Monday, June 16, 2025
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Jan Koivu Urges Government to Cut Red Tape and Strengthen Zambia Development Agency

Lusaka, Zambia – International investor and business advisor Jan Koivu has called on the Zambian government to reduce bureaucratic hurdles and streamline its regulatory processes to boost investor confidence and accelerate economic development. Speaking during a business policy discussion in Lusaka, Koivu praised the Zambia Development Agency (ZDA) for its efforts but warned that institutional inefficiencies are hindering progress and scaring away potential investors.

“I would encourage the government to see ways how they can reduce red tape rather than applying more of it,” Koivu said. “Regulation as such is good, but you’ve got to regulate the right way.”

Koivu’s comments come at a time when Zambia is actively positioning itself as a destination for foreign direct investment, particularly in sectors such as mining, agriculture, and energy. While the ZDA has made strides in facilitating investor entry into the market, many entrepreneurs both local and international still encounter delays, unclear procedures, and conflicting regulations across ministries.

According to Koivu, streamlining those processes is not about deregulating the economy entirely but about ensuring that regulatory frameworks are coherent, efficient, and investor-friendly. “The goal should be to make Zambia competitive. Investors are comparing countries side-by-side. If it takes too long to get basic approvals here, they will go elsewhere,” he explained.

The World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business Index previously ranked Zambia favorably in areas such as starting a business and access to credit. However, entrepreneurs and multinational firms have continued to report challenges in navigating land acquisition, licensing, and tax procedures  all of which are critical to business success.

Koivu singled out the Zambia Development Agency as one of the government’s most effective institutions, praising its proactive engagement with foreign investors. But he stressed that ZDA cannot operate effectively without the necessary resources and inter-agency support.

“I think ZDA is doing quite a good job in terms of attracting international investment. But for them to really deliver, they need to be properly resourced,” he said. “It’s one thing to have a vision for growth, and another thing entirely to give the institutions the tools they need to execute that vision.”

Business associations in Zambia have long pushed for a more centralized, one-stop-shop approach to investment facilitation a model in which ZDA plays a central role, coordinating with relevant ministries to expedite approvals. Koivu echoed these sentiments, noting that consistency in policy and responsiveness to investor needs are key to competing in a global economy.

Zambia Marks Africa Freedom Day with Tributes and National Honours

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As part of the Africa Freedom Day commemorations, President Hakainde Hichilema led a solemn wreath-laying ceremony at the iconic Freedom Statue in Lusaka, paying tribute to the brave men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice in Zambia’s struggle for independence.

The President, accompanied by senior government officials, dignitaries, and members of the public, honoured the memory of the country’s fallen heroes whose courage laid the foundation for the freedoms Zambians enjoy today.

Following the ceremony, State House hosted a special event where President Hichilema conferred national honours and awards on distinguished citizens in recognition of their outstanding service to the nation. The recipients, drawn from various sectors, were celebrated for their exceptional contributions to Zambia’s progress, unity, and sovereignty.

Among the honourees was the late Dora Mono Nyambe, who was posthumously awarded one of the country’s most prestigious national honours. Dora, who passed away last year at the age of 32, was widely known for her tireless efforts in saving over 200 vulnerable children from the brink of starvation. “We wish she was here to see the impact of her works,” said President Hichilema, describing her legacy as an enduring symbol of compassion and selflessness.

“These honours reflect our deep appreciation for the selfless dedication and patriotic spirit that have shaped our great nation,” President Hichilema said. “Their work reminds us all of the importance of service, sacrifice, and unity.”

Africa Freedom Day, observed annually on May 25, commemorates the founding of the Organisation of African Unity—now the African Union—and serves as a reminder of the continent’s ongoing journey toward peace, development, and integration.

The commemorations concluded with a renewed call for national unity, economic resilience, and the collective pursuit of a better future for all Zambians.

Illegal Aliens: Elon, Trump, and Ramaphosa’s Betrayal of African Dignity

Kapya Kaoma

The May 21, 2025 Oval Office meeting between Donald Trump and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa is still making international headlines—and rightly so. But for me, it wasn’t just another diplomatic disaster in Washington, D.C. It was a shameful display of subservience. It was a moment where Ramaphosa, once a lion of the liberation movement, appeared more like a head-nodding subordinate than a sovereign leader.

Who doesn’t know Trump’s ignorance? That’s not news. But Ramaphosa’s posture—smiling, nodding, yielding—was shocking. It was less a meeting of equals and more a performance of colonial nostalgia. Watching him, I didn’t see diplomacy; I saw deference. It felt like he wasn’t just nodding along—he was kneeling before white political patrons at home and abroad.

Many have dismissed the event as just another Trumpian misstep, reminiscent of his infamous pressure tactics with Ukraine’s President Zelensky. But unlike Zelensky, who stood firm, Ramaphosa offered no such resistance. He wilted.

The low point? When Trump handed the mic to his white South African ally—a man who proceeded to channel Trump’s xenophobic playbook, blaming South Africa’s crime crisis on “illegal aliens.” Ramaphosa offered only the mildest objection, noting crime affects “both sides,” but stoodby as the speaker doubled down, invoking Elon Musk’s Starlink and surveillance drones as the solution to South Africa’s murdering of white farmers, I guess. That, apparently, was why they were in D.C–to beg Trump for help.

Mainstream media rightly condemned Trump for broadcasting grotesque footage of alleged “white farmer mass graves.” But far less attention was paid to the roots of South Africa’s violent crimes. Yes, some immigrants commit crimes—as is true in the US—but the overwhelming majority of violent crime is committed by South Africans themselves. At the center of the crime crisis isn’t immigration, but apartheid–a legacy many white South Africans still refuse to acknowledge.

Even Julius Malema’s fiery rhetoric—gleefully replayed by Trump during that meeting—cannot be divorced from that history. Black South Africans were promised that the end of apartheid would bring economic justice. It didn’t. So for a white South African to scapegoat immigrants—many of whom do menial labor for white families—is not just insulting, it’s cowardly. Many so-called “aliens” once sheltered South African exiles. Today, they’re used as political shields.

Ramaphosa knows this history. Yet he sat there, nodding, faintly smiling—as if hoping to win the favor of the very interests that once brutalized his people and stole their land. For what? A handshake with Trump? A wink from Musk?

This wasn’t diplomacy. It was a carefully staged moment in service of a broader anti-immigrant crusade, with Ramaphosa playing the willing understudy. The tired lie that “illegal aliens” are to blame for national decay has been disproven time and again. But now it’s being exported into South African politics—repackaged and redeployed for domestic gain.

Why didn’t Ramaphosa challenge his Afrikaner allies when they blamed immigrants for tensions around land reform—the real obsession behind Musk and Trump’s sudden interest in South Africa? Why didn’t he remind the world that in African culture, we don’t call people “aliens”? To do so is to deny our shared humanity.

Could it be that Ramaphosa is leaning into the “illegal alien” narrative to placate a public angry over unfulfilled promises? In South Africa, xenophobic attacks are not rare. Scapegoating immigrants is a way to deflect from state failure and to absorb Black rage—while also currying favor with those most threatened by land redistribution.

Instead of defending the truth, Ramaphosa embraced a dangerous fiction. He sacrificed ubuntu—the African ethic of shared humanity—for short-term political cover.

As for Starlink and the talk of border surveillance—was it part of a backroom deal? Did South African officials lure Musk with promises, or vice versa? Either way, the symbolism is damning. Musk has long trafficked in racial dog whistles, painting Afrikaners as refugees in need of asylum. Now he and Trump are repackaging that narrative as foreign policy.

Some still have sympathy for Ramaphosa. I do not. He undermined fellow Africans on the global stage. Trump lied. His white South African mouthpiece lied as Ramaphosa stood by.

Africa will not earn respect by bowing to white masters. It never has. Power, dignity, and justice are not found in proximity to whiteness—they’re claimed through courage and truth.

Yes, diplomacy is messy. But leadership demands more than polite smiles at powerful tables. It demands a backbone.

Ramaphosa had a choice. He chose favor over principle.

In the end, he lost both.

Africa Freedom Day:Does It Honour The Ideals Of Pan-Africanism

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By Shaddon Chanda

The Pan-African congresses
Every year African countries commemorate Africa Day or Africa Freedom Day which is broadly in honour of the founding of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) established on 25th May 1963 in the Ethiopian capital city Addis Ababa. In the year 2001, Zambia had the rare privilege to host the last OAU Summit held at Mulungushi International Conference Centre chaired by Second Republican President Frederick TJ Chiluba. It was also the last year of President Chiluba as head of state. His successor Levy Mwanswasa was to handover the instruments of chairmanship to South Africa’s Second Black President Thabo Mvuyelwa Mbeki. It was Mbeki, an intellectual urbane and strong proponent and advocate of Africa Renaissance who became the chairperson of the African Union (AU) which supplanted the aged OAU in 2002. The OAU founder leaders and their successors had done their very best to ensure that the last three countries to attain political freedom in Black Africa namely Zimbabwe (April 1980), Namibia (January 1990) and South Africa (May 1994) got their freedom under majority rule.

The OAU was a product of the ideals of Pan-Africanism championed by great black enthusiastic political warriors such as Edward Wilmot Blyden a preacher and scholar of Liberia, Henry Sylvester Williams, Edward W. Burgardt Dubois, William Marcus Garvey and many others of African descent domiciled in the West Indies and the United States of America. Sylvester Williams, a lawyer and historian from Trinidad was the first person to use the term ‘Pan-Africanism and the first to organize and convene a Pan-African congress in 1900 in London. Dr Williams had extended invitations the men of African descent living in Europe to discuss the evils of white colonialism and white dominance over black peoples, racial prejudice, and the brutal treatment of black people in South Africa (Amate, 1986:34). The conference had to discuss the future of Africa and the international standing of the only three black states existing in the world at that time Haiti, Ethiopia and Liberia. Off the agenda was the pressing question of independence and Burgardt Dubois as a participant took an opportunity to introduce it into the key areas of the discussions and to persuade the congress to to call Britain, the largest colonial power and others with colonies across Africa and the Caribbean. Dubois emphasized on freedom and the right to govern for black people in the colonies of Africa and the West Indies with a deep sense of urgency.

Sylvester Williams died shortly after the first congress he had convened but the work he had pioneered did not go to the grave with him. Dubois took over from where his colleague had left and convened a series of five Pan-African congresses. He meritoriously carried the name ‘Father of Pan-Africanism. He was a practical and competent journalist who used the pen mightily to drive points home that Africa had come of age and needed no white government on the continent. He built up and administered a chain of newspapers which incessantly called for the granting of human rights to all black people treated like lifeless objects by inhuman extremist white people in the Americas, the West Indies and Africa.

Dubois organised congresses in the years 1919 (Paris); 1921 (London); 1923 (two sessions in succession in London and Lisbon); 1927 (New York); and the last one at the end of the Second World War in October 1945 which took place in Manchester, England. Dubois was 73 in 1945 and his vibrancy, radiancy and steam were on the verge of extinction. He remained a mobile spirit behind the influence, effectiveness and unwavering determination to arouse the consciousness of Black Africa to fight racism and colonial rule. The African-Americans and West Indian leaders who had convened the earlier congresses had fallen into the background as aged, ailing and physically weak champions and pacesetters of Pan-Africanism. Time was opportune to hand over the batons to a new breed of young Pan-Africanists.
The Manchester Pan-African Congress had a new team of dynamic and strong young leaders such as Kwame Nkrumah from Ghana; Namdi Azikiwe, S.L. Akintola and Magnus Williams from Nigeria; Peter Abrahams from South Africa; Wallace Johnson from Sierra Leone; and Jomo Kenyatta (Johnston Kamau) from Kenya. Compared to the first batch of Pan-Africanists who had convened the first four congresses, the 1945 congress organisers were radical and militant in their pronouncements on how the pressing issues facing Africa were to be addressed and redressed (Amate, 1986:36). The Manchester Group resoundily declared that all the peoples of Africa and African descent everywhere should be emancipated forthwith from all diabolical and inhuman forms of inhibiting legislation and influences and be reunited with one another.

In Anglophone Africa emerged Pan-African leaders such as Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Obafemi Awolowo and Benjamin Namdi Azikiwe of Nigeria; Kwame Nkrumah, Joseph Boakye Danquah and Kofi Busia of Ghana; Julius K. Nyerere of Tanganyika (now part of Tanzania with Zanzibar); Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, Thomas Joseph Mboya and Peter Mbiyu Koinange from Kenya; Apollo Milton Obote and Paulo Muwanga from Uganda; Joshua Nkomo, Robert Mugabe; Simon Mzenda, Josia Chinamano, Ndabaningi Sithole and Nathan Shamuyarira from Southern Rhodesia now Zimbabwe; Kenneth D. Kaunda, Harry M. Nkumbula, Simon M. Kapwepwe, Sikota Wina, Robinson Nabulyato, Munukayumbwa Sipalo, Nalumino Mundia and Hyden Dinguswayo Banda from Northern Rhodesia now Zambia; Kanyama Chiume, Orton Chirwa, Dunduza Chisiza, Henry Masauko Chipembere Chipembere and Yatuta Chisiza from Malawi; and Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo, Walter Sisulu, Govan Archibald Mbeki, Anthony Lembede, Robert Sobukwe, and Andrew Mlangeni from South Africa.
Francophone Africa had more black leaders who pandered to the whims, caprices and manipulation of the French and Belgians. It had more of inveterate malleable opportunists and culturally colonised, aristocratic elite leaders such as Felix Houphuet-Boigny of Ivory Coast, Leopold Sedar Senghor (credited with the philosophy of negritude), Joseph Mobutu (who became a personality cult after the Belgians in collusion with him and Joseph Kasavubu brutally assassinated Patrice Lumumba who was a radical Pan-Africanist upon him being elected Prime Minister of Congo-Kinshasa) and Gnassimbe Eyadema who killed killed the radical Pan-Africanist Gilchrist Olympio in Togo. Benard Albert Bongo in Gabon who later discarded Christian names and named himself Omar Bongo after being converted to Islam was another great lackey of the French government in Paris in the late 1969s. So was his son-in-law Denis Sassou-Nguesso of Congo Brazzaville. The most radical Pan-Africanist in Francophone Africa with a fundamentalist disposition was Ahmed Sekou Tourre of Guinea in West Africa who refused to truckle to the dictates of the French when he told them: ” We prefer poverty in liberty to riches in slavery”. The French had succeeded in wooing a good number of presidents in Francophone Africa who became part of the French Community of nations but Sekou Tourre flatly and roundly rejected their overtures to submit his country to the enclave of puppet states of the French.

What was the common vision of the Pan-Africanists?

Pan-Africanists from the outset envisioned a united Africa hermetically sealed with people of African descent in the United States, the Caribbean and other parts of the world. They advocated a discovery for recovery of African black pride, sense of humanity and economic liberation from Western manipulation which bound millions of black people to both physical and mental servitude. The patriarchs of Pan-Africanism wanted an economically, politically, socially and ideologically free Africa with total dependence on its own resources and not perpetually bound to the Portuguese, British, French, Belgians, Germany, Spanish or Italian colonialists. A united Africa was their battle cry.
Rodney (1988:135) asserts that in the centuries before colonial rule, Europe had augmented its economic capacity in leaps and bounds while Africa was almost static. The Europeans had displaced and dispossessed Africa of her human resources and the slave labour dislocated from Africa and shipped in chains to America and the Caribbeans provided hard labour services to the slave owners and the European governments which paid them absolutely nothing. Economies in Europe and Americas prospered and the continent stagnated and fell below zero in the long run. The advent of both slave traders and colonial masters afterwards brutally decimated the peasantry and exploited the black people individually sold as slaves and forcefully taken to Europe. The great social evils perpetuated and perpetrated by the Europeans in collusion left so many vestiges of dehumanization, suppression, exploitation and oppression. The evils are still scars on the beautiful face of Africa which will always remind us of the unpardonable acts of slavery and colonial rule. The divide and rule machinations employed by the colonialists made Africa suffer brands of colonial rule as the continent bled to near extinction with hundreds of people barbarically killed for claiming their right to self-rule under a government of the majorities who were black people. The Conference of Berlin convene by Chancellor Otto Von Bismarck of Germany was a gathering of greedy European colonial powers desperate for turning Africa into a poor continent void of all minerals, timber, and intellectual prowess. The Conference decide which thief among the countries gathered should steal which part of Africa without permission from the indigenous owners of the land. The duality of implacable poles which pitied the colonised and the coloniser later influenced the genesis of a new force of radical Africans on the continent and in the diaspora. The colonialists were never ready to give up the countries they stole and the black people with the arousal of political and social consciousness through the vision of Pan-Africanists who emerged in the late 19th century. The visionary Pan-Africanists began an unstoppable revolt against colonial rule which started with the non-violence approach mistaken for weakness by the colonial powers. Round table discussions for political freedom worked in some African countries which were very poor. The mineral-rich as well as the oil-rich countries such as the Congo-Kinshasa, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Angola, Nigeria, Ghana and many others experienced violence with alarming proportions and in the ultimate the colonialists had to vacate the continent against their will or wish. Victory was on the side of Pan-Africanists and puppets of the whites had to grind their teeth in stunning embarrassment as the forces of oppression always have a divinely-set expiry date.

Are ideals of the Pan-Africanists being honoured on Africa Day?

From 25th May 1963 Africa as a continent has been celebrating its Freedom Day with fanfare highly beautified by defence and security brass bands belting out freedom songs in instrumental lyrics to the temporary amusement and amazement of the people at various stadia and presidential palaces and state houses. The excitement is just ceremonial and for just some hours as political speeches are given in some countries and in countries like Zambia, some citizens and special guests from other countries are honoured for their distinguished services to their country or to Africa. This for over 63 years has been the case and it now looks like a very casual and cheap way of honouring our brave fallen heroes who strove sacrificially for the decolonisation of Africa and total ownership of the wealth of the continent by Africans themselves. Economic freedom which the forefathers and foremothers yearned for is still a pipedream after over a hundred years since Sylvester Williams convened the first Pan African Congress in London in 1900. The West still runs our economies and it is shameful that even the drugs Africans are supposed to manufacture themselves in their sovereign states are donated by the West and the advent of the neophyte extreme white president Donald J. Trump has seen African leaders subjected to agonizing embarrassment even where the art of diplomacy is supposed to be employed, Trump and his lackeys have used vulgarity and uncouth language to depreciate the dignity of the black African personality to the level of wild beasts or brainless apes. The scandals exposed by a foreign donor at the Ministry of Health is just unacceptable and agonizing as a crude embarrassment. We should not shield criminal cartels in any ministry but to be exposed by a benevolent cooperating partner in such a callous manner is disgusting and widely exasperating. Why should we condone such heights of high profile thefts in such key ministries like Health? Are there intensive and extensive audits of drugs supplied to the Ministry of Health? The buck stops at all of us! Pan Africanism must exhort us to be responsible and accountable in the way we discharge our duties and responsibilities. It must speak transparent honesty and integrity as bywords for all the occupants of state offices who must be there to serve the people of Africa and not to steal what belongs to them.

The African Union leaders seem not to be doing much to honour the vision of its founding fathers of its forerunner, the OAU. The unification of Africa into a great continental power to make every African proud and free is still a far-fetched dream darkened by the cloud of greed and treachery perpetrated by ourselves. We always give leverage to Western investors to take control of our economies and pay lip service to promotion of local investments into mining which has been monopolized by Transnational Corporations backed by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). We have had great African geniuses running international institutions such as Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iwela, former managing director of the IMF and currently managing director of the World Trade Organization from Nigeria, Obiageli ‘Oby’ Ezekwesili former vice president of the World Bank – Africa Region who also stood as presidential candidate in the 2019 elections of Nigeria an outspoken, blunt-speaking advocate of women’s rights, Nkosana-Dlamimi Zuma former African Union Commissioner and first woman to lead the African Union Secretariat, Chief Emeka Anyouku former Secretary -General of the Commonwealth Group of Nations from Nigeria, Salim Ahmed Salim former Organisation of African Unity (OAU) from Tanzania, late Koffi Attah Annan first black African Secretary -General of the United Nations from Ghana and many more personages who have done wonders for the continent in the continental and regional organisations but our continent still wallows in the muddy waters of underdevelopment with millions barely able to make ends meet as poverty is generating rapidly and rubbing off the little gains nations-states recorded in respect with gross domestic product (GDP) though some countries like Rwanda, Burkina Faso, Uganda and Mauritius seem to be doing very well and shining economically akin to the attainment of Singapore which many countries are looking up to.

The tragedy of Africa is that, unlike the commitment of the founding fathers and pioneers of African unity like Kwame Nkrumah, Abubakar Tafawa Balewa Julius Nyerere, Sekou Tourre, Leopold Sedar Senghor, Gilchrist Olympio, Kenneth Kaunda and Milton Obote among few others, the new breed of political party leaders is more of greed and admiration of long-stay in power to amass personal wealth and enrich their children, leaving a trail of grinding poverty in their paths beyond the solution of their successors. Corruption is more, less a formal and normal practice in government circles. They are devoid of good morals and are overshadowed by the egocentric ambition to rule their nations for life and suppress leaders of the opposition with brazen impunity. Misery is what they deliver to their citizens and forcibly turn themselves into personality cults which swallow the pride of political parties. Their names and political parties they lead become synonymous.

Time has come for the African government leaders to rise to the occasion and honour the ideals of the Pan-Africanists of yesteryear and emulate their great works and principles. The nation-states must enact laws which should ban from participating in national elections for life corrupt leaders found guilty by the courts.

Young Zambians in schools must be enlightened on the importance of Africa Freedom Day and what the founding fathers of the OAU had envisioned about a poverty-free Africa with learned people to protect the continent on the pride of Africa as our Motherland fashioned with and blessed by God’s mighty Hands and emphasise the importance of unity which goes counter to ethnic hostility which has left many African nations scarred beyond recognition. The problems besetting Africa are as wide as the whole world but with a great sense of fortitude, resilience and maximum commitment anchored on deep sense of patriotism and continental unity Africa will awaken into a giant it is supposed to be, like a shining city built on a great hill emitting beacons of hope to all people in squalor, poverty, hunger and ill-health.

Open letter to President Hakainde Hichilema

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A Heartfelt Appeal for Justice, National Reconciliation, and Institutional Reform

Mr President,

I extend warm regards and deep respect as a fellow Zambian who believes deeply in our nation’s promise and in your potential to help fulfil it. Your journey from incarceration to the presidency was not just your personal triumph—it was a testament to Zambia’s belief in change and democratic renewal.

It is in that spirit that I write today, moved not by partisanship but by a profound concern for fairness, unity, and justice in our Republic.

Across Zambia, individuals continue to face imprisonment, exile, or legal intimidation under circumstances widely seen as politically motivated. Among them (ongoing or addressed):

• Nickson Chilangwa, Ronald Chitotela, and Emmanuel Mwamba – facing convictions or restrictions, under what many see as politically driven prosecutions.
• Chilufya Tayali, Charles Chanda, and Emerine Kabanshi – all subjected to intense legal scrutiny despite contested grounds.
• Feminist activists, youth protesters, Chilufya Makasa, and a woman who merely spoke out about the cost of living – criminalized for voicing dissent.
• Munir Zulu, and today, Maureen Mabonga – under legal pursuit for matters that appear entangled with their political views.
• Brebner Changala, a respected civil rights activist, arrested and charged with sedition and espionage after publicly commenting on the alleged abduction of MP Jay Jay Banda.

His case highlights concerns about the suppression of free expression and the targeting of dissenting voices.These situations echo what your own UPND endured in opposition:

• You, Mr President, were once arrested on charges of sedition and treason—charges widely dismissed as political in nature.
• Your party was denied public space, restricted by the Public Order Act, and vilified for assembling or speaking freely.
• Trevor Mwiinde, now a UPND youth leader, was implicated in disturbing scenes of violence during the 2024 Kawambwa by-election—allegedly threatening police and undermining electoral integrity. Although he has denied the allegations, the concern
remains that past patterns of abuse are repeating under new banners.

Yet today, under your leadership, only opposition voices or outspoken critics seem to face imprisonment or aggressive prosecution. Not a single senior official currently in your government—despite credible allegations in some quarters—has been prosecuted and sent to prison. A case in point: the former Minister of Health, who presided over a flawed and controversial procurement process involving healthcare public funds, continues to serve in government. She retains access to state machinery and sensitive data—despite public outcry and calls for accountability. How does this square with our national ideals?

Where is the fairness in justice? Where is the equality before the law? Where is the rule of law that so many Zambians—yourself included—fought for? Mr President, I understand that broad institutional reform may not be politically feasible before the 2026 elections.

However, that reality does not prevent you from leading with moral clarity now. The exercise of discretion, compassion, and balanced governance is entirely within your power.

Sir, therefore, I respectfully urge that you:

a) Direct a transparent review of all politically sensitive prosecutions and detentions—especially where perceived bias exists.
b) Facilitate the safe return of those in exile and guarantee their full freedom and protection.
c) Ensure your own government is not immune to accountability—let the law apply equally to all, regardless of political alignment.
d) Lay the legislative groundwork for post-2026 reforms to ensure independence among the three arms of government.
e) Commit publicly to political tolerance and end retaliatory justice—so that even your critics can safely contribute to our democracy.

Mr President, your presidency still holds the potential to be remembered as a bridge—between the pain of the past and the promise of a more just future. Let history record that you were not only a beneficiary of democracy, but also its protector. I write this not out of personal allegiance or association with any of the individuals mentioned—indeed, I have never met or known any of them personally. My knowledge of their circumstances comes solely through the media and public reports. Each of them can attest to this fact.

With deep hope and unwavering patriotism, please stay blessed Mr President.

Stephen Mpundu Kataya
Zambia Development Party president

Over K74 Million Disbursed to Central Province Farmers Under Climate-Resilient Loan Scheme

Over K74 Million Disbursed to Central Province Farmers Under Climate-Resilient Loan Scheme

CENTRAL PROVINCE – In a bold step toward agricultural modernization and resilience, the Zambian government has disbursed over K74 million under the Sustainable Agricultural Financing Facility (SAFF), a flagship programme designed to empower small-scale and emergent commercial farmers with affordable credit. The disbursement, which focuses heavily on Central Province, is part of a broader K300 million facility that will reach over 10,000 farmers across the country.

SAFF is a blended finance model supported by both government coffers and international partners, including development banks and climate-resilient agriculture donors. It provides low-interest loans to qualifying farmers, especially those adopting climate-smart practices and mechanized farming systems.

Speaking during the launch event in Kabwe, Agriculture Permanent Secretary Green Mbozi stressed that the funding is about much more than capital injections. “This programme is not just about money; it’s about transformation. It’s about giving our farmers the tools to become competitive, sustainable, and future-ready,” he said.

He noted that the majority of the beneficiaries had used the funding to purchase tractors, irrigation kits, solar-powered water pumps, fertilizers, and drought-resistant seed varieties. The goal, Mbozi said, is to transition Zambian agriculture from subsistence to commercially viable models.

To ensure the effective utilization of funds, the Ministry has put in place robust monitoring systems, including satellite-based crop surveillance and periodic community-level audits. “We want to know not just where the money is going, but what it’s producing,” Mbozi emphasized.

A technical committee within the Ministry, in collaboration with local cooperatives and district agricultural offices, has been tasked with verifying productivity gains and ensuring loan repayment mechanisms are in place.

The Zambia National Farmers Union (ZNFU) welcomed the funding announcement but cautioned that delays in input procurement or loan processing could derail its impact. “We urge the Ministry to expedite loan approvals and ensure that farming inputs are distributed in time for the planting season,” said ZNFU spokesperson Grace Mwamba.

The union also called for decentralization of loan management to district offices to reduce bureaucratic bottlenecks faced by farmers in rural areas.

In a noteworthy development, the Ministry revealed that 40% of the SAFF loan recipients in Central Province are women and youth. This aligns with the government’s agricultural gender strategy, which aims to close the gap in resource access and land ownership among marginalized groups.

“Women and young people are not just beneficiaries they are innovators and leaders in the new agricultural economy. We are proud to see their participation increasing,” said Chanda Tembo, Director of Gender in Agriculture at the Ministry.

Beneficiaries have already started reporting tangible benefits. One young farmer in Kapiri Mposhi, who acquired a drip irrigation system through the loan, said her tomato yield tripled in the last season. “This is what empowerment looks like we just need a chance, and we’ll prove ourselves,” she said.

The Ministry plans to roll out additional funding rounds before the end of 2025, targeting Southern, Eastern, and Northern Provinces next. Discussions are also underway to expand the SAFF model to include livestock value chains, aquaculture, and agro-processing ventures.

Agriculture remains Zambia’s largest employer and economic backbone. With initiatives like SAFF, the government hopes to enhance food security, reduce poverty, and build a new class of agro-entrepreneurs ready to compete on regional and global stages.

China Steps In to Boost Zambia’s Health Sector

China Steps In to Boost Zambia’s Health Sector

LUSAKA – May 23, 2025 Zambia has entered a new phase of healthcare diplomacy as China pledges deeper collaboration to help the nation strengthen its health systems, especially in the wake of reduced Western donor support. A delegation from Sichuan Province, led by senior medical experts, arrived in Lusaka to explore traditional and modern healthcare integration strategies.

Minister of Health Dr. Joseph Katema Muchima welcomed the Chinese delegation and commended the long-standing Zambia-China friendship. He emphasized the country’s openness to new approaches that can strengthen primary healthcare and reduce reliance on imported pharmaceuticals.

“We are open to learning how to incorporate Chinese medicine into our health system to reduce the disease burden and improve pharmaceutical supply chains,” said Dr. Muchima.

The visit comes after the withdrawal of major foreign health funding, including HIV/AIDS support under PEPFAR. China’s move signals a shift in global health partnerships toward more South-South cooperation.

During the meetings, Chinese health officials proposed collaborative efforts on herbal medicine research, local production of essential drugs, and infrastructure upgrades in underserved districts. The Ministry confirmed that exchanges with medical universities in China are planned to help upgrade the skills of Zambian professionals.

Traditional leaders and local medical practitioners also voiced support, urging the government to expand community health models that combine indigenous knowledge with modern science.

The Ministry of Health and the Chinese Embassy have committed to drafting a formal cooperation framework in the coming months.

Kabwe MP Bemoans Misuse of CDF Funds by Beneficiaries

Kabwe MP Bemoans Misuse of CDF Funds by Beneficiaries

KABWE – Kabwe Central Member of Parliament Christabel Phiri has raised alarm over the alleged misuse of Constituency Development Fund (CDF) by some project beneficiaries. During a tour of community projects in Makululu and Chowa, Phiri expressed disappointment that some recipients diverted resources or failed to complete intended work.

“We need stronger accountability. Some of these projects were meant to uplift lives — but instead we’ve seen poor workmanship, delays, or outright neglect,” she said while inspecting a stalled road project.

Her comments echo growing concerns from across the country that, despite increased allocations under the CDF, some community-led projects lack oversight.

The MP suggested introducing more stringent vetting processes and transparent project monitoring frameworks, possibly involving civil society and local government watchdogs.

Meanwhile, civic leaders in Kabwe backed Phiri’s sentiments and urged the Ministry of Local Government to revise implementation guidelines. “It’s not just about disbursing funds  we must enforce consequences where there’s mismanagement,” one Ward Councilor remarked.

Phiri urged youth and women cooperatives benefiting from CDF loans to remain focused, noting that access to funding should be treated as an opportunity, not an entitlement.

Haimbe Calls for EU-AU Mutual Partnership

Haimbe Calls for EU-AU Mutual Partnership

LUSAKA – May 23, 2025 Foreign Affairs Minister Mulambo Haimbe has called for a stronger, mutual partnership between the European Union (EU) and African Union (AU), urging both blocs to align around sustainable economic development, trade facilitation, and digital innovation.

Speaking at a diplomatic forum in Lusaka, Haimbe emphasized that Africa’s development should not be shaped by one-sided donor-recipient relationships. “Africa must sit at the table as an equal player. Partnerships must reflect mutual respect and shared prosperity goals,” he said.

He highlighted the AU-EU Global Gateway initiative as an opportunity to invest in critical infrastructure across Africa, particularly in energy, logistics, and digital connectivity.

Haimbe also called for a new trade agenda that eliminates non-tariff barriers and aligns customs systems to facilitate intra-African and Europe-Africa trade. “Zambia stands ready to host conversations on joint economic diplomacy,” he stated.

The EU delegation to Zambia welcomed Haimbe’s remarks, acknowledging that fostering sustainable investment in Africa was a shared responsibility. Plans are underway for Zambia to co-host the upcoming EU-AU economic summit later this year.

It’s a Bumper Harvest!-projected 3.7 million tonnes of maize

It’s a Bumper Harvest!

LUSAKA –Zambia is set to record one of its most impressive agricultural seasons in recent years, with a projected bumper harvest of 3.7 million tonnes of maize. This forecast includes a surplus of over 501,000 tonnes, far exceeding the nation’s food security threshold and paving the way for potential exports.

Minister Sylvia Masebo said the bumper harvest reflects the success of well-coordinated input distribution and improved climate conditions. She credited government-led interventions, including the Farmer Input Support Programme (FISP), for enabling smallholder farmers to plant early and efficiently.

“This yield is not just a product of rainfall; it’s a result of policy alignment and farmer commitment,” she said. The expected surplus may lead to a further reduction in mealie meal prices, a key staple for millions of Zambians.

The Ministry has already initiated assessments on which regions will contribute most to the export window. “We’re looking at opportunities across COMESA and SADC to distribute our excess maize without compromising national reserves,” Masebo added.

Stakeholders in the food industry have welcomed the development, calling it a timely buffer against global food supply shocks. The Zambia National Farmers’ Union (ZNFU) urged government to secure storage and market linkages for the projected output to avoid post-harvest losses.

This comes at a critical time when inflationary pressure on food has eased slightly due to declining commodity prices. Analysts predict this harvest could also stabilize the kwacha due to a reduced import bill for food and increased foreign exchange from exports.

Chipangali Records Surge in Teen Pregnancies

Chipangali Records Surge in Teen Pregnancies

EASTERN PROVINCE – Chipangali District has recorded a troubling increase in teenage pregnancies, with 57 confirmed cases during the first quarter of 2025. The report, presented by District Education Board Secretary Jackson Mfune, has triggered concern among health and education authorities.

The figures suggest a 30% rise compared to the same period last year. Local education officials attributed the spike to prolonged school closures, lack of reproductive health education, and cultural taboos surrounding open discussions on sexual health.

Health workers in the area are now launching aggressive outreach campaigns to sensitize communities. “We are involving parents, traditional leaders, and school administrators in our strategy to reach the girls and change the narrative,” said District Health Officer Grace Tembo.

Chief Chitimukulu also weighed in during a recent health outreach event, calling on all traditional leaders to support girls’ education and work with NGOs to create safe spaces.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Education is reinforcing the rollout of comprehensive sexuality education under the Health Education curriculum. The Zambia National Education Coalition (ZANEC) urged more inter-ministerial collaboration to curb the crisis before it escalates further.

President Hichilema Urges Unity and Hard Work During Community Engagement in Kalomo

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President Hakainde Hichilema continued his outreach to citizens in Kalomo , delivering a heartfelt message of unity, diligence, and national development. Addressing a gathering of residents, the President emphasized the importance of safeguarding the country by “looking out for each other and working hard.”

He underscored his administration’s commitment to equitable resource distribution, highlighting the transformative impact of the Constituency Development Fund (CDF). “Our focus is on ensuring that Zambia’s resources are shared equally across all our 10 provinces,” said President Hichilema. “The CDF has become a game changer. Where once we had a meagre K1.5 million, we now have over K30 million being channelled into communities.”

Reiterating the values of national unity and inclusiveness, the President encouraged citizens to embrace one another regardless of background or region. “Where there is hatred, we take love. Where there is no development, we take development. Where there is violence, we take peace,” he stated, reinforcing the message that all Zambians must play a role in building a peaceful and prosperous nation.

President Hichilema also called on communities to use the expanded development fund responsibly and transparently to ensure long-term, sustainable growth that benefits every citizen.

President Hichilema Visits Former School, Inspires Pupils with Message of Hard Work and Discipline

President Hakainde Hichilema returned to his roots with an emotional visit to his alma mater, Kalomo Secondary School, where he addressed pupils and staff, sharing words of inspiration and a reaffirmed commitment to the education sector.

The visit was described as “momentous” by the Head of State, who attended the school from 1976 to 1980, residing in Red Hostel and graduating from the Form 5A Class. Speaking to a packed assembly, President Hichilema reflected on his formative years at Kalomo Secondary and described the institution as a place he and his peers “will always cherish and hold dear to our hearts.”

During his address, President Hichilema reiterated his administration’s dedication to improving and prioritising education across Zambia, calling it “everything to us.” He urged pupils to remain focused, embrace discipline, and recognize education as the key to unlocking their full potential.The President also encouraged students to think beyond traditional career paths and adopt an entrepreneurial mindset. “We want you to not only seek employment, but to create jobs and become employers yourselves,” he said, promoting self-reliance and innovation among the youth.

Pledging continued support for the school, President Hichilema said that he, alongside fellow alumni, remains committed to uplifting Kalomo Secondary. “We are proud of this school,” he affirmed. “Together with others who passed through these classrooms, we will continue supporting it in every way possible.”

The visit was met with excitement and pride by both learners and staff, many of whom expressed appreciation for the President’s encouraging message and his efforts to reinvest in the institutions that shaped him.

Trump ambushes South Africa’s Ramaphosa in Oval Office meeting

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Donald Trump began an Oval Office meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa by unexpectedly screening a video making false claims of anti-white discrimination in South Africa. The fact however is, in South Africa, wealth is disproportionately concentrated among white South Africans, with a significant racial wealth gap persisting despite the end of apartheid.

While the meeting was overshadowed by Trump’s decision to screen a video alleging violence against South Africa’s white minority—a move that surprised many—Ramaphosa downplayed its impact on their discussion. “We did not dwell on it,” he said, suggesting the leaders prioritized broader diplomatic engagement over polarising narratives.

The video reportedly included statements from far-left South African figures such as EFF leader Julius Malema. Ramaphosa reiterated that crime in South Africa affects all communities and stressed that the allegations of a targeted campaign against white South Africans lack foundation. Independent South African news outlets like News24 and Daily Maverick have long reported that no credible evidence supports claims of a systematic “white genocide.”

Meanwhile Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema has dismissed the high-level meeting between Presidents Cyril Ramaphosa and Donald Trump at the White House, describing it as “a group of older men meeting to gossip about me.”

This remark comes after Trump paused the meeting on Wednesday to show a video montage of Malema chanting “Kill the Boer,” subsequently questioning why the EFF leader had not been arrested for using the controversial liberation-era slogan.

In response, Malema maintained that there is no credible intelligence or evidence to support the claim of a “white genocide” in South Africa. He also reiterated the EFF’s firm stance on land reform.

“We will not agree to compromise our political principles on land expropriation without compensation for political expediency,” he said

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said his meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump in Washington has helped cast doubt on controversial claims of a so-called “white genocide” in South Africa.

Addressing the media following the closed-door meeting at the White House on Wednesday, President Ramaphosa said their exchange touched on several key issues, including Trump’s anticipated participation in the upcoming G20 summit in Johannesburg.

Ramaphosa expressed optimism about Trump attending the November G20 gathering, stating, “I expect him to be coming to South Africa.” He emphasized that the United States, as a founding G20 member, plays a vital role in global economic policy. With the U.S. poised to assume the G20 presidency in 2026, Ramaphosa remarked, “We don’t want to hand over the presidency of the G20 to an empty chair,” underlining the importance of a strong American presence.

Despite the awkward start to their talks, Ramaphosa said Trump agreed to future meetings, with both sides set to engage on trade-related matters. “We will continue strengthening our ties through mutual dialogue,” Ramaphosa noted, adding that the U.S.-South Africa relationship remains key to regional and global economic cooperation.

Ramaphosa described his Washington visit as a “great success,” affirming that he achieved his goals for U.S. engagement. Analysts see the meeting as a balancing act—managing sensitive issues while ensuring future cooperation remains possible.

The Oval Office confrontation underscores the complexities in U.S.-South Africa relations and raises concerns about the influence of unverified information on international diplomacy.

Work Harder, Starve Better: The Gospel According to HH

By Kapya Kaoma

President Hakainde Hichilema’s recent call for “all Zambians to be productive in order to promote trade and economic growth,” as reported by the Lusaka Times, might seem noble on paper—but in reality, it’s dripping with irony. That he delivered these words at the Anglican Cathedral of the Holy Cross during a Thanksgiving Service for good rains only deepens the disconnect between presidential rhetoric and the daily struggles of ordinary Zambians.

To me, what was meant as inspiration landed more like a punchline. I recall a conversation with a UPND-supporting taxi driver in Lusaka who proudly said, “President Hichilema has taught Zambians to work hard.” He’s not alone—this line has become the slogan of UPND commanders–cadres that once marched in protest over the high cost of living under the Lungu administration. Today, those same voices dismiss hardship with a shrug and a sermon about hard work. So I have to ask myself, when exactly did Zambians stop working?

Honestly, they never did. Zambians have always toiled—hustling in markets, queuing in clinics, stretching every Kwacha just to make ends meet. What has changed, however, is not their productivity, but the betrayal of their labor by politicians. Successive governments, including the UPND administration, have commodified people’s struggle, exploiting their resilience while giving back little in return. Under the Patriotic Front, desperate mothers lined the streets. Under HH, the faces are the same, the lines even longer. Only the slogans have shifted.

I don’t want to misrepresent anything. At the core of Zambia’s economic plight isn’t the drought, nor is it a lack of productivity. It’s theft—rampant, unashamed, and increasingly normalized under this President. While pastors gathered in prayer, did anyone dare ask what, exactly, President Hichilema was giving thanks for? Wasting public resources by living lavishly in two State Houses? The “disappearance” of $20 million meant for maize? Siphoning of $50 million intended for essential drugs? Or perhaps the staggering $3 billion in missing public funds spotlighted by the U.S. ambassador?

These aren’t divine disasters. They are outcomes of political choices made by people in HH’s offices. It is on us to accept that poverty isn’t accidental—it is engineered. Our politicians are not victims of circumstance; they are its architects. And it is time we said so, plainly.

It is shameful that ruling party loyalists scrambled to dismiss the U.S. ambassador’s allegations. In diplomacy, silence carries weight. Had the accusations been false, President Hichilema would have responded swiftly and decisively—a formal protest, a diplomatic recall, a press conference. Instead, there was nothing—just silence. And silence, in this case, speaks volumes.

As a Christian, I cherish the Church. But I refuse to accept prayer as a stand-in for justice. The Zambian Church, with a few courageous exceptions, has become more interested in proximity to power than in prophetic witness. It kneels for influence but stands back from truth. Why hasn’t the Church demanded answers about missing medicines, about maize that vanished while people went hungry? How many envelopes handed to clergy are soaked in the blood of the poor—money that could have saved lives at UTH or stocked empty pharmacies in hospitals and clinics across the nation?

Karl Marx’s warning that religion can become the opium of the people is uncomfortably true here. In Zambia, religion has been used as political absolution. The same Church that once gathered under “Pastors for Lungu” now quietly blesses a new administration—not with scrutiny, but with submission. It is not an overstatement to say corruption and the pulpit are allies in our so-called Christian nation.

I am still puzzled by silence around the maize scandal. Could the answer be in brown envelopes? Until the Church finds its courage, it will remain complicit, laundering corruption through prayers and piety. It must not endorse the gospel according to HH either–work harder, and starve better!

President Hichilema owes Zambians more than economic mantras or prayers. He owes them the truth, the whole truth. What happened to the maize? The medicine? The billions?

These questions can’t be answered by bishops, priests, pastors, apostles, prophets, evangelists or prayers.

Only the President can answer them.

And he must.