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RB assures CHAZ of K2.2bn workers’packages

President Rupiah Banda

President Rupiah Banda has assured the Churches Health Association of Zambia (CHAZ) that his Government will release the K2.2 billion meant for retirement packages for daily classified employees who worked for the association.

President Banda said this money has been outstanding since 1996.

He said Government will also ensure that CHAZ daily classified employees who were still not on the pay roll were put on the roll.

President Banda said this in a speech read for him by Presidential Affairs Minister, Ronald Mukuma at the official opening of the 40th annual general council of CHAZ at Mulungushi International Conference Centre today.

Mr. Banda noted that churches have, since 1964, been Government’s trusted ally in terms of providing health care and other services to people, especially in rural areas hence the need to maintain the relations.

He added that CHAZ was a pioneer of introducing home based care services to people living with HIV/AIDS.

“It has put 31,000 people on anti retro therapy. CHAZ has also supported 50,000 orphans in schools successfully,” he said.

The President further said CHAZ has helped 224,000 people suffering from tuberculosis (TB) and distributed thousands of mosquito nets to needy people in an effort to combat malaria.

President Banda said it was for this reason that Government will continue to provide funds to church supported institutions.

He pointed out that Zambians should not ignore the realities of diseases which were challenging the health sector.

He said his Government was resolved to addressing all the impediments that made Government to fail to provide quality health care delivery to the public.

Mr. Banda expressed confidence that since cooperating partners have resumed funding to the Ministry of Health, most of these challenges will be addressed.

He cited the challenges as inadequate funding to the health sector, inadequate staffing levels to the sector and lack of adequate infrastructure.

The President has meanwhile, urged CHAZ and its members to continue complementing Government efforts by providing quality health care services despite various challenges dogging the health sector.

Earlier, CHAZ Board Chairperson, Joop Jansen, said the association was aiming at serving the underprivileged people in society.

Dr. Jansen said CHAZ will endeavour to continue complementing Government in providing health care services in the country.

And in her vote of thanks, Sister Beatrice Chanshi commended Government for standing firm in providing health care services to Zambians even when donors had withdrawn funding to the Ministry of Health last year.
CHAZ consists of members from various church denominations in the country.

[ ZANIS ]

Zenani Mandela to get private funeral

5

The funeral of Nelson Mandela’s great-granddaughter, Zenani, will take place on Thursday June 17, 2010 at the chapel of her school, St Stithians College in Sandton, the Nelson Mandela Foundation said on Monday.

While the funeral would not be open to the public, South Africans were welcome to send their condolences to the Mandela family via email, said foundation spokesperson Sello Hatang.

“We appreciate that South Africans and visitors to the country would all like to be there, but due to space constraints, we ask that they please send their condolences to [email protected],” he said.

“We will certainly make sure that the family receives them.”

Zenani Zanethemba Nomasonto Mandela, 13, died in a car crash after the World Cup opening concert in Soweto on Thursday night. She is the granddaughter of Zindzi Mandela, who is the daughter of Madiba and Winnie Madikizela-Mandela.

The driver of the car was Sizwe Mankazana, the 23-year-old son of Zwelakhe Mankazana, who is Zenani Mandela-Dlamini’s partner. Mandela-Dlamini is the late Zenani’s great-aunt.

Mankazana was initially arrested and charged with drunk driving and culpable homicide, but his case was struck off the roll on Friday pending “further investigation”.

The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) said that Mankazana would appear in the Johannesburg Magistrate’s Court on July 26, two weeks after the World Cup had ended.

NPA spokesperson Mthunzi Mhaga declined to comment on claims that Mankazana was getting special treatment because he was part of the Mandela family.

He also denied that Mankazana’s case had been delayed to manage media coverage by letting him appear after the World Cup had ended on July 11, when most foreign journalists had already left the country.

“Whatever decisions we take, they are above board,” said Mhaga.
Sapa

Sata, HH naive, says Sikota

PF Leader (L) and UPND Leader (R)
PF leader Michael sata and UPND leader Hakainde Hichilema

United Liberal Party (ULP) president Sakwiba Sikota has said the leaders of PF/UPND pact Michael Sata and Hakainde Hichilema are allegedly naive and too simplistic by suggesting that they would reverse the sale of 75 per cent shares in Zamtel to Libya’s Lap Green Networks.

Mr Sikota, who is also a lawyer, said the two leaders lack a proper understanding of economic management from a legal perspective because renationalising companies was costly as the new owners would demand several other costs apart from the principal purchase value.

Mr Sikota was reacting to continued statements by Mr Hichilema and Mr Sata that they would revoke the sale of 75 per cent shares in Zamtel sold to Libya’s Lap Green Network.

He said the cost demobilisation, projected profits, the amounts invested, compensation and the actual profits, which would be lost, could rise to un proportional levels that no government would pay.

The country’s rating had already been threatened because of such statements, which do not give hope to the present and would-be investors.

He warned that Zambia’s world credit rating would collapse if Mr Hichilema and Mr Sata continue to threaten renationalisation of the privatised companies like Zamtel.

Mr Sikota said Mr Hichilema and Mr Sata should avoid such thoughts because they were almost legally unrealistic.

Mr Sikota said Government operated on the principle of continuation of sovereignty, which ensures continued economic and political stability.

He said Mr Hichilema and Mr Sata should not become a risk to national economic development by issuing statements that would threaten the country’s increased confidence internationally.

He said whether or not Government changes after next year’s elections, the Government of the Republic of Zambia would remain with the mandate of encouraging foreign direct investment.

And Minister of Commerce, Trade and Industry Felix Mutati said that Zamtel made losses that amounted to K385 billion in the last three years and that it saved US$200 million which was required to save the company from closure.

Mr Mutati said at a media briefing in Lusaka yesterday the company had become technically insolvent with shareholders’ fund collapsing to negative K270 billion in 2009 alone.

Mr Mutati said the company had terminally collapsed with more than 50 per cent of monthly revenues going towards salaries while its competitors, Zain and MTN only spent less than 25 per cent on the payroll and made contributions to the economy through taxes.
[ Times of Zambia ]

Suspecetd formation of cartels anger millers

The Millers Association of Zambia has described as ridiculous speculations by government that Millers have began forming cartels to unfairly benefit from this year’s bumper harvest.

MAZ vice chairperson Peter Cottan who is also National Milling Corporation Managing Director has since challenged Government to go on and investigate their suspicions of the alleged formation of cartels by Millers.

He says the announcement made by him on behalf of National Milling to reduce prices was in a bid to lead others to follow suit or risk losing their market.

Mr Cottan said it is not possible for millers to start reducing the prices now because they are still buying maize from the 2008 and 2009.

He said that Government should not mislead people that prices of mealie-meal must be low stressing that the decision taken by National Milling may not be possible for other millers to follow suit.

Mr Cottan added that he did not make the announcement for the reduction of mealie-meal prices in his capacity as a representative of MAZ but as managing director for the National Milling.

He expressed shocked about the route of suspicions stressing that the milling business is highly competitive and that millers cannot seat together and set prices as they have to compete against each other owing to the already over capacity in the industry.

Government has said that it is monitoring the millers’ price fixing amidst the bumper harvest that the country has recorded.
[ QFM ]

Katele’s leave from party duties applauded

MMD national secretary Katele Kalumba announcing the suspension of Gabriel Namulambe in Lusaka
MMD national secretary Katele Kalumba

Convicted former Finance Minister Katele Kalumba’s decision to take leave from his party duties as MMD National Secretary has been described as courageous.

Mission Press Director Father Dravesky Miha said there are few leaders who would take leave from office on moral grounds as Dr Kalumba has done.

He said Dr Kalumba’s decision to ask for leave from his party duties shows his great courage and humility to the party.

Fr Miha noted that Dr Kalumba should be applauded for taking such a brave step, especially that other leaders have failed to take similar steps even after being found wanting by the courts.

And former defence minister Goerge Mpombo said the decision taken by D Kalumba is in his own interest.

Mr Mpombo said his leave from party office would give him a peace of mind and maintain the moral standing of the Party.

A political activist Dante Saunders has described Dr Kalumba as a principled member of the MMD.

He said if other members of the ruling party could emulate him Zambia would be on the right track to ridding the country of corruption.

Youth activist affiliated to a number of youth organizations Mulenga Fube said the move by the MMD National Secretary should not be perceived as a sign of weakness but a right step.

Fube said the leave would not have come at a better time than now when the party is preparing for election next year.
Dr. Kalumba was together with six of his co-accused convicted by a Lusaka magistrate court and sentenced to 4 years imprisonment with hard labour for corruption during the time he served as finance minister.
[ QFM ]

Sata wants Zambians to suffer — Ronnie


Chief Government spokesperson Ronnie Shikapwasha has said Patriotic Front (PF) leader Michael Sata wants Zambians to suffer by calling on donors to withdraw aid.

Liuetenant General Shikapwasha said Mr Sata was being unpatriotic through his calls to donors to withdraw aid and make people suffer .

He instead appealed to Mr Sata to be patriotic and moot ideas which will better the lives of Zambians.
[pullquote]“Mr Sata should be patriotic. The Government is here to work with donors and it is the Government that sets the vision.

“Appealing to the donors to make people suffer by withdrawing aid is unpatriotic.

“We should be people of integrity and speak on things that will help people. Zambia is a sovereign State and if he has issues, he is free to go to any ministry and lodge a complaint,” he said.[/pullquote]

Commenting on Mr Sata’s statement that donors should put pressure on President Rupiah Banda’s administration, Gen Shikapwasha said the appeal by Mr Sata was not in the best interest of Zambia.

Gen Shikapwasha said in an interview in Lusaka yesterday that Government was the one which set the country’s vision and donors were merely there to help it achieve the set goals.

“Mr Sata should be patriotic. The Government is here to work with donors and it is the Government that sets the vision.

“Appealing to the donors to make people suffer by withdrawing aid is unpatriotic.

“We should be people of integrity and speak on things that will help people. Zambia is a sovereign State and if he has issues, he is free to go to any ministry and lodge a complaint,” he said.

Zambians were looking for leaders who would better their lives and Government under the leadership of Mr Banda had made great strides economically and socially.

He said more schools, roads, health centres and various development projects were being undertaken countrywide.

Despite Zambia not being spared by floods last year, the country was able to record a bumper harvest, which was twice more than that of the previous farming season.

“This is a great achievement for our people as they will have more food. On the other hand if you go to the streets of Lusaka, even Choma or Livingstone there is traffic congestion a sign that more people can afford to buy cars. All these are indications that the Government is delivering,” he said.

He said what Mr Sata and his UPND counterpart Hakainde Hichilema should do was to encourage President Banda to work even harder instead of looking out for faults to advance their political agendas.

Gen Shikapwasha wondered why when there was a report of misappropriation of funds at the Ministry of Health, Mr Sata never condemned the acts.

He challenged him to come out in the open and publicly condemn the alleged theft of funds at the Ministry of Health.

On Mr Sata’s allegations that civil servants were delaying to get paid an indication that the Government was misapplying funds, Gen Shikapwasha who is Information and Broadcasting Services minister said the delay in the payments of salaries was an information technology (IT) problem which was being worked on.

Gen Shikapwasha said Secretary to the Cabinet Joshua Kanganja had explained and apologised to the nation on the delay caused by the IT problem which was being rectified.

“The delay for civil servants to get their dues has nothing to do with lack of money. There is plenty of money. It is an IT problem unless Mr Sata has a hand in messing up the IT. This problem has nothing to do with politics,” he said.
[ Times of Zambia ]

Zambian pair in the dock for honking

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A court in Zambia on Tuesday ruled that two opposition lawmakers must face trial for honking their car horns in protest after former president Frederick Chiluba was cleared of corruption.

Jean Kapata and Mumbi Phiri of the main opposition Patriotic Front were arrested last August after taking part in a mass honking jam to protest Chiluba’s acquittal on charges he embezzled $500 000 in public funds.

Magistrate Charles Kafunda Chiluba found a “prima facie case has been established” against the duo who must now present their defence against charges of conduct likely to cause the breach of peace on July 19.

The acquittal of Chiluba, who led Zambia from 1991 to 2001, sparked dismay among opposition parties and anti-graft campaigners.

The former president still faces legal action in a separate matter stemming from a graft conviction in Britain, where a court in 2007 found him and former aides guilty of stealing nearly $50-million of state funds.

[AFP]

The Weekend in Pictures

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1.

Amasha Yabukulu at 75 - by E. Mwamba

2.

The sunset at Mindolo dam in Kitwe

3.

A fire heating up in readiness for a BBQ at Mindolo dam in Kitwe

4.

A man watches the sunset at Mindolo dam in Kitwe

5.

An entrance into Chicsokone market in Kitwe.

6.

One of the streets in Kitwe with statue of a miner called Mposa mabwe or stone thrower

7.

Street vendors conducting their business in Kitwe

8.

Some Kitwe residents relaxing at the Mindolo dam in Kitwe

9.

Some Kitwe residents in the centre of town

10.

A salsa group entertain guests at Pamodzi hotel in Lusaka.

11.

Information minister Ronnie Shikapwsha and Zambia breweries Group managing director about to present awards to sports journalists in Lusaka

12.

Members of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Danish Parliament and officials from their Zambian embassy are dwarfed by giant 300-tonne Komatsu dump truck on their recent visit to the Chingola Open Pits operations of Konkola Copper Mines.

13.

Members of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Danish Parliament and officials from their Zambian embassy at the KCM open pit operations from the top of the 300-tonne dump truck at the Chingola Open Pit mine on their recent tour to Konkola Copper Mines.

Health revolution arrives on two wheels

6

Violet lets baby Happiness get a grip on the handlebars of her motorbike. Photograph Rebecca Stewart
As the sun rises over a village in Zambia, Judith ties a toddler on her back and a baby on her front and sets off on a 14km walk. Five hours later she makes her way down a dusty track to the health post, a cement building in the middle of the bush. Nico, the only health worker for 50km, looks up from basic exercise books – the medical records for all his patients.

Everything about Judith’s baby is the wrong colour. His lips are white, his eyes yellow, his new teeth brown and black. He is thin and pale and too tired to cry. His name is Happiness and he is eight months old. His mother is HIV-positive.

Nico says: “Because of your status we need to start the child on a course of treatment. But until I get the results from his dry blood spot test there is nothing I can do.” There is a high risk that Judith has transmitted the virus to her baby. The best way to test is by taking a small sample of blood and sending it off to the lab.

That’s when things get tricky. “Even when we have taken the specimens they can stay here for two months before they leave. We keep them in the fridge, but sometimes we don’t have the fuel to power the generator and the samples go bad. There is just no way of getting the samples to the lab in Chadiza or Lusaka in time,” says Nico. “Or to get the results back. Without the results, we can’t start treatment.”

This scene is repeated through sub-Saharan Africa thousands of times a day. But the issue is not medical. It’s failed transport. “I set off at sunrise,” Judith tells Nico. “I’m not sure I can come back here again. It is too far.”

Suddenly something close to miraculous happens. The door crashes open and a young woman in motorcycle gear struggles to remove her helmet. “I am Violet,” she declares as she wrestles an oversized rucksack from her back. “I have come to collect your specimens.” Nico had heard that a fast specimen referral system was supposed to be starting in the district. But he hadn’t believed it, there are so many promises. He holds Violet’s hands tight. Then he gives her the blood specimens and paperwork as he calls in his next patient from the hundred-long queue outside in the clinic.

The lab is in Chadiza, a rural town in the east of Zambia, a country five times the size of the UK. Mostly the “roads” are pot-holed, dusty tracks, and the Ministry of Health has few working vehicles. So the work of most clinics is undermined by their isolation. But there is a change: managed transportation thanks to Riders for Health, a global leader in social enterprise, which has six established programmes from Lesotho to Nigeria.

The group emerged from the world of motorcycle racing and is the official charity of MotoGP and motorcycle sport’s ruling body, the Federation Internationale de Motocyclisme. Its mission? “Working to make sure all health workers in Africa have access to reliable transportation so they can reach the most isolated people with regular and predictable healthcare,” its website says.

Riders now manages almost 1,500 vehicles and reaches about 10.8 million people. Zambia’s is the latest Ministry of Health to benefit. Riders started in 1989 when the founders, visiting Africa, looked in horror as a woman in life-threatening obstructed labour had to be pushed to a clinic in a wheelbarrow. “In a world of well-engineered vehicles, it was pretty obscene,” says Andrea Coleman, “especially when the clinics and hospitals were surrounded by broken-down vehicles.” Coleman turned her skills to publicising the scandal and raising money to end it.

At first it met with resistance. Eventually officials in some countries saw the benefits.

Slowly, the Riders’ system of remote fuel management, outreach maintenance and training began to take hold and move from country to country. Setting up the Zambia programme are Alfred Gonga and Lloyd Chipere – long-serving members of Riders’ Zimbabwean team.

“It is not directly about healthcare,” says Gonga. “Here we are sample couriers. We save lives just by making sure people can get a diagnosis.” Chipere says: “One of the most important things we do is train our riders. Every single day they do their own maintenance routine. It’s a sustainable system. And it’s Africans working for Africa.”

A child started on antiretrovirals early enough can have his or her chance of developing full-blown Aids reduced to a mere 2%.
“Imagine,” says Violet, “I am girl from the village who learnt how to ride a motorbike. And now I might save the life of Happiness.” As Violet gets back on her bike Judith and Happiness are starting on a journey of their own: the long walk back to their village. Judith will get the result in three days and the child’s treatment will begin. “Now I can actually do my job,” says Nico. “And all because of a motorcycle.”

• Visit the the Riders for Health website.

[guardian.co.uk]

I’ll never insult people’s intelligency – Mutati

Commerce minister Felix Mutati
Commerce minister Felix Mutati

Commerce, Trade and Industry Minister Felix Mutati says he will never insult the integrity of the Zambian people.

Addressing journalists during a press briefing held at his office this afternoon, Mr. Mutati said his statement that the people of Zambia would not understand the ZAMTEL Valuation Report was not meant to insult the integrity of the people.

Mr. Mutati explained that what he meant was that the people would only understand fully the matter after government makes a presentation of a comprehensive statement to parliament immediately it resumed sittings next month.

He said a comprehensive statement would highlight the details of the RP Capital Valuation Report and other details pertaining to the sale of ZAMTEL.

Mr. Mutati said his statement was based on how people might find it trick to understand the motive behind government’s sale of the country’s telecommunications company before a detailed comprehensive statement is made available to the public through parliament.

And Mr. Mutati disclosed that government decided to sell ZAMTEL because it was financially ill.

He said government did not have money to recapitalize the company because it was not budgeted for in the 2010 national budget.

He said the money that was needed to recapitalize ZAMTEL amounted to over US$200 million which he says government could not afford.

He noted that the only option government had was to find an investor who would inject money needed to revive normal operations of the company, which he says was a good idea because government will now receive dividends and taxes, as opposed to recording zeroes before it was sold.

Meanwhile, Mr. Mutati said the Zambia National Commercial Bank, ZANACO, is currently performing well in the wake of its privatization.

He said government has been benefiting well from ZANACO through dividends and taxes it receives from the investor in the commercial bank since it was privatized.
[ QFM ]

Under-20 Camp Temporally Suspended

2

The Football Association of Zambia (FAZ) has temporally called off the Zambia Under-20 training camp after just one day after the team gathered in Lusaka.

The team entered camp on Sunday to begin preparations for its Libya 2011 CAF African Youth Championship 1st round, 1st leg qualifier against Mauritius on July 24.

Under-20 coach Keegan Mumba confirmed that training camp has been and that the 30-member team was due to regroup on June 20 but did not state the reason for the sudden break of camping after just 48 hours.

However, according to sources close to the situation, the administrative and logistical reasons have caused the temporal cancellation of the training camp.

The source said that Faz had a shortfall on funds to camp the team and was also yet to complete the contractual paper work for the technical bench.

Meanwhile, winner of the two-legged f1st round match against Mauritius will face either Nigeria or Guinea in the final 2nd round qualifying stage for a place in next year’s African Youth Championship finals in Libya.

Ministry of Health signs a five-year “Multi-Million Euro” Contract with Philips Electronics

6

Royal Philips Electronics NV (PHIA.AE) said Tuesday it has signed a “multi-million euro” contract with the government of Zambia for upgrading and the maintenance of 71 hospitals in the country.

MAIN FACTS:

– Philips and the Ministry of Health, Zambia sign a five-year multi-million Euro contract for upgrade and maintenance of 71 hospitals nationwide.
-Philips didn’t give more financial details.
-The deal also includes the training and education of healthcare workers on advanced medical treatments using modern technologies to improve the quality of care.
– By Amsterdam Bureau, Dow Jones Newswires; [email protected]

[Dow Jones ]

Global Fund freezes Zambia aid, citing corruption

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The Global Fund has suspended more than $300 million in health assistance to Zambia because of concerns about corruption — the latest graft scandal to hit President Rupiah Banda before an election due next year.

The freeze, which is likely to affect the southern African country’s fight against AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, comes a year after Sweden and the Netherlands suspended $33 million in Health Ministry aid due to a missing $5 million.

The European Union has also halted aid earmarked for road construction because of concerns about graft.

“The national authorities have failed thus to provide assurance of appropriate action regarding the fraud against Global Fund grant programmes,” the U.N.-initiated Fund said in a report seen by Reuters on Tuesday.

University of Zambia economist Oliver Saasa said the latest suspension should serve as another warning to Banda to get serious about graft, a growing concern to the donors who pay for 30 percent of the budget in Africa’s biggest copper producer.

“This touches directly on life and should send a signal to the government on the importance of accountability,” he said.

Banda’s anti-corruption credentials have been called into question since a junior court in Lusaka cleared former president Frederick Chiluba of graft in August and the government refused to appeal the decision.

Chiluba was accused of stealing $480,000 in Treasury funds but the court said prosecutors had failed to prove their case beyond reasonable doubt, raising an outcry from anti-graft groups and the political opposition.

Banda’s Movement for Multi-Party Democracy narrowly won an election in 2008 but is facing a serious challenge from populist opposition leader Michael Sata.

The Global Fund To Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria gets the bulk of its funds come from the United States, Europe and Japan, and magnates such as Bill Gates also chip in.

[Reuters]

Clinton scolds Africa on handouts

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Hilary Clinton

African nations must stop seeking handouts and begin tough structural reforms, especially on trade, if they truly want to improve their economies, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Monday.

Clinton’s sharp comments were in response to a question about broadening the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), a measure passed by Congress in 2000 which gives favorable access to U.S. markets to dozens of African countries.

While many African governments hope the benefits can be made permanent, Clinton signaled Washington was going to look for signs that African countries are serious about improving their own domestic economic policies.

Both Clinton and U.S. President Barack Obama have used trips to Africa to stress good governance, saying local leadership is as important as foreign help in the drive to stamp out war, corruption and disease on the continent.
[ QFM]

Peasant farmers oppose Namboard revival plans

5

THE National Association for Peasant and Small-Scale Farmers of Zambia (NAPSFZ) has said it is opposed to the suggestion to revive the defunct National Agriculture Marketing Board (Namboard).

Association President Roger Phiri said his association would continue supporting the Food Reserve Agency (FRA) maize marketing system and was ready to go into partnership with it.

Mr Phiri said in a statement in Lusaka yesterday that instead of agitating for the disbanding of FRA, the NAPSFZ would offer alternative solutions to improve maize marketing system in Zambia.

“The Namboard system of maize marketing was condemned by many that it was too big and had many functions outside maize buying and we all agreed to restructure the institution,” he said.

He said the Zambian farming community had not forgotten that they demanded the establishment of a new maize buying institution in the country arguing that the re-introduction of the Government maize board would reverse the earlier decision.

Mr Phiri said in a liberalised economy, any maize marketing system has teething problems and are expected when setting up a national maize buying institution like the FRA.

“It is better to offer alternative solutions to maize marketing system with relevant facts supporting argument for reviving an old maize marketing institution like Namboard,” he said.

Mr Phiri urged institutions in the agricultural industry not to mislead the Zambian people on maize marketing systems.