Friday, October 4, 2024
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Micho Pays Tribute to His Late Mother

Chipolopolo coach Milutin ‘Micho’ Sredojevic has paid tribute to his mother who died over the weekend.

Rada, 70 passed away on Sunday in Micho’s homeland of Serbia.

“I have remained just with best memories of herself in my heart, mind and soul with the best ingredients being the values she engraved in me,” Micho said.

“My mother wills forever inside me and whatever I did in African football I owe it to her.”

Micho,who was appointed Chipolopolo coach on February 3,2020, is currently in Zambia due to the Coronavirus lockdown.

Caucus for women parliamentarians to sponsor a private members motion in Parliament to address the cyber bullying

The caucus for women parliamentarians says it will sponsor a private members motion in Parliament that will address the cyber bullying that is on the increase in Zambia.

Caucus Chairperson Professor Nkandu Luo says Zambia needs to start putting laws in place that will deal with the issue of cyber bullying before it gets out of hand.

Professor Luo says it is regrettable that it has become fashionable for some youths to insult leaders in the name of freedom of expression particularly women.

Professor Luo has questioned the silence by the Church and some Civil Society Organisations who she said are key in curbing cyber bullying especially against women.

She said she has every reason to be upset if people enter people’s bedrooms to insult them especially women among other groupings.

Professor Luo said the Human Rights Commission has a duty to start unpacking the issue of human rights which is being abused by some sections of society.

“What is so sad is that the educated people are the ones leading the crusade of insulting with were they even insulted my spectacles. How can one insult spectacles really, what have they done to someone?” she lamented.

Professor Luo is hopeful the Ministers of Transport and Communication and Religious Affairs will support the motion to restore the dignity of Zambia in the eyes of the International Community.

She has called on other women particularly lawyers and Civil Society to support the cause to stop the rot which is affecting women and girls in the country.

“If they are insulting Nkandu Luo, they are also insulting all the women walking the streets of Zambia”, she lamented at a media briefing.

And speaking earlier, Chief Government spokesperson Dora Siliya said the caucus will not allow anyone to insult President Edgar Lungu.

She said it is unbecoming for young people to hide on Social media to insult the Head of State.

MMD says that it has expelled Nominated Member of Parliament Nakachinda

The opposition Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) has expelled Nominated Member of Parliament Raphael Mangani Nakachinda.

Mr. Nakachinda who was a suspended member of the MMD from 2016 was expelled after the Party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) sitting in Lusaka on the 20th of June, 2020 unanimously voted to expel him from the party.

According to the expulsion letter, MMD National Secretary Hon. Elizabeth Chitika informed him that he had been given time to appear before the Party’s disciplinary Committee and he has refused to come through.

“Following your exculpatory letter of 2016, We wrote to you on the 15th of November, 2019 inviting you to appear before the disciplinary Committee but you and your agents refused to get the letter. This show of arrogance, insubordination and disregard for the Party Leadership can not be entertained”, Hon. Chitika wrote.

She further said that he had continued holding meetings where he was bringing the name of the party into disrepute.

“Furthermore, You have continued holding meetings in Lusaka, Chipata, Luangwa and other places in the country, bringing the name of the party into disrepute and slandering thereby injuring the image of the Party and abrogating sections of the Party Constitution which relate to obligations of a member namely Article 10 (a) (c) (d) (h) (j) and (k)”, Hon. Chitika further wrote.

She then informed him that the National Executive Committee of the MMD resolved to expel him.

“With all these constitutional violations, I wish to inform you that the National Executive Committee (NEC) of the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) at its sitting on the 20th of June, 2020 at the Party Secretariat and using it’s inherent powers vested in it and in accordance with the disciplinary procedure, inter alia Article 52 (2) and 19 (n) of it’s party Constitution unanimously resolved to expel you from the party with immediate effect”, Hon. Chitika said.

She then informed him that the Speaker had been informed of the Party’s decision to expel him.

Police in full riot gear deployed all over Lusaka to stop peaceful protests

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Police in Lusaka have deployed officers to deal with protesting youths who have vowed to go ahead with protests on various issues of national interest including corruption in the government.

Zambia Police Spokesperson Esther Katongo said no youth has been given a permit to protest over anything today.

Mrs Katongo said the current COVID-19 situation does not allow for huge gatherings hence anyone that will be found protesting will be dealt with in accordance with the law.

Mrs Katongo has also accused some Civil Society Organisations of inciting youths to go on the street to protest while they remain in the comfort of their homes.

She said according to information availed to her by the Police Command in Lusaka, the youths have not been given any permit to protest.

Mrs Katongo added that she has no information that Minister of Home Affairs Stephen Kampyongo has permitted anyone to protest.

She has urged people intending to protest to follow the law and ensure that they also approach the Ministry of health for guidelines.

 

I am ready to cooperate with ACC-Bowman

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Lusaka Province Minister Bowman Lusambo says he is ready to cooperate with the Anti Corruption Commission as it carries out an inquiry against him.

Two weeks ago, some PF sympathizers reported Mr Lusambo to the ACC for suspected abuse of office authority following his donations to his Constituency, the forced removal of former teachers from Munali High School houses and the manner in which he carried out anti-Covid-19 prevention measures.

But Mr Lusambo says the ACC is a highly effective and professional institution and that he respects its mandate.

He further stated that the Commission does not need to be incited into launching an investigation into anyone as it has the capability to institute its own investigate without outside influence.

Mr Lusambo who is also Kabushi Member of Parliament said his donations to his constituents are sourced from many well wishers who believe in his ability to deliver.

He was speaking on Sunday at his residence in Ndola during a luncheon for over 200 differently abled Kabushi residents at which he donated items such as wheelchairs, bags of mealie meal and blankets.

“The ACC does not need to be told who to go after. The ACC has got eyes to see straight through what you are wearing and if they feel that the shirt you are wearing was illegally obtained, they can summon you for interviews,” Mr Lusambo said.

Meanwhile, the Zambia Agency for Person’s with Disabilities in ndola has called on government to consider tax exemption on devices that aid disabled people.

ZAPD Member Lameck Zulu says devices and appliances used by people living with disabilities are unaffordable.

He says wheelchairs, hearing aids, crutches and prosthetics are expensive and many people living with disabilities cannot afford.

Mr Zulu added that there is need for constant consultation with people living with disabilities when formulating tax types to be exempted such as Value Added Tax.

Lusaka Province Minister Bowman Lusambo handing over wheelchairs to the disabled in Kabushi Constituency
Lusaka Province Minister Bowman Lusambo handing over wheelchairs to the disabled in Kabushi Constituency

Government takes a swipe at HH for claiming that Lumumba Roads works cost $1.2 billion

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Government has taken great exception to the video that has gone viral of the UPND leader Hakainde Hichilema inspecting Lumumba road in Lusaka alleging that government spent one point two billion dollars on the ongoing rehabilitation works on the road.

Housing and Infrastructure development minister Vincent Mwale has told ZNBC news in a statement that the contract for the Engineering Design, Rehabilitation, Upgrading and Construction of selected Lusaka Urban Roads in Lusaka City that includes Lumumba, Mungwi, Great North and Ngwerere to Kasisi roads cost 70 million dollars and not one point two billion dollars for Lumumba road as alleged by Mr. Hichilema.

Mr. Mwale says Government through the Road Development Agency -RDA directed the contractor AVIC international Project Engineering Company to redo the works on these roads due to deformations observed.

The Minister says RDA carried out assessments and ordered AVIC to immediately remedy the situation by reworking the asphalt surfacing or the wearing course.

He says the works are being done at no cost to the Government as it is being done within the defects liability period.

Mr. Mwale further says it should also be noted that the road has not been handed over to the Government by the Contractor.

He says Mr. Hichilema should learn to engage the necessary stakeholders for him to get factual information on any of the road infrastructure projects instead of misleading the nation on matters he is not competent on.

He says RDA is a public institution that anchors its work on transparency and accountability and the UPND Leader or any other person can easily have access to project details once requested upon.

The minister adds that Mr. Hichilema’s statement on social media should therefore be dismissed with the contempt it deserves as it carries no grain of truth.

He says the UPND Leader could be mixing with the works that are yet to be embarked on by Messrs China Jiangxi Corporation for International Economic and Technical Cooperation -CJIC on the 3-hundred and 21 Kilometre Lusaka-Ndola Dual Carriage Way.

Mr. Mwale says AVIC international is a reputable road construction company that has done quality works on many road infrastructure projects for a considerable period in Zambia.

He says , However, that the RDA has a vendor rating system in place that carries out assessments on road projects and contractors found wanting are directed to redo the work until the Agency is satisfied with the performance.

The minister further said Government will not be derailed by people like Mr. Hichilema who are in the habit of making negative statements but will continue to deliver developmental projects such as a good road network not only in Lusaka but throughout the
country.

UPND President Hakainde Hichilema Inspecting Works on Lumumba Road
UPND President Hakainde Hichilema Inspecting Works on Lumumba Road
UPND President Hakainde Hichilema Inspecting Works on Lumumba Road
UPND President Hakainde Hichilema Inspecting Works on Lumumba Road

There is no content in Bill 10 to warrant the acrimony seen from those opposing the document

Chembe PF Member of Parliament Sebastian Kopulande says there is no content in Bill 10 to warrant the acrimony seen from those opposing the document.

Mr Kopulande has accused people objecting Bill 10 of pushing for regime change in Zambia.

He says calls to withdraw Bill 10 are pure politics meant to push for change of government by proponents of regime change.

Mr Kopulande said the objecting of the Bill in its entirety is a political game aimed at embarrassing government.

He said some people wants Bill 10 to fail because they know that its failure will be deemed as government failure.

Mr Kopulande has cautioned the proponents of regime change not to set the country on fire in their quest to make Bill 10 fail.

Mr Kopulande who was a member of the Raphael Nakachinda led select Committee.

He has also castigated NGOCC Board Chairperson Mary Mumba for calling for the withdrawal of the Bill.

Mr Kopulande has wondered how a person who served as Vice Chairperson at the National Dialogue Forum could today turn around and castigated a document she helped develop.

Poor Work on Lumumba road by AVIC is a manifestation of corruption in the PF government-HH

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UPND Leader Hakainde Hichilema says the poor workmanship on Lumumba road by AVIC International is a manifestation of corruption in the PF government.

Mr Hichilema says it is a shame that a road that cost tax payers US$1.2 billion is being redone just after few months of its completion.

The UPND Leader was speaking when he inspected the road in the company of Human Rights Activist Brebner Changala.

He said when the UPND forms government, roads will be built at the right cost and good quality in order to save money that will be channelled to other sectors such as health, agriculture, water and sanitation and education.

He has accused the PF government of wasting tax payers money at the expense of improving lives for suffering majority Zambians.

Mr Hichilema says corruption is one of the biggest challenges facing Zambia and has promised to bring this to an end when his party forms government in 2021.

He has urged Zambians to vote wisely in the next election and retire the PF in order to save their resources from further plunder.

Meanwhile, Avic International, a Chinese construction firm, has offered to re-do some poorly done roads in Lusaka at no cost to the government.

This was revealed by Minister of Housing and Infrastructure Development, Vincent Mwale during a briefing in Lusaka.

Mr Mwale has further called on the Road Development Agency to be on high alert and ensure that no contractor gets away with shoddy works.

Senior Chief Kaputa thanks President Lungu for the Empowerment of his subjects with livestock

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Senior Chief Kaputa of Kaputa District in Northern Province has thanked President Edgar Lungu for the Empowerment of his subjects with livestock by the government.

The chief has also thanked the President for the commencement of works on the Mporokosa-Kaputa-Chienge road.

He said although the road works are not what the people expected, working on the road will help ease movements of people and the transportation of goods into and out of Kaputa.

The Chief said this is a clear demonstration of not leaving anyone behind in terms of developing the country.

Chief Kaputa hoever said that there is need for Government to build more industries in rural areas to lift people out of poverty.

He says this is the surest way to create employment for the Zambian people and decentralising development.

Chief Kaputa said the investment in fruit processing plant in Katete and the Pineapple processing plant in Mwinilunga should be replicated in other parts of rural Zambia.

Chief Kaputa said creating a cassava processing plant in Kaputa will make the cassava sub sector viable and attract young people to engage in cassava farming.

Speaking when President Lungu visited him at his palace in Kaputa, the traditional leader said he is ready to work with the government of the day in implementing developmental projects.

And responding to the chief, president Edgar Lungu said his government will work towards delivering development to all parts of the country.

He said as Chairperson of the Industrial development corporation, he will engage his Chief Executive Officer to hear what plans he has for cassava production.

The Planned Protests are illegal, my office has not permitted any protests-Kampyongo

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HOME Affairs Minister Hon Stephen Kampyongo has dismissed media reports suggesting that a group of youths planning to protest were permitted by his office and the Zambia Police Service.

Speaking when he commissioned and officially handed over 34 housing units to the Zambia Police Officers in Masaiti District of Copperbelt Province yesterday, Hon Kampyongo said his office has not permitted any protests.

“Inspector General of Police Mr Kakoma Kanganja allow me to take advantage of this very noble event to implore you to activate your command who will in essence active your well equipped men and women in uniform to stand ready to bring to book anyone who intends to cause acrimony disguised as peaceful protests” Hon Kampyongo said.

The Minister said government is aware of the agitation that the deadly coronavirus pandemic has brought in Zambia and the rest of the world hence enforcing public health guidelines such as the banning of large gatherings.

He said that government working with its various institutions will not allow any form of protests amidst the deadly COVID-19 pandemic.

“To those Youths who want to dare the police by going ahead with an illegal protest, you will only have yourselves to blame, you have been warned, and don’t say you were not warned when the wide police dragnet catches up with you ” Hon Kampyongo cautioned.

Hon Kampyongo has since called on all parents to ensure that they keep their children away from participating in lawlessness.

“Fellow parents I am calling on you on this Father’s Day to ensure that you advice your children to stay away from these protest whose agenda is ill conceived and misguided ” Hon Kampyongo said.

Hon Kampyongo said it is unfortunate that some politicians want to use people’s innocent children as a lader to ascend to political power by encouraging them to go against the law.

And Hon Kampyongo has urged Police officers across the country to remain on high alert to ensure that law and order is maintained in the country.

Meanwhile Masaiti Constituency Member of Parliament Hon Michael Katambo has hailed President Edgar Lungu and government for building 34 Police houses in Masaiti district.

Hon Katambo said the 34 houses will ease the burden of having to commute from Ndola every day which had been placed on officers assigned to Masaiti Police Station.

The Munister of Home Affairs was Accompanied by Copperbelt Province Minister Hon Japhen Mwakalombe, Copperbelt PF Provincial Chairperson Nathan Chanda, PS Dr Chileshe Mulenga of Home Affairs, Copperbelt PS Bright Nundwe, Inspector General of Police Kakoma Kanganja, Chifubu Member of Parliament Hon Frank N’gambi and other senior government and party officials

Lusambo refurbishes dormitory at Solwezi Boys as a way of paying back to his former school

Lusaka Province Minister Bowman Lusambo on Saturday visited his former school in Solwezi where he has renovated and adopted a dormitory wing he used when he was a pupil.

During his visit to Solwezi Boys Technical High School, Mr. Lusambo donated Mattresses, Blackets and Pillows and assorted items much to the delight of pupils who welcomed him.

Other items donated include various stock of Sanitizers, 500 bags of mealie meal and 12,000 cash for the boys to buy relish and other food essentials.

Mr Lusambo announced that his family had been saving money towards the cause for sometime now.

He has rehabilitated wing A and B of Kalengwa house which will now have a ceiling board and has since been renamed after him following the school Management’s decision to acknowledge his gesture.

He emphasized that President Edgar Lungu will always work with young people but was quick to advise them against social media abuse .

“So just make sure that you are disciplined and make sure that you focus on your studies, Mr Lusambo told the boys as they cheered him on.

And in a vote of thanks, School Head teacher Given Mugwengwe thanked President Lungu for appointing his former pupil as Lusaka Province Minister .

Mr Mugwengwe said Mr. Lusambo’s leadership qualities were identified by the school management who appointed him as Prefect in Grade 10.

Mr. Lusambo was at Solwezi Boys Technical School from 1996 to 1998.

Inside the Bowman Lusambo dormitory at Solwezi Technical Secondary School
Inside the Bowman Lusambo dormitory at Solwezi Technical Secondary School
Part of the mattresses donated to Solwezi Technical School by Lusaka Province Minister Bowman Lusambo
Part of the mattresses donated to Solwezi Technical School by Lusaka Province Minister Bowman Lusambo
Part of the refurbished dormitory at Solwezi Technical School
Part of the refurbished dormitory at Solwezi Technical School

Pilato, Music and the Grim Social Realities of our Time

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By Sishuwa Sishuwa

On 5 January 2019, a 34-year old citizen was forced to flee Zambia after members of the governing Patriotic Front (PF) threatened to kill him. His crime?

He composed and released a song with references to a rat that enters a home, eats all the food in the pot and steals everything else including what it did not need, thinking that no one would question its actions. The track met popular reception but infuriated the PF who interpreted it as a direct attack on President Edgar Lungu, whose administration has been plagued by accusations of endemic corruption and mismanagement.

The ‘supporters of the rat’ gave the artist a 48-hour ultimatum in which to ‘withdraw the song’, failure to which they would ‘withdraw’ his life, instead. Unprepared to occupy a cemetery plot, the citizen turned to the police for protection.

In a country with a militia-like police that is largely serving as a sword for the ruling elite and their supporters rather than a shield for the weak and ordinary citizen, his call for help fell on deaf ears. With his life on the line, the artist fled into exile in South Africa. That young man is Chama Fumba, artistically known as Pilato, an acronym for People in Lyrical Arena Taking Over.

Pilato has emerged as Zambia’s most famous dissident in the tradition of protest music since he first burst on the national scene in 2009. His latest album, Here I Live, confirms his reputation. It is a tribute to the courage of his convictions and willingness to risk his life selflessly that he has continued to sing after his near-death experience.

If those who issued death threats against the musician thought they would intimidate and slow him down, or silence his silky voice, they were wrong. Pilato is back in Zambia and with more ‘dangerous’ songs that preserve his status as a towering artist with a deep-seated consciousness who deploys music to educate people and to causes that promote the public good.

The music in this 15-track album, you will soon discover, is not like any other that you have previously listened to from other Zambian singers.

Where the lyrics of most musicians draw inspiration from ephemeral concerns and instant consumer pleasures, those of Pilato draw inspiration from wider public debates and the struggles of the social classes and communities around him.

Where other artists offer platitudes of a high order to those in power, Pilato delivers songs that promote accountability and proclaim virtue.

Where the voice of many singers identifies itself with the few powerful elites who abuse public trust, rob the poor, manufacture inequality, serve as the midwifery of injustice, and erode Zambia’s democracy, Pilato raises his voice to pour criticism on the actions of such elites, to attend to the pain of those who suffer, and to serve the silent and oppressed.

Musicians are part of the broader forces of social movements. Music is simply the platform on which they seek to carve out a wider progressive agenda, to create larger narratives of nationhood and to participate in building a new script for the country, one that resonates on a very phenomenological level with the masses. Like other activists, artists wield enormous influence and have the capacity to bring down autocrats, encourage self-introspection in a manner that has the potential to alter relations of power, cultural attitudes and established psyches, and to transform whole societies through song.

The earlier cited response of the ruling party to Pilato’s song, Koswe Mumpoto, illustrates, more than anything else, the disruptive power of music. Ordinarily, the term Koswe Mumpoto, the Bemba language equivalent for ‘a rat in the pot’, should trouble no one. However, the creative power of music is such that it empowers its consumers to comprehend or interpret it in ways that reflect their own experiences and which its composers or architects may not have envisaged. This is especially the case in instances where a singer uses metaphors.

By demanding the ‘arrest’ of the Koswe Mumpoto song, arising from the interpretation that the reference to ‘a rat in the pot’ meant those in positions of authority who are looting public resources, the ruling party officials understood that music has the capacity to spread beyond the reach of formal institutions and of other mediums such as newspapers, radio and television stations. If the wider public were to extract similar meanings from the song, they would likely question the actions of the ‘thieving rats’ and call for the removal of the said koswes from State House.

In the wisdom of the authorities, the solution was not only to ban the song and curtail its circulation, but also to kill its composer and halt the production of similar tracks in future. This response constitutes an acknowledgement that the track resonated enough with the wider audience and had huge potential to mobilise public sentiment to the point that it became dangerous to the State. Here, we see the subversive capacity of music and its ability to be mobile and widespread, to effectively defy the constraints of a shrinking democratic space – to disrupt the status quo.

A focus on the meaning rather than literal translation of music enables it to mobilise multiple sets of sentiments and to bring out its affective dimension – capturing people’s imagination, making them feel, and be outraged by the result (s). In this sense, music, exemplified by Koswe Mumpoto, enables the public to understand where actual real power resides – not in the ‘rats in the pot’, but in the people. It grows this awareness of power among the citizens, mobilises solidarity among their lot, and challenges them to cast away the fear of the repressive and abusive minority in form of the pilfering rats that have invaded their home!

When these three conditions are met – knowledge of where real power lies, mobilisation of solidarity, and casting away the false veil of fear of the oppressors, then the liberation of the oppressed, of those whose resources are being looted, can take place. At this point, the oppressed and abused are ready to reclaim their power from the villains! This is the kind of empowerment that Pilato’s music brings. This is what this album is all about.

Here I Live challenges us to lose our vanity; to rediscover the power of political organisation around our struggles to reclaim our basic sense of humanity; to protect the environment; to be moved by the plight of others; to be riled by injustice; to find ways of cutting down the outrageous levels of inequality and degrading conditions of poverty that afflict most around us; to rebel against our sub-human existence and reject the mediocrity of our lives and public leadership; to strive to defeat all things which retard our full expression and full lives, and work towards the greater fulfilment of the human person. In short, the album calls us to reject what we have become.

Above all, Here I Live challenges us to active solidarity. ‘The poverty we talk about in hotels, at political rallies, on radio and many other elitist platforms’, Pilato told me when I asked him to explain the album’s name, ‘is reality for many of our fellow citizens. In this reality, they LIVE. When we talk about inequality at any level, the people at the frontline live in that reality.’

In this response alone, we see many qualities that speak to Pilato’s character and serve as the nectar of his music – native intelligence, an incredible awareness, a penetrating mind whose produce is capable of afflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted, a deep sense of responsibility, a conscience that is restless in the face of the misery that surrounds its host, a generous spirit of giving oneself to a cause and struggling for others, and an extraordinary concern for humanity’s moral values and the humanity of the future. None of the words I use about him involve the slightest exaggeration.

Musicians are thinkers. They are public intellectuals who manage within a few words to express what an academic will say in a book. Easily accessible and cheaper, their intellectual output serves society better and more effectively. They are the closest to God. In fact, if God has left people on Earth to carry out His work, it is musicians and poets. In this album, Pilato fulfils that mandate.

  • This comment appears as the Foreword to Pilato’s latest album, Here I Live, which is set to be released on 4 July 2020.

Zambia Embassy in Angola facilitates the the repatriation of 23 Zambian nationals trapped by COVID-19 restrictions

The Embassy of the Republic of Zambia in Angola has facilitated the repatriation of 23 Zambian nationals and residents who were caught up in travel restrictions in that country due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Government of the Republic of Angola provided a plane on humanitarian grounds upon request from the Government of the Republic of Zambia to help repatriate the said individuals.

The returnees were seen off at Luanda International Airport (Aeroporto Internacional Quatro de Fevereiro), earlier, by Zambia’s Ambassador to Angola His Excellency Mr. Lawrence Chalungumana and other Diplomatic staff.

In his address to the Zambian nationals, Ambassador Chalungumana noted that the collaboration between Zambia and Angola on this repatriation exercise is a testament of the longstanding strong bilateral relations.

Ambassador Chalungumana thanked the Government of Angola for the assistance rendered towards the repatriation of the Zambian nationals.

The Zambian envoy urged the returnees to strictly adhere to the communicated public health guidelines to help prevent the spread of Covid-19.

The Zambian nationals and residents arrived in Lusaka today 21st June 2020 aboard TAAG Angolan Airlines and the plane is expected to transport Angolan nationals stranded in Zambia.

Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola
Zambian nationals being repatriated back from Angola

Police say No Permission has be given for Tomorrow’s Demonstrations as PF accuse HH of inciting Youths

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Acting Zambia Police spokesperson Danny Mwale has said that police have not received any notification concerning the planned demonstration which is said to be scheduled for tomorrow.

Responding a query about reports rumours of a planned demonstration tomorrow, Mr. Mwale has advised those planning to demonstrate not to go ahead as procedure has not been followed and that those that will go ahead with the demonstrations will be dealt with accordingly.

Meanwile, UPND president Hakainde Hichilema has been advised not to parade and incite other people’s children to protest while he sits in the comfort of his home.

Patriotic Front deputy media director Antonio Mwanza says it is irresponsible for the UPND leader to put other people’s children in harms way when he can never allow his own children to protest.

“Mr Hichilema has grown up children who are themselves youths and i challenge him to send them to the frontline to protest also rather than inciting other people’s children to protest while his children are comfortably enjoying themselves in the comfort of his home” Mr Mwanza said.

Mr Mwanza who was commenting on tomorrow’s planned protest by youths said freedom of expression has to come with responsibility and advised youths not to allow themselves to be used as political pawns to champion agendas that risk the country’s peace or border on conduct likely to breach peace.

Minister of Home Affairs, Hon Stephen Kampyongo has said the protest march scheduled for this week has not been approved by the Police or his office.

Mr Mwanza has asked Mr Hichilema to mention how many orphans and widows he has helped after putting the lives and security of their fathers and husbands at risk to champion his agenda of inciting the public.

“Where are the orphans and widows of those whose lives have been harmed championing Mr. Hichilema’s agendas. Does he even know what these families are going through in the absence of their bread winners? He is quick to use and abuse the names of the departed for political gain but he has never taken time even to check on how these families are surviving. That is very hypocritical of him as a leader” Mwanza has charged

There is no cause at this stage to withdraw the Constitution Amendment Bill-YALI

The Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI) says there is no cause at this stage to withdraw the Constitution Amendment Bill number 10 of 2019 from Parliament when it has already undergone first reading.

YALI President Andrew Ntewewe says the process is backed by law and that all Members of Parliament understood it from the time it was presented in 2019 to date.

Mr. Ntewewe says he does not know of any law backing the withdrawal of the Bill but stated that it can only be amended.

He explains that it is not the duty of the church or any Civil Society organization to call for the withdrawal of the Bill but Members of Parliament to debate as mandated by the law.

Mr. Ntewewe was speaking today at the opening of a one-day media workshop on the contents of the Constitutional Amendment Bill number 10 of 2019.

He however pointed out that debate is the normal way of doing things in a democratic dispensation.