed pupils to have sex at their premises.

Mr Chimba said there is need for Authorities to ensure that the issue is sorted out before a team traveled to Kasama in Northern Province for High School National games.

ZANIS/ENDS/ESM/CLM/

Voting progressing well in Milanzi

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Voting in the Milanzi parliamentary by-election in Katete district in Eastern province is progressing well, with over 900 people having voted by 09:00 hours this morning.

A check by ZANIS in over seven polling stations found hundreds of people anxiously queuing up to cast their votes despite the cold weather.

At around 09:00 hours, 300 had cast their votes at Kagoro Basic polling station, 233 at Dole basic school polling station, 150 at Kawaza, 130 at Kafumbwe basic school and 98 at Chimbundire polling station.

The number of registered voters at Dole polling station is 646 but only 233 had voted by 11:00hours, while Kagoro polling station has 722 where 300 people had cast their votes by 11:00 hours.

Kawaza polling station has 438 voters in the register but only 150 had cast their votes by 10:00 hours.

Voting closes at 18:00 hours this evening.

The Milanzi constituency seat fell vacant in March this after the death of Dr. Chosani Njovu of the United National Independence Party (UNIP).

Political parties contesting the seat include the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD), Patriotic Front (PF), United National Independence Party (UNIP), United Party for National Development (UPND), All People’s Congress party (APC) and the Forum for Democracy and Development (FDD).

Milanzi constituency has 19,700 registered voters and 40 polling stations.

ZANIS/LN/KSH/ENDS

RUN-OFF ELECTION STILL ON – ZEC

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The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) have maintained that the presidential run-off election set for June 27 is still on, and have since dismissed Morgan Tsvangirai’s withdrawal from the race.

ZEC chairperson Justice George Chiweshe told journalists that it was too late for the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader to pull out of the election.

Chiweshe said the Commission met earlier in the day to deliberate on the issue, following the submission of the withdrawal letter by Tsvangirai on Tuesday.

‘It was unanimously agreed that the withdrawal had inter alia been filed well out of time and for that reason the withdrawal was of no legal effect.

‘Accordingly, the Commission does not recognize the purported withdrawal and is therefore proceeding with the presidential run-off election as planned,’ he said.

Chiweshe said ballot papers had since been printed and dispatched.
Tsvangirai, who is pitted against Zanu PF candidate President Robert Mugabe in the election, withdrew from the election, citing various reasons.

In his arguments for the pullout, the opposition leader said obtaining conditions, among them, political violence and intimidation, made it difficult to hold a free and fair poll.

Following the withdrawal statements, Justice Chiweshe told observers and other stakeholders on Monday that the country would still hold credible elections despite the various incidences of political violence that occurred.
“We do not have a war in the country, generally there is peace,” he said.

“You never have an election (anywhere in the world) that is 100 percent perfect and I believe we can hold a free and fair election.”
He said the Commission was ready for the election as logistics had been put in place.

The Friday run-off election follows failure by both candidates to garner a majority vote in the harmonised elections held on March 29.

Three by-elections are also to be held on the same day.
New Ziana/ZANIS/MK

LEVY Committed to Fighting Developmental enemies

64

PRESIDENT Levy Mwanawasa says he remains committed to fighting vices such as corruption that frustrate government’s efforts of improving the national economy.

Dr Mwanawasa said he will continue with the crusade against corruption in order to secure a stable environment for the implementation of developmental projects.

He said the crusade has helped the country regain investor confidence in various sectors of the economy especially in the mining sector, and increased donor aid in the education and health sectors.

In view of the prevailing environment for investments, Dr. Mwanawasa said government has embarked on mineral and oil exploration in selected parts of the country.

ZANIS reports that The President said government is spending substantive financial resources on exploiting natural resources for improved economic activities that are aimed at alleviating poverty.

Dr Mwanawasa further stated his return to active politics in 2001 was intended to improve transparency and accountability in the management of public resources.

Meanwhile the president has called for the quick completion on rehabilitation of Kagoro basic school for which government released K19 Billion for the project.

He expressed concern with the slow pace at which rehabilitation works are going on at the school.

Dr Mwanawasa also expressed disappointment with Environmental Council of Zambia (ECZ) for wanting to insist on carrying out an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for the project when, the school has in fact existed since 1943.

He said the money that the ECZ expected the school to pay in form of study fees could be used for other projects at the school.

The president directed the minister of education professor Geoffrey Lungwangwa to ensure the quick completion of rehabilitation works at the school.

Dr Mwanawasa said his emphasize on free education to be compulsory for all children in the country was aimed at ensuring that all children receive better education as was the case in the past.

Dr. Mwanawasa who this afternoon completed his three day visit to Katete is tomorrow expected to attend the burial of vice president Rupiah Banda’s late mother Sara Zulu in Chipata and later return to Lusaka.

He was in Katete to drum up support for MMD parliamentary candidate Reuben Banda for tomorrow’s Milanzi Bye Election.

The Seat which is being contested By UPND, UNIP, ACP,PF and FDD fell vacant after the death of Chosani Njovu of UNIP.

ZANIS/HN/LN/SJK/MK/ENDS

Sinazongwe Community Accuse ZAMBEEF of exploiting them

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Chief Sinazongwe’s representative has charged that ZAMBEEF in the area is indirectly stealing from the community through fixing the cattle price below the market value.

Louis Manje said the community was worried with the price at which the company was buying their animals.

.

Mr. Manje told ZANIS in an interview that ZAMBEEF was charging K8, 000 per kg for an animal that was weighing 130 kg while 131 kg and above was being pegged at K9, 000.

He said though ZAMBEEF was helping the people to have easy access to market, management should change its attitude to the community.

“ZAMBEEF management must have regard for people and should explain the criteria used to come up with different prices otherwise it is a diplomatic way of stealing from people,” Mr. Manje said.

Mweenda ward councilor Bernad Kalata has appealed to government to lift the ban on stock movement to enable people in Sinazongwe sell their animals at competitive prices.

Mr. Kalata stated people would be able to derive the value of their animals if they sold them at competitive prices.

He said the ban and severe hunger in the district was forcing people to sale their animals to ZAMBEEF at a low price for them to buy maize.

The councilor described the ZAMBEEF prices as inhuman and a punishment to people who have no where they could sale their animals.

He said most of them were waiting for government to lift the ban for them to start taking their animals to Lusaka where market was competitive.
ZANIS/TN/MK/END

Wednesday Zambian Football Update

93

Herve Renard wants two friendly games for Zambia between now and September 5.

The Frenchman said he wanted one friendly next month before taking part in the Cosafa Senior Challenge Cup and another on August 30 during the Fifa August friendly match-date window ahead of Zambia’s September World/Africa Cup qualifying date against Togo in Chililabombwe.

“We plan one camp in August and we hope to have one friendly to prepare against Togo when we have one FIFA date to use,” Renard said.

“We will have another friendly to prepare for the Cosafa Cup and we are waiting for the date (of the game) because it will be difficult because it will not be on a Fifa date.”

And Renard said he would call-up fringe foreign-based players for next months Cosafa Senior Challenge Cup training camp ahead of the mini-tournament in South Africa.

The Frenchman said he would like to observe as many fringe foreign-based as possible who have not had the opportunity to future for Zambia in the past during the July training camp.

“Maybe we will include one or two young players, I have seen one player from Israel Justin Zulu,” Renard said.

Meanwhile, the Zambia under-20 coach Oswald Mutapa has dropped six players from the 27 in camp preparing for Sundays 2009 Africa Youth Championship 1st round, 1st leg qualifier against Mauritius to be played at Woodlands Stadium in Lusaka.

The players were dropped today after the Under-20 teams 4-1 win over current Faz Premier League leaders Young Arrows in a training game at Nkoloma stadium played this morning.

The players are Innocent Mumba of Zesco United, Afrisports striker Ian Kafusha, Gift Sakuwaha of Chambishi and Hendrix Mumba from Shooting Stars.

Others are Roderick Siame from Konkola Blades and Nathan Chintu of Green Buffaloes.

The Under-20 team will on Thursday afternoon play City of Lusaka in another training game at Woodlands after which Mutapa is expected to name his final 18-man team for Sundays clash.

Rural Health Retention Scheme not a Reality,

8

The Parliamentary Committee on Health and Social Welfare yesterday heard that the exodus of health workers from rural to urban areas would be solved by making the rural retention scheme a reality to benefit all health workers.

Presenting the current health situational analysis to the committee, Kasempa Clinic Health Director, Sikota Lutangu, attributed the exodus of health workers from Kasempa district to lack of retention incentives.

Mr. Lutangu said rural health centres have had many challenges in providing acceptable health care services to rural people because of the shortage of medical staff.

He observed that the retention scheme in rural areas has not impacted positively on the health workers, adding that the scheme was just on paper and not a reality.

He explained that health workers in the district have not been enjoying the conditions spelt out in the retention scheme.

“The challenges brought about by the exodus of health workers are many but the problem would be alleviated if the government incentives covered all the cadres at health centres”, he said.

Mr. Lutangu noted that most workers in the health sector were willing and ready to work in remote areas of Kasempa district if they were provided with incentives such as transport.

Mr. Lutangu said the health workers in the district have however, worked hard to bring down the HIV/AIDS prevalence rate to 8 per cent from the previous 15 per cent in the whole district.

He said among the many problems the clinic was faced with was the lack of a laboratory to test HIV, tuberculosis (TB) and malaria.

He said most of the people seeking VCT services were referred to Mukinge Mission Hospital.

He was speaking when a Parliamentary committee on Health and Social Welfare toured Kasempa main clinic and Mukinge Mission Hospital to establish challenges the health sector is faced with a rural areas.

Among the members of the committee that were in Kasempa, were Chikankata Member of Parliament (MP), Munji Habeenzu, who is the Chairperson for the committee, Ndundumwezi MP, Edgar Sing’ombe, MP for Mandevu, Jean Kapata, and MP for Chingola, Joseph Katema.

And Mukinge Mission Hospital Executive Director, Jairos Fumpa, attributed the shortage of health workers at the hospital to delay in processing the retention schemes.

Mr. Fumpa said no health worker has benefited from the rural retention scheme, adding that papers have been submitted to the government but no positive results have been realised.

He said the hospital was facing a critical shortage of health workers which has resulted in other members of staff working extra hours in order to provide quality health care services for the people of Kasempa and Mufumbwe district.

Mukinge Mission Hospital offers first level medical and surgical care to both Kasempa and Mufumbwe districts.

And speaking after touring the health centres, Committee Chairperson, Munji Habeenzu, assured the two directors that the problems their institutions were facing would be forwarded to relevant authorities.

ZANIS/SN/EML/KSH/ENDS.

NCC to adopt six committee reports by the end of this year

16

The National Constitutional Conference (NCC) has planned to adopt reports of at least six committees by the end of this year.

The NCC divided its work into 11 committees, under which each article of the Mung’omba draft constitution, which is a term of reference, falls.

NCC Chairperson, Chifumu Banda, said at a press briefing in Lusaka today that so far, three committees have already concluded their deliberations on their terms of reference.

Mr. Banda said committees that have concluded deliberations on their terms of reference are the Citizenship committee, the Judicial Committee and the Public Service committee.

“The reports of these committees are being finalised by the secretariat. The members of these committees will be called again for a few days to come and approve these reports before presentation to the conference for deliberation and adoption,” Mr. Banda said.

He told journalists that three other committees have since been called to meet next month to deliberate on their terms of reference for 20 working days before parliament resumes sitting in August this year.

The three committees that would meet in July are the Democratic Governance, the Local Government and the Public Finance.

Mr. Banda explained that the NCC has planned to meet in September and August this year when parliament would be on recess to adopt the six reports of the committees.

“The NCC will meet to adopt six reports of the Citizenship committee, the Democratic Governance Committee, the Judicial Committee, the Local Government Committee, the Public Service Committee and the Public Finance Committee,” he said.

He said if everything worked according to the NCC schedule, the six reports should be considered before parliament resumes its business in November 2008.

He said the conference would from 1st December this year to early January 2009, call other committees to deliberate on their terms of reference.

“As you can see, we intend to adopt at the very least, reports of six committees. This means come next year, we will have only five committees or less to attend to,” he said.

Mr. Banda said after this, the conference would need six days in which to publish the initially adopted constitution to enable members of the public make comments on it.

“The adopted constitution will be translated in all major local languages and public discussions will be held on radio and television so that the people are fully involved,” he added.

The NCC Chairman explained that the NCC would after six days of publishing the initially adopted constitution, meet to consider comments from the public and then adopt the draft constitution.

“We intend to listen to the people very carefully. As you know NCC members are, by law, accountable to the Zambian people,” he said.

He further said after the draft constitution is adopted, the NCC members would decide whether to submit the entire draft constitution to the national referendum or to parliament for immediate enactment of those parts whose alteration would not require a national referendum.

He said if such parts of the constitution were submitted to parliament for immediate enactment, then those parts that required a national referendum would be submitted to the referendum.

Mr. Banda cited part III, which is the Bill of Rights, and Article 79 of the current constitution and other articles in the Mung’omba draft constitutions over which the NCC has failed to reach a decision as some of the parts that could require a national referendum before parliament enacts the final constitution.

He has since thanked individuals and government departments that sent officers to brief NCC members of committees on various important issues.

The NCC started sitting in December last year to deliberate, debate and finally adopt the draft Mung’omba constitution, which was a result of the Mung’omba Constitutional Review Commission (CRC) that was created in 2003.

Over 400 people from different professions, occupations and careers form the NCC composition and are sitting on 11 committees which are deliberating the terms of reference of the Mung’omba draft constitution.

ENDS/KSH/AM/ZANIS

NCZ workers cause traffic jam on Kafue-Lusaka road

17

Traffic on the Kafue-Lusaka road in Kafue today came to a standstill after scores of Nitrogen Chemicals of Zambia (NCZ) workers and their families blocked the main road as they demonstrated demanding that government should immediately address their plight.

The workers, who were backed by retirees, school going children and women with babies wrapped on their backs, sat on the Kafue-Lusaka road at Kafue cemetery junction, causing a traffic jam, which lasted from around 09.00 hours to 16.00 hours.

The irate workers, who had just been addressed by Kafue District Acting Commissioner Henry Bowa, expressed dissatisfaction at what they were told in the morning and vowed to demonstrate until the Minister of Agriculture and Cooperatives, Sarah Sayifwanda addresses them.

The workers, who together with their wives and children, numbered over 300, sat on the road, much to the astonishment of motorists, who were forced to park their vehicles and waited for the situation to calm down.

A number of trucks and small vehicles that were blocked from proceeding in their respective directions formed a stretch of over 8 kilometres.

Drivers of the vehicles and other passengers were forced to get out of their vehicles to watch the demonstrating worker and families as polices officers watched and kept vigil to prevent the situation from degenerating into chaos.

Motorists talked to by ZANIS described the demonstration as an inconvenience to them because they were wasting their business hours by waiting for demonstrators to leave the road.

They said it was unfair for the workers to block road for a long time.

And addressing the workers in the late afternoon, Agriculture and Cooperative Minister Sarah Sayifwanda, pleaded with the workers to give her up to this Friday, to look for resources from relevant authorities to address their problems.

Mrs. Sayifwanda reiterated that NCZ was still a government ‘baby’ whose problems it was ready to solve.

She was accompanied by Lands Minister, Bradford Machila, who is Kafue area Member of Parliament and Agriculture Deputy Minister Daniel Kalenga.

Speaking earlier, Mr. Machila said that government would listen to the workers’ complaints hence Mrs. Sayifwanda’s efforts to travel to Kafue to address them.

He appealed to the workers to be calm as government was addressing the matter at cabinet level.

The workers however gave the minister of Agriculture up to Friday this week to dissolve the company board claiming that it was not accountable and transparent in the running of NCZ affairs.

They vowed to assemble at the District Commissioner as early as 05.00 hours to wait for her to address them on Friday.

Lusaka Province Police Commanding Officer, Greenwell Ng’uni, and other senior police officers were also present to providing to the minister and motorists with security.

ZANIS/BS/SC/KSH/ENDS