Sunday, May 4, 2025
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Sweden reassures of support to Zambia drought response, social cash funding, climate resilience

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Swedish Ambassador to Zambia His Excellency Mr. Johan Hallenborg has assured that his Government will support Zambia overcome the negative impact of climate change-induced drought and increase funding to Social cash Transfer programme.

Ambassador Hallenborg made the assurances when he paid a courtesy Call on Minister of Green Economy and Environment Hon. Mike Elton Mposha at the latter’s office in Lusaka on Wednesday.

The Ambassador said both Zambia and Sweden were experiencing the effects of climate change.
“We have assisted through the EU. We have donated US$ 1 million to the World Food Programme for humanitarian assistance; that is through a programme that I recently visited in Monze District where we could see the devastating effects of drought but also see that the funding we are providing now helps people,” Ambassador Hallenborg

He said the support goes in the emergency cash transfer programme.
“We have also added more funding into the Social cash transfer, we hope to add USD2 million more in that programme and that will help increase the social cash grants for the vulnerable people across Zambia,” he said. “Thirdly, we are one of the main donors to the UN Central Emergency Response Fund (UNCERF) they have set aside US$5.5 million for Zambia to fight drought. Sweden does not sit idly when we see drought in Zambia.”

He called for close working relationship with Zambia at multilateral fora such as United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP).

And Hon. Mposha said the Zambian Government is working tirelessly to develop climate-resilient infrastructure, enhance disaster preparedness, and support climate-smart agriculture practices.
Hon. Mposha said the Ministry is committed to promoting economic growth, job creation, and environmental sustainability.

“Our goal is to transition Zambia into a low-carbon and resource-efficient economy that benefits all citizens.As such, initiatives focusing on renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, and eco-tourism are important to us as we aim to reduce our carbon footprint, protect our natural resources, and build resilience for our people,” he said. “We recognize the impact of climate change on our economy and our people. that is why we are working tirelessly to develop climate-resilient infrastructure, enhance disaster preparedness, and support climate-smart agriculture practices.”

The Minister said the vision, as a Ministry, is to have a Zambia where economic growth goes hand-in-hand with environmental stewardship and a Zambia where children can inherit a prosperous, sustainable future.
He said Zambia was dealing with the effects of the drought and was  grateful for the support received from the international community as thencoubtry navigates this challenge.

“With strong partnership of cooperating partners like yourselves, the Ministry is confident that we are going to address multiple challenges of climate change, environmental degradation, deforestation while pursuing green growth and creating jobs for our people,” he said.

Hon. Mposha said he was aware of the  common interests that Zambia and Sweden share both at the bilateral and multilateral levels and intend to strengthen and consolidate these ties.

He said  the cordial relationship between the two sister countries has seen the development of some notable initiatives and partnerships between Zambia and Sweden including: the Sweden – Zambia Development Cooperation Agreement; the Zambia -Sweden Trade and Investment Agreement; the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) programmes in Zambia and the Zambia – Sweden Cultural Exchange Programme.
Hon. Mposha said the recent signing of the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on cooperation in the area of Carbon Market under the Paris Agreement is a clear demonstration that the relation continues to grow from strength to strength.

“We are looking forward to move towards the actual bilateral agreement in this area and I know that technical officers on both sides are already working hard on that,” he said.

“We are also at an advanced stage of enacting the Climate Change and Green Economy Bill,” said Hon. Mposha.
MGEE Communications Unit

Chipolopolo exorcise ghost of losses, back in Morocco 2025 race

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By Benedict Tembo

Zambia on Tuesday night exorcised the ghost of seven losses on the trot without victory when they edged Sierra Leone to play themselves back in contention for a place at next year’s Africa Cup of Nations.

An exquisite header from Young Africans’ striker Kennedy Musonda, Libya-based Kelvin Kampamba’s clinical finish and a cheeky free kick by Israel-domiciled Klings Kangwa gave Avram Grant a job-saving victory.

Played in a half empty Levy Mwanawasa stadium in Ndola, Zambia faced a stoic Sierra Leone who hit back almost instantly after going behind.

Musonda glanced in a header to the far post after a pinpoint cross from skipper Lubambo Musonda in the 28th minute but the visitors responded instantly via Augustus Kargbo.

The second half held more hope for Zambia when Kampamba, who replaced Obino Chisala in the 66th minute, dinked and swerved before firing an unstoppable shot just five minutes after being introduced.

But again, Sierra Leone refused to cower as they got things level two minutes later when Hindolo Mustapha pierced through the defence and hoofed home the equaliser in the 72nd minute.

Then came perhaps the goal of the match. After conspiring with Kampamba, Kangwa wickedly lofted a free over the wall and into the net when the Leone Stars goalkeeper Mohamed Kamara watched helplessly in the 85th minute.

Sabobo Banda who replaced Lameck Banda at the start of the second half showed a lot of promise. The FC Zurich prodigy displayed brilliance and gave fans hope of a bright future for the Chipolopolo as the Morocco 2025 qualifiers take shape.

Benson Sakala also some action after being introduced for Clatous Chota Chama in the 89th to consolidate the lead.

The victory gave fans something to cheer about and served as a tonic amidst harsh economic conditions headlined by the worst loadshedding in history.

Zambia have three points from a possible six having lost their first game 2-0 to ivory coast who cantered to the summit of the table with a copycat score against Chad.

Sierra Leone and Chad have a point apiece.

The Chipolopolo will face Chad next month in back-to-back games with the first leg being scheduled for the Levy Mwanawasa Stadium.

Open Letter to Former President Edgar Lungu

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Dear 6th Republican President, Edgar C. Lungu

I hope my letter finds you well.

You are probably wondering why you are waking up to a long letter when you are a mere former head of state.

Well, the short answer is that you left a mess, such a mess that the incumbent president, Dr Hakainde Hichilema (three honorary PhDs, and counting) and his disciples say that the buck doesn’t stop at him but at you for this mess. Debt, Lungu. Loadshedding, Lungu. K400 mealie meal price, Lungu. Exchange rate, Lungu. By-elections, Lungu. Honorary PhD gala, Lungu. Violence, Lungu. Corruption, Lungu.

Secondly, and ironically, you are the most popular politician in the country right now. From shame in Heroes Stadium on 24th August 2021, to thunderous and exuberant crowds everywhere you go. Like the Legend of the Phoenix. Man of the Moment. Dr Hichilema can’t string four sentences together without inserting in your name somewhere. When he gets some little sleep, he wakes up soaking wet. “It’s another Lungu nightmare, my dear Mutinta.”

There’s a way in which you are to blame for all the mess the country is in. Your borrowing pace was not matched with prudent spending, transparency, and repayment capacity. Many procurements had a stench of kickbacks around them. Government workers went years and months without receiving their terminal dues or salaries, while your cadres engaged in wanton conspicuous consumption. Those complaining or suffering were just bitter, disgruntled, lazy, or opposition hired guns.

You poorly managed the 2016 election. The Constitutional Court let you off the hook for what was, in the eyes of many reasonable people, most likely a rigged election. Then you unleashed the reign of terror on the opposition and the citizens through the Zambian Police Service and your party cadres. Innocent people died.

Your appointments were mostly from your ethno-regional base to the near total eclipse of the Zambezians.

Amidst the teargassing, incarceration, court cases, restriction of freedoms assembly, movement and speech, Hichilema’s numbers increased steadily beyond his Tonga and ethno-political auxiliary support base of Western and North Western Provinces. Your government’s brutality won him tens of thousands of sympathy votes.

Your harshness against your former allies like Chishimba Kambwili and Geofrey Mwamba led them to the UPND. Hichilema and camp quite possibly despised these men, but they adopted and deployed successfully a use-and-dump strategy. This helped cleanse Hichilema of his tribalistic entrance and sustenance in politics. Like a hungry chameleon, Hichilema camouflaged himself well long enough to scam the Bemba/Nyanja speaking voters into believing he was a benign nationalistic statesman.

The question I always ponder is, were you your own man as Republican President or you were a hostage of Michael Sata’s relatives and close associates like Mr Alexander Chikwanda and Mumbi Phiri? Your cabinet had a disproportionate number of Bemba-speaking ministers. Then you settled for Nkandu Luo as running mate. She was literally the last nail in your coffin. Unlike Levy Mwanawasa who quickly formed his own government and political persona, you were surrounded by Sata’s men and women. Though Sata wielded sufficient personal power over his people, you seemed to have folded under theirs.

Some of the people you inherited from Sata resorted to tribalistic politics against Hichilema. In so doing, they played into the hands of the Grand Master. Hichilema had over the years managed to radicalise a pliant ethno-political base into an unshakable voting bloc. If some Southern Province constituencies gave around 90-95% of the vote to ANC’s Harry Nkumbula, Grand Master had an easy job of stoking old fears and playing the ethnic victimhood card every so often it became an eternal truth in the minds of his supporters.

With the ethnic conviction and master-mind of Hichilema, Southern Province was impenetrable by any outsider challenging a chosen Bantu Botatwe. You stood little chance. It is much easier for a camel to enter through the eye of a needle. Even Levy Mwanawasa, a fellow Bantu Botatwe, could not penetrate. He lamented in Chikankanta: “We have only one MMD member of parliament in Southern Province and I have difficulties finding a person I can appoint as Minister of the Province. I gave you … a Lamba, then … a Luvale or Chokwe and you are lucky that I did not give you a tribe you dislike.”

Now you let members of the ‘disliked’ tribe run an anti-Tonga campaign. You even adopted one as running mate. Many Bembas were unhappy with this and decided to gamble with Hichilema. A gamble that has gone horribly wrong.
Where you were naive or weak and as a result condoned tribal behaviour, Hichilema has the accolade of being the reigning patron saint of tribalism in the world. He fans it and flourishes in it.

Contrary to his promises, the vast and disproportionate majority of key or close appointments are tribesmen and women or tribal cousins. It doesn’t take much imagination or observation to see that such appointments are likely to be followed by waves of appointments and promotions along ethnic lines. It is a crass, shameless slap in the face of Zambians who grew tired of ethnic exclusion under your regime.

Hichilema’s ethnic persecution has extended beyond those who served under your government but to businesses and activists from other tribes. Young people and old people critical of him are arbitrarily thrown into detention and kept there for lengthy periods of time without being charged.

Many are charged with dubious offenses and transported into Southern Province hinterlands for trial by Hichilema’s tribesmen. Where members of what Levy called the ‘disliked tribe’ are legally tried in Lusaka or Luapula, their cases are usually allocated to judges or magistrates from Southern Province or the auxiliary provinces. It all looks like an ethnic orchestra.

You may be wondering why I am accusing your successor of biased ethno-political persecution. Kafue Mayor, Buumba Malambo, has not received so much of a rebuke from Hichilema for her tribal remarks. Minister of Education, Douglas Syakalima said Bemba-speaking people of Luapula were mentally retarded. He was not fired, has not been reprimanded and his prosecution has been stopped by a judicial system that answers to Hichilema. His tribesmen accused of kidnapping Member of Parliament for Petauke Central, Jay Emmanuel Banda, are roaming freely without so much as a police call-out.

While the likes of Chishimba Kambwili and Francis “Why Me” Kapwepwe are facing jail time, those from Hichilema’s ethno-political group who insult you and other tribes daily without provocation are free angels. His ethnic appointees who are accused of incompetence or corruption are defended to the hilt.

The President threatens to strangle opponents and promises to rule by hook and crook. His Minister, Charles Milupi, incites party youths to violence against critics of the President. His political advisor, Levy Ngoma, has assured that those opposing the president will be trampled. These are Hichilema’s angels.

As a result of Hichilema’s abysmal failure to rectify your economic and governance shortcomings, he is very likely to lose the next election. Unless he rigs them. With your remarkable record of infrastructure development, Zambians found you wanting. Unfortunately, due to Hichilema’s failures at ethnic inclusion, even surpassing yours, the 2026 is going to be largely an ethnic census.

Because of ethnic appointments, he is unlikely to lose much, if at all, from his ethno-political bases. This will restrict Hichilema to the 2011 support base which came very short, behind Sata and Rupiah Banda. Many easterners and northerners in and outside government have realised or been exposed as useful idiots.

Many are victims of the UPND use-and-dump strategy. A few like Andrew Banda, Mutale Nalumango and Patrick Mucheleka are largely sidelined spent forces drawing their retirement pay checks as ethnic tokens. Nervers Mumba and Felix Mutati are self-representative eaters with not political clout.

This is where you come in. Despite sinister machinations by Hichilema against you and the Patriotic Front, your party remains intact and has probably grown! Only after your ousting have you suddenly emerged as your own man. With courage and character that can appeal beyond the PF family, you have a very rare opportunity to rectify your failures and leave posterity a worthy legacy.

Unite selflessly the opposition, the Zambians. Create an ethnic-inclusive shadow cabinet. Devise a merit-based, ethnicity-blind plan for inclusive recruitment and appointments in Zambia and abroad. This should not be about you or the PF bouncing back. It should be about Zambia bouncing back. A Zambia where a Timbuktu, Ushi, Nkoya, Ila does not feel any personal opportunities or misfortunes are down to their ethnicity.

If it takes an Ubuntu truth and reconciliation that indemnifies Hichilema and his government, we must consider it. End the cycle of ethnic retribution or exclusion, real or merely perceived. Without the cover of ethno-political impunity, we can open a new era of political and economic accountability, and a chance for a prosperous real One Zambia, One Nation.

By Osward Bwali

Zambia launches phase 3 clinical trial for promising TB vaccine candidate

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ZAMBIA has demonstrated its commitment to eradicating Tuberculosis (TB) by launching phase 3 clinical
trial for a promising TB vaccine candidate.
The first trial site in Zambia is in Lusaka. Screening of participants started on August 29 at selected sites
in Lusaka. There will be a total of four clinical trial sites in Zambia.
TB remains a significant public health challenge in Zambia, with approximately 59,000 people afflicted
by the disease each year.
The disease mainly affects those living in poverty and with limited access to healthcare.
The need for an effective vaccine has never been more urgent than now, especially for adolescents and
adults in the country and globally who are most at risk.
Zambia is the third country to start Phase 3 clinical trials for this vaccine candidate, following Kenya in
July and South Africa in March.
Monde Muyoyeta is the national principal investigator for the trial in Zambia.
“We are excited to participate in this clinical trial, and look forward to working with our community,”
said Dr Muyoyeta of the Centre for Infectious Diseases Research in Zambia (CIDRZ).
“So many people continue to be burdened by TB, including the silent epidemic of post TB lung disease.
Personally, I am very hopeful that this pivotal trial will confirm the findings from Phase 2 trials,” Dr
Muyoyeta says.
At full capacity, the trial will include up to 20,000 participants, including people living with HIV, at 60
trial sites in seven countries — South Africa, Zambia, Malawi, Mozambique, Kenya, Indonesia and
Vietnam.
Participants will receive either the investigational M72/AS01E vaccine or a placebo in what is known as a
double-blind trial, meaning neither the trial participant nor the clinical investigators will know who
receives vaccine or placebo.
This approach is considered the gold standard for evaluating the safety and efficacy of an investigational
vaccine.
If shown to be well-tolerated and effective, M72/AS01E could potentially become the first vaccine to
help prevent pulmonary TB in adolescents and adults, the most common form of the disease, and the
first new TB vaccine in over a century.
It is anticipated that it will take up to five years to complete the trial, followed by data analysis and then
preparation for submission of data to regulatory authorities.
Globally, according to the World Health Organisation, an estimated 10.6 million people fell ill with TB in
2022 and 1.3 million died — over 3,500 people per day.
The disease primarily affects people in low- and middle-income countries, and those at highest risk are
often living in poverty, with poor living and working conditions and undernutrition.

Almost half of TB-affected households face costs higher than 20 percent of their household income. In
Zambia alone, around 59,000 people develop TB each year.
While TB is one of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases — and the leading cause of death amongst
people living with HIV — the only available TB vaccine, the Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG), dates back
to 1921.
It protects babies and young children against severe forms of TB, but it offers inadequate protection for
adolescents and adults against the pulmonary form of the disease, which is primarily responsible for
transmission of the TB bacterium.
The Gates MRI, a nonprofit organisation and subsidiary of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, is
sponsoring the trial, which is supported by funding from the Gates Foundation and Wellcome.
GSK continues to provide technical assistance to the Gates MRI, supplies the adjuvant component of the
vaccine for the Phase 3 trial and will provide the adjuvant post licensure should the trial be successful.
An adjuvant is an ingredient used in some vaccines that can help create a stronger immune response.
“The launch of this Phase 3 trial for a TB vaccine candidate in Zambia is a major step, and we thank our
global and Zambian colleagues for making this important undertaking possible,” said Dr. Alemnew
Dagnew, who leads development of M72/AS01E at the Gates MRI.
“TB continues to be a tragic burden on our communities, but we are committed to helping to address
this public health challenge,” Dr. Dagnew says.
The M72/AS01E vaccine candidate has been in development since the early 2000s. It was originally
designed and clinically evaluated by the biopharma company GSK up to the proof-of-concept phase
(Phase 2b), in partnership with Aeras and the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI) and was funded
by GSK and in part by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. In 2020, GSK announced a partnership with
the Gates MRI for further development of M72/AS01E.
In GSK’s Phase 2b trial, M72/AS01E provided approximately 50 percent protection (13/1626 versus
26/1663) against progression to active pulmonary tuberculosis for three years in Mycobacterium
tuberculosis-infected HIV-negative adults, which was unprecedented in decades of TB vaccine research.
The World Health Organisation estimates that over a 25-year time span, that level of protection could
save 8.5 million lives, prevent 76 million new TB cases and save US$41.5 billion for TB affected
households.
Making vaccines accessible and affordable for communities in areas of high disease burden in the long-
term is a priority for all trial partners.
The Gates MRI has worked with a wide range of stakeholders, including communities around clinical trial
sites, to guide the TB candidate vaccine to Phase 3.
To this end, the Gates MRI, GSK, Wellcome and the Gates Foundation are working together to
understand the potential demand for the vaccine and build an end-to-end plan to ensure long-term
sustainable access, should the trial be successful; from supporting research and building an evidence-
base for the potential impact of the vaccine and community requirements for uptake, to collaborating
with multilateral, regional and country partners required to introduce the vaccine.
Additionally, the trial funders are planning to establish an international advisory group comprised of
representatives from all these groups to provide input on the overall programme.

Developing and ensuring access to global health products is a complex task. As such, global collaboration
and strong partnerships are a core component of planning for future access to the candidate vaccine.
In March 2024, the Bill & Melinda Gates Medical Research Institute (Gates MRI) announced that a Phase
3 clinical trial to assess the efficacy of the M72/AS01E tuberculosis vaccine candidate was underway,
with first doses given in South

By Benedict Tembo

Pupils And Parents In Kasempa District Warned Against Illegal Mining

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Government has warned pupils and parents in Dengwe area of Kasempa District to desist from engaging in illegal mining activities which has become rampant following the recent discovery of Gold in the area.
District Administrative Officer, Francis Makanga was disappointed that some pupils in Dengwe area had shunned away from classes due to illegal gold mining.

Mr Makanga said this during a stakeholders meeting in Dengwe area of Kasempa District.
“I am aware that schools have been deserted therefore pupils should not engage themselves in illegal mining of gold they need to concentrate on school,” he added.

Mr Makanga implored parents and guardians to ensure that all the pupils that had deserted school due to illegal mining were brought back to school.

“To my parents and all our relatives who are parents and guardians of these children who are engaging themselves into illegal mining should tell them to come back to school,” He said.
Mr Makanga further warned teachers not to engage themselves in illegal mining as it would affect their work performance.

Meanwhile, District Education Standards Officer -Special, Exildah Biyemba emphasised the importance of getting educated.
“I want to emphasise that please avoid going to that side for illegal mining, pay attention to school, report to school every day so that you become what you want in the future,” Ms Biyemba added.
She appealed to parents and guardians to ensure that their children focus on education rather than them engaging in illegal mining activities.
ZANIS

President Hichilema Seeks World Bank support To Avoid Economic Shutdown

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President Hakainde Hichilema has urged the World Bank Group to take necessary decisions and steps to help countries like Zambia avoid going into economic shutdown.

President Hichilema said there is need for the World Bank Group to make a decision on the Catastrophe Deferred Drawdown Option (Cat DDO) so as to help Zambia avoid an economic shutdown.

The Cat DDO is a contingent credit line that provides immediate liquidity to International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) member countries in the aftermath of a natural disaster.

Mr Hichilema said climate change has brought a new dimension which the government did not fuse into its debt restructuring and sustainability programming , and has consequently affected the country’s 2024 growth projection of 4.7 percent.

President Hichilema was speaking when a World Bank team led by Regional Vice President for Southern and Eastern Africa Victoria Kwakwa, paid a courtesy call on him at State House.

President Hichilema explained that with climate change affecting energy and agriculture, there is need to make energy available for irrigation and food security.

“Our growth projection was that , this year we would go to 4.7 percent but with climate change, we are talking about two percent plus. The drought has injected two national risks , energy and food,” he said.
President Hichilema said the World Bank has a daunting task to help repair the damage that has been caused by climate change through the Cat DDO.

“There is a need to front load that project so that we can make energy available for irrigation agriculture, to avoid an economic shutdown by climate change whose damage may escalate to even the two percent growth made,” he said.

Mr Hichilema said the government’s key area in managing the drought effects and risks is energy, food, water and sanitation as well as education.

At the same meeting, Secretary to the Treasury Felix Nkulukusa said the government is working with the World Bank on the National Energy Advancement and Transformational project (NEAT).
Mr Nkulukusa said the $700 million project will run from 2023 to 2033 and is aimed at making ZESCO sustainable and attract new private sector investment.
“In phase one , we did have an allocation of $100 million and a disbursement of $25 million was done last week,” he added.

The Secretary to the Treasury, said the Cat DDO will greatly help Zambia to respond to the energy crisis
And World Bank delegation leader Ms Kwakwa disclosed that the World Bank is bringing a new instrument to Zambia called the Cat DDO and the project will be tabled by the World Bank board before the end of the year.
She explained that the Cat DDO is a form of contingent financing offered to help countries take a proactive stand towards reducing exposure to catastrophic risk and access to funds immediately after a natural disaster.

Ms Kwakwae stressed that the drought reinforces the importance of continuing to build resilience in energy, water resources management including irrigation and adapting more climate smart agriculture.
She noted that there is a need to diversify the energy sector and sources through regional trade.
Ms Kwakwa also said the World Bank will work with Zambia to remove major hindrances to private investment and growth.

“We will continue to work with you to push this agenda and also put in place things that will stimulate growth in a way that you are able to achieve your objectives of reducing poverty and uplifting all Zambians,” said Ms Kwakwa.

The World Bank regional chief said that her organization will work more closely with Zambia on mechanisms that will allow the country to manage the revenues that come out of investments, particularly revenues from the mining sector.

Government To Probe Amatheon Allegations

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Government says it will investigate and address allegations levelled against Amatheon Agri (Z) Limited.

Ministry of Information and Media Director Spokesperson Henry Kapata says govern will conduct a thorough investigation to determine the validity of the accusations.

Mr Kapata stated that government is committed to ensuring that all businesses and the media adhere to the highest standards of ethics and integrity.

The allegations against Amatheon Agri (Z) Limited include unethical business practices, conversion of community dams into private Dams , government collusion, deliberate livestock trespassing among others.
Amatheon Agri (Z) Limited Head-HR lands and community relations Moonga Hanjili has since denied the allegations that have been circulating on various media platforms.

Mr Hanjili added that AAZ is dismayed by the false and misleading information being spread about the company

HH Mpaka 2030 is totally different from Christians for Lungu

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HH Mpaka 2030 Coordinator Bill Kapinga says the new pro Hakainde Hichilema organisation should not be compared to the Christian for Lungu which was merely mobilised by former president Lungu to abuse the Church with the sole aim of achieving his political agenda.

Mr Kapinga says HH Mpaka 2030 is totally different from Christians for Lungu.

He explained that the HH Mpaka 2030 has been assembled by individuals and organisations from a cross section of society voluntarily who share a common go of ensuring that HH secure a second term in office because he has managed to restore order in the country in the last three years that he has been in office.

“During his last three years in power HH has restored order in this country, HH is escalating development in this nation,the issue of cadres is the thing of the past in this country,marketeers are now able to trade freely without cadres storming the markets to harass them,” Mr Kapinga noted.

He further stated that the UPND administration has also embarked on infrastructure and skills development among the youths across the country using the Constituency Development Funds (CDF).

He however said that despite embarking on such robust developmental projects President Hakainde Hichilema’s administration was being mercilessly and unfairly attacked by enemies of progress while those surrounding him were not doing enough to defend the President.

” Almost in every Constituency across this country, we are seen projects under CDF unless in those Constituencies whereby some Mps from PF don’t want to associate themselves with the CDF, we are seen feeder roads being worked on, we are seen schools,clinics ,health centres being built we have seen teachers houses being constructed, individuals our youths are being trained are receiving training under CDF as carpenters, drivers as welders as mechanics as electricians but unfortunately enough the U
PND as a party is not doing enough to highlight the achievements of his excellency President Hakainde Hichilema apart from that he is mercilessly and unfairly attacked left ,light and centre by detractors ,by enemies of progress while the party remains dwiii not always being steadfast to defend our President,so since we are happy with the performance of HH, we have come together to help articulate Government policies ,to help explain to the people the achievements HH is recording and also defend him from unnecessary attacks,” Mr Kapinga said.

He,additionally said that the HH Mpaka 2030 will be holding town hall meetings where Mps and Ministers will be given a platform to explain what government was doing to address various challenges the country is currently facing, such as power loadshedding, climate change, the high price of essential commodities such as mealie meal among others.

Minister Mposha elected Vice-President of UN Environment Assembly

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Minister of Green Economy and Environment Hon.Mike Elton Mposha, MP, has been elected as a Vice-President of the Seventh Session of the United Nations Environment Assembly representing the Group of African States.
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Secretary of Governing Bodies Radhika Ochalik announced Hon. Mposha’s election in a letter dated 6 th September, 2024 and addressed to all Ministers responsible for Environment worldwide.

“I have the honour to refer to the letter from the Secretariat, dated 6 August 2024, regarding the
nomination of His Excellency Mike Mposha, Minister of Green Economy and Environment of Zambia, as Vice-President of the seventh session of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-7),” Ochalik stated. “In the absence of any objections to this nomination in the preceding one month, I am pleased to announce that, in accordance with Rule 19 of the Rules of Procedure of the United Nations Environment Assembly, His Excellency Mike Mposha has been duly elected as a Vice President of the seventh session of the United Nations Environment Assembly representing the Group of African States.”

Hon. Mposha currently also serves as Vice-President of the African Ministerial Conference on Meteorology (AMCOMET). In the subregion, Hon. Mposha serves as the Chairperson of the Lake Tanganyika Authority (LTA), which includes ministers responsible for the environment from the four countries bordering Lake Tanganyika: Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the United Republic of Tanzania, and Zambia.

MGEE Communications Unit

2024 Junior Secondary and GCE Examination Results Released

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The Ministry of Education has announced the results of the 2024 Junior Secondary External and General Certificate of Education (GCE) examinations, marking the completion of this year’s assessment process.

In a statement issued by Education Minister Hon. Douglas Syakalima, a total of 113,193 candidates, representing 94.38% of those registered, sat for the Junior Secondary External Examination. Of these, 48,839 (43.15%) were boys, while 64,354 (56.85%) were girls.

Minister Syakalima further revealed that 88,548 candidates, representing 78.23%, passed at least one subject, while 24,645 candidates (21.77%) did not pass any subjects. Among the 28,310 candidates who sat for six or more subjects, 7,999 (28.94%) were awarded certificates, 15,440 (54.54%) passed fewer than six subjects, and 4,871 (17.21%) failed all their subjects.

The Ministry also noted that 6,735 candidates, or 5.62% of the registered cohort, were absent from the examination.

2024 GCE Examination Results
In a separate announcement, Minister Syakalima reported that 138,084 candidates sat for the 2024 General Certificate of Education (GCE) examination. Of these, 120,660 candidates (87.38%) passed in at least one subject, while 17,424 candidates (12.62%) failed all subjects.

Notably, 24.72% (3,649) of the 14,764 candidates who sat for five or more subjects successfully obtained the General Certificate of Education. However, 756 candidates (5.12%) failed all the subjects they attempted.

This year’s GCE pass rate showed an improvement of 6.48 percentage points compared to the 2023 results.

Examination Integrity and Malpractice
Minister Syakalima confirmed that the examinations were conducted without any significant leakages, maintaining the integrity of the process. However, three cases of malpractice were reported during the Junior Secondary External Examination, involving five candidates.

The results are now available via the SMS result notification system, and candidates will also be able to access their statements online through the Examination Council of Zambia (ECZ) portal using their examination numbers, starting September 16, 2024.

Zambia Needs To Pray – Steve Chungu

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FORMER Government Chief Whip Steve Chungu has called on Zambians to kneel down before God and pray if the country is to overcome the challenges that the nation is currently going through.

Mr Chungu said in an interview that the current economic challenges the country is presently going through, such as high cost of living, drought which has resulted into power loadshedding need spiritual solutions through prayer adding that no single human being can solve them.

Mr Chungu who is also former Luanshya Central Constituency Member of Parliament said politicians especially those in power should humble themselves and seek the face of God to intervene in the social and economic problems the country is facing.

” As Zambians , politicians those in opposition and Government should choose a day to come together and pray for the nation of Zambia, we have to call on God to intervene in our problems as a nation,” Mr Chungu said.

He further said that those in power should also not treat those with divergent views over the governance of the country as enemies adding that it is only when the party in power accepts positive criticism the country will move forward economically and socially.

” Self praise , will not take this country anywhere, let those in power accept positive criticism and humble themselves before God this way our country will develop socially and economically,” he said.

He said that Zambia’s economy is in shambles saying that those in power should not willingly put a blind eye on the reality and mock Zambians that the economy was doing fine when not.

He said some of the interventions that the Government has put in place to address the economic crisis were not enough.

He said interventions such as cash for food were not enough to handle the economic woes that has hit the country.

” One mistake the UPND has made is to go to bed with the IMF(International Monetary Fund), cash for food is not a solution to our economic crisis,”
Mr Chungu said.

Africa needs a single currency

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… and increase intra-African trade flows

Africa is entangled amidst challenging developments in the national and world economies.Let me say that the COVID-19 Pandemic, among others, led to quantitative easing in developed countries, which, in turn, led to growing money supply by as much as 40 percent in some jurisdictions,and, consequently, rising levels of inflation.

Shortly after that, the sanctions emerging from the conflict in Ukraine caused global supply disruptions
which in turn fueled inflation.

In both cases, interest rates also rose, and in developing countries, this led to higher debt servicing
payments and repayments as well as currency depreciations.
In some parts of Africa, inflationary pressures are also coming from drought situations, complemented
with energy shortages for those countries which depend on hydroelectricity.
Against this background, we can recall the advice of the late Milton Friedman and I quote him: “Inflation
is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.”
From this quote, you as the African Monetary authorities have the supreme duty to bring down the
levels of inflation across Africa, which are currently in the range of single digit to three-digit levels across our countries, the highest being 157.9 percent.

Bringing down inflation would result in improving the welfare of our people.
Equally important, reducing inflation would result in macroeconomic and financial stability and create
better conditions for inclusive growth and sustainable development, including the development of our
emerging stock, bond and mortgage markets.

As we strive to leverage big data and artificial intelligence to complement interest rates in bringing down
inflation, I am sure we are fully aware that effectively harnessing these is anchored on investments in
human capital, physical Infrastructure as well as affordable and reliable supply of energy.
This precondition brings us back to the agenda of promoting inclusive growth and sustainable
development.

Although this is not an area of activity for monetary authorities, they create the necessary conditions for
the effective execution of this agenda by authorities managing the real sector of the African economy.
In addition, reducing levels of inflation would create a conducive environment for effective implementation of the macroeconomic convergence criteria of the African Monetary Programme adopted by the Assembly of the African Union Heads of State and Government in 2022.

Africa requires effective and timely implementation of the macroeconomic convergence criteria to lay
the groundwork for the establishment of the African Central Bank, and immediately after that, a single
African currency.

The continent needs a single African currency to, among others, increase Intra-African trade flows, and
this is key to strengthening the African economy and making it more resilient to endogenous and
exogenous shocks.

The urgency in timely and effective implementation of the macroeconomic convergence criteria is
further driven by the fact that even before Africa reaches continental economic integration characterised with the establishment of the African Central Bank, the permanent membership of the African Union in the G20 provides prospects for the Chief Executive Officer of the African Monetary Institute, when it is operational, to be a member of the African Union delegations to the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meetings as well as the working groups of the G20 Finance Track.

When the African Monetary Institute transforms into the African Central Bank, the Governor will be
attending the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meetings since this is one of the financial institutions of the African Union, together with the African Monetary Fund, African Investment
Bank and the Pan African Stock Exchange.

A new development is the operationalisation of the African Credit Rating Agency, which will, among
others, contribute to the development of a Pan African capital market.Once more, I am calling on our monetary authorities to come up with practical measures to bring down levels of inflation across Africa and contribute to improving the welfare of Africans.

By Albert M. Muchanga
The author is African Union Commissioner for Economic Development, Trade, Tourism, Industry and Minerals

CTPD Urges Government To Expedite Finalization Of The Climate Change Bill

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The Centre for Trade Policy and Development (CTPD) calls on the Zambian government to prioritize the finalization of the Climate Change Bill, as a critical step towards addressing the country’s vulnerability to climate change.

CTPD notes while climate change has been identified as a significant development challenge in the 8th National Development Plan (8NDP), progress in implementing key measures has been hampered by institutional inefficiencies, inadequate funding, and the absence of a binding legal framework. The proposed Climate Change Bill presents an essential opportunity to overcome these obstacles by providing a comprehensive legal mandate for climate action in Zambia. One notable challenge has been the harmonization of issues surrounding carbon markets. However,with the revised National Forestry Policy in the process of being finalized, CTPD urges the
government to expedite the finalization of the Climate Change Bill.

CTPD anticipates that the climate change legislation will address the following:

  • Institutional Coordination: The existing climate change governance structure struggles to coordinate climate action across sectors. Legislation can address this fragmented approach by establishing a unified body to coordinate climate-related actions across various sectors.
  • Domestic Resource Mobilization: Zambia lacks legislation that ties a specific spending threshold to climate action. Thus, climate change activities remain vulnerable to low and irregular budgetary allocations and excessive reliance on external support. Climate change legislation will encourage increased domestic funding for climate initiatives through mechanisms such as a Climate Change Fund.
  • Stakeholder Engagement: The legislation can mandate inclusive processes to ensure that civil society, local communities, and the private sector are actively involved in climate decision-making.CTPD urges the government to expedite the legislative process of the Climate Change Bill to ensure that national plans and measures aligns with and ensure that the final version of the Climate Change Act aligns with international best practices and addresses Zambia’s specific needs.

    Issued by:
    Dr. Matildah Kaliba
    CTPD Research Associate

Reminding the president to fulfil campaign promises is now an offence in Zambia

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By Sishuwa Sishuwa

Jason Mwanza, a 28-year-old unemployed youth activist in Zambia, has been in police detention without charge for almost two weeks now. His offence? Conducting a peaceful lone protest against acute unemployment, continued high-level corruption in government, the cost-of-living crisis, rolling power blackouts formally lasting a minimum of 21 consecutive hours a day, and the perceived failure of President Hakainde Hichilema to honour his campaign promises on these issues. 

After completing secondary school in 2016, Mwanza, who grew up in an orphanage in the capital city after his dad died when he was 9 months old, went on to study hospitality management and graduated in the expectation that he would find a job. In the 2021 election, he voted for Hichilema, at the time Zambia’s main opposition leader, who had promised to create employment opportunities for young people like him. Three years later, he remains unemployed and has had to withdraw from further studies due to financial constraints. Deprived of a formal job and with his ability to make ends meet curtailed by crippling load shedding – officially, electricity is guaranteed to ordinary Zambians for only a maximum of up to 3 hours per day – Mwanza notified the police, as per the law, about his intention to hold a one-person peaceful protest against the status quo that threatens his very existence or life.

As if to convey an enlightening statement, he chose the Freedom Statue as the venue for his lone protest. The Freedom Statue – a 12-foot artwork designed by British sculptor James Butler and constructed after the achievement of independence from Britain in 1964 to represent Zambia’s triumph from the chains of over 70 years of colonial subjugation – was the same place where Hichilema, then in opposition, had conducted a lone protest before the 2021 election to draw attention to the same issues that Mwanza now sought to bring to President Hichilema’s attention. Unlike Hichilema, who was not arrested for his lone protest or for stating that corruption, load shedding, unemployment, and high cost of living are a result of poor leadership, Mwanza was arrested on accusations of unlawful assembly and seditious practices. 

Two other youths – Thomas Zulu and a 30-year-old unemployed female graduate of the University of Zambia named Chanda Chikwanka – who later expressed support for Mwanza’s right to protest, in the belief that they live in a liberal democracy that provides for free expression, were also arrested in the aftermath. They too remain in police detention without formal charges and have been denied police bond. 

These latest infringements on fundamental freedoms have been aided by a pliant Judiciary that effectively operates as an extension of the executive and primarily sees its role as that of pushing the presidency’s agenda. The latest infringements also come in the wake of recent damning reports from the United Nations Human Rights Council and Human Rights Watch on the worrying state of human rights in Zambia today. The reports show growing intolerance for political opposition and dissent, cases of arbitrary arrests and detention, and continued violations of the rights of expression, peaceful assembly, and protest. 

Embarrassed by the bad publicity generated by these reports, the Zambian government, instead of stopping to supply the material that feeds that bad publicity, tried to dismiss the UN report, claiming that it was misleading and false. Yet around the same time when the government spokesperson was extolling its supposed commitment to protecting human rights, the police were arresting Mwanza, Zulu, and Chikwanka for reminding President Hichilema to fulfil his campaign promises.

To its credit, the Hichilema administration has abolished the notorious law on defamation of the president, long used by successive incumbents to deter legitimate criticism through the threat of arrest and numerous convictions. However, the administration has since employed other repressive laws that remain on the statutes to suppress human rights. A key example is the Cyber Security and Cyber Crimes Act that inhibits the right to free speech. In opposition, Hichilema condemned this “bad law” and vowed to repeal it, if elected: “Our first task once you elect us this August”, Hichilema wrote in August 2021, “will be to repeal this bad law!”

In power, his administration has deployed the same law he previously denounced as “bad” to arrest and imprison critics and political opponents on charges of hate speech, among others. The government has even announced plans to expand the restrictions of this law in order to curb what Hichilema recently called “the abuse of social media in the name of democracy.” As shown in greater detail elsewhere, the Hichilema administration has also regularly employed the Penal Code Act, a colonial-era relic that contains provisions that criminalise free speech, to arrest critics and political opponents on a variety of charges ranging from sedition and the use of insulting language to criminal libel.

The modus operandi of these arrests is generally the same: arrest the activists and opposition leaders, keep them in detention for a period longer than authorised by law, and either release them on police bond without ever taking them to court or drop the charges after court appearance. Even members of the clergy have not been spared from this continuing onslaught on human rights. For instance, in January this year, police on the industrial Copperbelt arrested and detained pastor Duncan Simuchimba of Kings Church for speaking out in defence of marketers.

Arrests and court cases have a demonstrative effect on even those who are not caught up in them: the costs of participating in political activities deemed inappropriate by the government. Strongly discouraging them from challenging the government, activists and the opposition are made aware that at any time they could have their lives upended and spend weeks or even months in detention and protracted legal cases.

For a long time now, several civic institutions and prominent individuals have repeatedly raised alarm about the increasing restrictions on human rights in Zambia. For instance, in March this year, the highly-regarded retired archbishop of Lusaka, Telesphore Mpundu, petitioned the United States to impose targeted sanctions on State actors seen as primarily responsible for this sustained assault on political and civil rights. 

Earlier, in November 2023, the influential Zambia Conference of Catholic Bishops issued a strongly-worded pastoral letter in which it reprimanded the government for exhibiting authoritarian tendencies and failure to guarantee fundamental freedoms. A month before, in October, a consortium of 12 civil society organisations expressed deep concern about the spiralling infringements on human rights.

Yet the government remains unrepentant, consequently leaving so many human rights on death row. Under international human rights obligations, the Zambian state has three responsibilities: (a) to ensure that all persons under its jurisdiction enjoy their rights (b) promote human rights and investigate violations; and (c) punish violators of human rights. President Hichilema is later this month scheduled to address the UN General Assembly at which he is expected to extol (!) his human rights record. This realisation might explain why his administration is desperate to discredit the fairly accurate UN report, even as the repressive actions of the Zambia Police Service continue to paint a more realistic picture.

Attacks On Socialist Party Irks Fred Mmembe

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Socialist Party (SP) President Dr Fred M’membe has expressed concern over continued and coordinated lies against the party, saying the UPND is desperate.
Dr. M’membe says the attack on him by State House sponsored online publication Koswe are meant to turnish his image.
He says it is not true that he took àlcóhol and other ill!cit drúgs to Mukobeko prison, saying he does not even take alcohol.
“The attacks are not coincidental but they are deliberate and they are coming from the UPND. Koswe is protected and the people who run Koswe are known. It’s part of Mr Hichilema’s media team. Their campaign against us is there for all to see. The desperation where it is coming from we don’t know. But when you see your opponents who are saying you are nothing, keep on talking about you and fabricating things, everyday you have to put some news and say this is fàke news, where is it originating from? From State House through Koswe. Then you know State House is under pressure. President Hakainde Hichilema is behind Koswe,” he alleged.
“Why would I take alcóhol and ill!cit things into prison, I don’t drink at all. Nobody in my household drinks, why should I take drinks to prisoners? And also things that you take to prison are checked at the gate. Did they verify with any prison warder that I took those things? It’s an offense to take alcóhol into príson. I would have been scàndalized to the max if I took those things.”
And Dr. M’membe said attempts by the UPND to claim that he has joined the ruling party are aimed at bringing confusion in his party.
“It’s all an attempt to create an impression that there is a crisis in Socialist Party. I have never been a member of the UPND and I will never be a member of UPND. The issues of claiming that Fred M’membe and the Socialist Party are joining UPND were aimed at making people resign from their party on the basis that it is finished,” he stated.
Meanwhile, Dr. M’membe has refuted claims that he met Archbishop of Lusaka Dr. Alick Banda over a possible alliance with PF President Edgar Lungu as a running mate to the former Head of State.
“I met Hon Given Lubinda at Chilenje Police Station who had been down the previous days, he was not well. Archbishop Dr. Alick Banda is not in the country, he is in Europe. Where did we meet? And the truth is that I have never met anyone over an alliance. And it is simple, we cannot discuss any alliance without the authority of the National Congress of the SP,” he indicated.

[SP Media]