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Provide proof for corrupt allegations in the PF, Lungu Challenges

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Home Affairs Minister Edgar Lungu has challenged people that have been alleging that there are some corrupt officials in the Patriotic Front (PF) government to prove their claims following the Anti-Corruption Commission’s decision not proceed to probe the allegations due to lack of sufficient details.

Justice Minister Wynter Kabimba and Vice president Guy Scott had recently claimed there were corrupt officials in the PF government at the height of calls for Mr Kabimba to resign as PF Secretary General.

Speaking in a telephone interview with QFM News, Mr. Lungu says the onus is now on the people alleging that there is corruption in the PF government to produce evidence to prove such claims.

He states that that anyone claiming that there is corruption in the PF without showing evidence will be merely politicking.

Mr. Lungu adds that people making such allegations must also use the right channels to prove their allegations by reporting to the ACC and allow the allegations to be investigated failure to which such people would be spreading falsehood.

The post Provide proof for corrupt allegations in the PF, Lungu Challenges appeared first on Lusaka Voice | Zambia News.


Masumba’s conviction a warning to would be offenders- FODEP

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Foundation for Democratic Process (FODEP) has joined in welcoming the conviction of Sports deputy minister Steven Masumba.

FODEP Executive Director MacDonald Chipenzi has told Qfm News president Michael Sata should immediately drop Masumba from his ministerial position and allow him to fight his conviction outside government.

Mr. Chipenzi has also hailed the court for being firm in dispensing justice in Masumba’s case.

He adds that the conviction of Masumba should serve as a warning to other people against using dubious means to obtain professional qualifications.

Mr. Chipenzi stresses that Masumba’s conviction is a lesson to all who are in the habit of forging academic qualifications

The post Masumba’s conviction a warning to would be offenders- FODEP appeared first on Lusaka Voice | Zambia News.

“I will criticize PF government were necessary”– Sunday Chanda

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Open Society Foundation (OSF) Executive Director Sunday Chanda says he will criticize the PF government were necessary.

Mr. Chanda has told Qfm News that reports on some online media publications that he is stranded and has since decided to be antagonistic towards the ruling party are baseless, stating that he is a man of principles.

Mr. Chanda says if he wants to support or criticize the PF government, he will do it openly without hiding because he speaks about real issues.

He adds that he has nothing personal with the Patriotic Front, adding that his criticism is not malicious but constructive.

The post “I will criticize PF government were necessary” – Sunday Chanda appeared first on Lusaka Voice | Zambia News.

AVAP predicts high voter turn out in Mansa by-elections

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The Anti-Voter Apathy Project (AVAP) has predicted a good voter turn out in the November 22, Mansa Parliamentary by-election slated for this Friday.

The Electoral Commission of Zambia (ECZ) has also predicted a higher voter turn in the by-election.

AVAP Executive Director Richwell Mulwani says the anticipated good voter turn out will be as result of the peaceful campaigns all the five participating political parties have engaged in.

In an interview with Qfm, Mr. Mulwani has further observed that the assurance by the Home Affairs Minister that there will be no cadres that will be ferried from Lusaka to Mansa has also played a vital role in sustaining the peaceful campaigns.

He has since commended the ECZ and the Police for the role they have both been playing in ensuring that campaigns are peaceful in the constituency.

The post AVAP predicts high voter turn out in Mansa by-elections appeared first on Lusaka Voice | Zambia News.

Zambian Sex offender dodges deportation from Australia

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Likumbo Makasa had been threatened with deportation and was kept in immigration detention after his conviction on three counts of having sexual intercourse with a child in 2006, when he was aged 22.

Likumbo Makasa had been threatened with deportation and was kept in immigration detention after his conviction on three counts of having sexual intercourse with a child in 2006, when he was aged 22.

A Zambian man who was sentenced to two years in jail for having sex with a 15-year-old girl will be allowed to stay in Australia after it was ruled he was a low risk to the community.

Likumbo Makasa had been threatened with deportation and was kept in immigration detention after his conviction on three counts of having sexual intercourse with a child in 2006, when he was aged 22.

A further conviction for raping the same girl the next day at Hurstville, in Sydney’s south, was quashed in 2010 – but a year later, the then Minister for Immigration and Citizenship cancelled Makasa’s visa.

Now the Administrative Appeals Tribunal has ruled to deport Makasa would not be in the best interests of his own children, two of whom live in Perth.

Makasa, along with acquaintances Tyrone Chishimba, 25, and Mumbi Peter Mulenga, 29, were all jailed over the August 2006 aggravated sexual assault of the girl, who they were introduced to by a friend.

During a 2009 jury trial, Sydney’s Downing Centre District Court heard the girl drank a lot of alcohol after school and went to Makasa’s house where she slept in a bedroom.

She later woke to find a man having sex with her.

Then more men, including Chishimba, Makasa and Mulenga, were accused of having sexual intercourse with her without her consent. But because the room was dark, she was unable to identify them.

They challenged their convictions in the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal and Justices Robert MacFarlan and Bruce James, with Justice Lucy McCallum dissenting, upheld the appeal.

At the tribunal, the federal immigration authorities had argued Makasa should be deported – on the basis that by the civil standard of balance of probabilities, he had had non-consensual sexual intercourse with the complainant.

But in his judgement on Makasa’s visa, tribunal deputy president Brian Tamberlin said he should not be asked to adjudicate on questions of criminal misconduct and ruled Makasa could stay in the country.

Rape victim’s nine-hour ordeal - AUGUST 20, 2009

HE PLAYED the part of a knight in shining armour, offering a 15-year-old girl safety when she could not protect herself.

But that same man turned attacker, leading two of his friends in a horrifying gang rape.

Her three-year fight for justice ended yesterday as a jury found three Zambian nationals guilty of aggravated sexual assault without consent for the attack in August 2006.

The main attacker, Likumbo Makasa, was also found guilty of charges of having sex with a child under 16.

The chequered history of the matter can now be revealed – there have been two aborted District Court trials and this one, meant to take a month, has lasted well over three months.

Makasa, Tyrone Chishimba and Mumbi Peter Mulenga had pleaded not guilty and faced a trial on a total of 30 charges between them arising out of the incident in Hurstville.

The court heard that the girl, who cannot be identified, had been drinking alcohol with friends when she was met by two of the accused – Makasa and Chishimba – who bought the group bourbon and cask wine.

The teenager passed out drunk in a 7-Eleven store and Makasa offered to take her back to his unit so she would not be picked up by the police.

After they arrived at the unit, police said, Makasa, a married nurse who has been a permanent resident for three years, showed her a hand gun.

The girl told police she was intoxicated and vomited once.

She passed out again and later told the trio that she was still drunk and wanted to sleep.

The court heard that the girl did indeed fall asleep, only to awake to the horror of a man on top of her having intercourse, to which she had not consented, with the other two watching.

All three were found guilty of aggravated sexual assault in company. Makasa faced additional charges for having sex with the underage victim for another nine hours after the other men left his unit. He was found guilty of three of those.

The trial heard allegations that for two hours after the initial assault, the trio repeatedly raped the girl.

However, the jury did not convict them on those charges.

The trio, two of whom have no prior criminal record, face a minimum of 10 years’ jail. Judge Graham Armitage remanded them in custody to face court in October for sentencing.

SOURCE

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Small Zambia cash grants pay big dividends for rural poor

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In rural Africa, where money is scarce and subsistence farming the norm, even small injections of cash can go far and help grow a local economy in surprising ways.

These are among the findings of a study by the Washington-based American Institutes for Research (AIR), which over a two-year period analyzed Zambia’s monthly child grants to extremely poor households in three rural districts.

It comes against the backdrop of a wider debate about the role of aid in Africa, especially handouts, which critics say stifle economic activity by creating a culture of dependency and removing incentives to work.

But supporters of aid have long argued that direct cash transfers can give those at the very bottom of the income ladder a leg up, and this seems to be one of these cases.

Aside from greater food security – and it would be expected that such poor family units would spend additional cash on calories – the study found recipients boosted their crop production and also diversified their household income base by setting up small businesses.

“It has impacts across the board. People can take this money and grow it so it is helping to grow the economy. These households are starting short-term micro-businesses such as small shops,” David Seidenfeld, a senior researcher with AIR who directed the study, told Reuters in a telephone interview.

“We know they have more money than they did before, which has enabled them to do all of these things,” he said.

A simulation model used by the researchers found that each Zambian kwacha ($0.18) transferred to poor households raised, through multiplier effects, the income in the local economy by 1.79 kwachas.

This suggests that such transfers not only alleviate poverty but also stimulate economic activity – though of course on a small scale and from a very low base.

TARGETING THE POOREST OF THE POOR

Zambia’s modest program of child grants, involving three remote districts targeted because they had the country’s highest rates of extreme poverty and mortality among children under the age of five, was started in 2010.

The criteria was simple: all families with at least one child beneath the age five were eligible, but all households received the same amount – 60 Zambian kwacha or around $11 a month at current exchange rates – regardless of their size.

No conditions were attached to how the money could be spent and the researchers interviewed the heads of over 2,500 of the households in the communities, about half of whom were recipients, so they could contrast their fortunes with those who did not receive it.

The study found that 76 percent of the increased spending by those given the transfers went to food, with the percentage of households eating two or more meals a day rising by 8 percentage points to 97 percent.

In a promising sign, virtually none of the extra money was spent on alcohol or tobacco. So fathers were not grabbing the cash and heading down to the local informal bar for a bender.

The study also showed that the value of agricultural produce harvested rose by 50 percent and the number of households selling harvested crops rose by twelve percentage points.

This was because they had extra cash to hire labor from within their communities and also to spend on inputs and tools.

There was a 21 percentage increase in the number of livestock owned and recipient households sold twice as many livestock as those not receiving the cash.

Significantly, there was a 17 percentage point increase in the number of small businesses set up by the households receiving the extra $11 a month.

Zambia plans to build on what it sees as the success of the program by increasing it to 150 million kwacha a year in 2014 from around 17.5 million now and also expanding the criteria, so it may go to more than just families with children under five.

President Michael Sata inherited the program when he took office in 2011 and widening it is in keeping with his populist initiatives on behalf of the poor and working class.

Cash transfers or grants to the poor and indigent in Africa are few and far between but are starting to take root.

South Africa has by far the largest program on the continent, with around 16.1 million people or close to a third of its population receiving some kind of social grant, according to a recent report by investment bank Goldman Sachs.

The Transfer Project, a research initiative that looks at grant programs in Africa, says Namibia and Lesotho also have social pensions while cash transfers of various kinds have been rolled out in Malawi, Mozambique and Kenya.

If the Zambia case is anything to go by, such programs should at least aim for the very poorest households and those with young children, which could reap big dividends from even small grants of cash. ($1 = 5.5600 Zambian kwachas)

READ MORE ON REUTERS

The post Small Zambia cash grants pay big dividends for rural poor appeared first on Lusaka Voice | Zambia News.

Drought threatens small-scale Zambian maize farmers

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Arnold Chimfwembe (right), 62, farms 6 acres in Ngwerere, Zambia. Two or three days a week, he takes greens to a nearby packhouse that supplies produce to the Pick n Pay in Lusaka.

Arnold Chimfwembe (right), 62, farms 6 acres in Ngwerere, Zambia. Two or three days a week, he takes greens to a nearby packhouse that supplies produce to the Pick n Pay in Lusaka.

(Reuters) – Zambia’s staple food crop, maize, looks set to be significantly dented next year by a lack of rain that is delaying planting.

Most of the harvest comes from small-scale farmers around the capital, Lusaka, and these have been badly affected by the dry spell.

“We planted a small section of maize because we were not sure about the rains,” said Eunice Bwalya, a 56-year-old peasant farmer who ekes out a living just north of Lusaka. “But it’s drying up because there’s been no rain.”

Landlocked Zambia’s maize production for the 2012/13 growing season fell by 11 percent to 2.5 million tonnes because of poor weather and a worm infestation, contributing to what its likely to be a fall in GDP growth from last year’s brisk 7.2 percent.

The sector is more resilient than it used to be, as state subsidies and improved farming practices have helped Zambia to go from being a maize importer to an exporter, boosting output to a peak of 2.8 million tonnes from about 600,000 in just over a decade.

But this year the state has raised the burden on farmers by cutting a subsidy on fertilizer to 50 percent from 75 percent – an unusual case of the state scaling back assistance to the poor under the populist president, Michael Sata.

The most immediate concern for the small-scale farmers, however, is the weather. They would generally be planting their maize now for harvesting around April.

Rains came to Lusaka on Monday night – the first in the capital in four weeks – but it is not wet enough yet to plant.

STATEMENT DUE

“The soil moisture has not deepened enough to sustain germination,” Joseph Kanyanga, chief meteorologist with the Zambia Meteorological Department, told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday.

He said since the third week of October, when almost the entire country reported good rains over a brief period, showers have been scattered and sporadic and mostly confined to the west and northern regions of the country.

The Agriculture Ministry plans to issue a statement about the situation on Wednesday or Thursday.

Zambia is Africa’s biggest copper producer but farming remains crucial to its economic fortunes, accounting for about 20 percent of its gross domestic product. Any shortages or reduced harvests can fan inflation.

Other countries in the region, such as Angola, have also seen economic growth slowed by drought.

READ MORE

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Airtel launches ‘Go For It’ youth campaign

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Airtel Networks Zambia Plc, Zambia’s leading Telecommunication Company has launched  the much awaited for youth targeted initiative dubbed “Go for It”.

The launch of the campaign comes against the background of Airtel’s vision of enriching the lives of millions of Zambia’s youths and empowering them with the relevant tools and initiatives for deepening data usage and knowledge.

Airtel has made major upgrades to its 3.75 G network to deliver a world class mobile internet service. Airtel has also upgraded the billing system which will see build on the numerous innovative services that are launched.

Airtel  Managing Director Ms.  Charity Lumpa said  “ The Airtel “Go for it” Campaign  is offering the youth an exciting, very affordable high-speed Internet service which  allows them to make video calls, have quick and easy access to social sites, email; download music quickly and  even originate and participate in video blogs.”

She further explained that “Airtel has launched the campaign to motivate the youth so to work towards achieving their dreams and using the world class mobile internet platform as a means of generating  revenue generating activities as emerging entrepreneurs.

Airtel customers can subscribe to tailor-made data bundles and make exciting savings by dialing *575# and just “Go for it” she added.

 

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Mind your language, Speaker warns MPs

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SPEAKER of the National Assembly Patrick Matibini has said the use of unparliamentary language and making running commentaries during debates are fast reaching endemic levels in the House.

Dr Matibini has cautioned Members of Parliament (MPS) who are in the habit of displaying undignified behaviour against breaching parliamentary rules.

He said the vice was unacceptable, and would erode public confidence and bring the institution of the National Assembly into disrepute, which he would not allow.

The Speaker’s remarks came in the wake of a point of order raised by United Party for National Development (UPND) Lukulu West MPMisheck Mutelo who wanted to find out if Youth, Sport and Child Development Minister Chishimba Kambwili was in order to pass running commentaries.

Mr Mutelo had earlier raised a point of order when Mr Kambwili passed a comment that “umwaice ala pepa ichamba” (the young man smokes dagga).

The incident happened on October 18, 2013 and Mr Mutelo raised the point of order against Mr Kambwili on November 6, 2013.

Mr Mutelo wondered whether Mr Kambwili was in order to make reference to him in the manner he did.

In his ruling, Dr Matibini said the use of unparliamentary language in the House was alarming.

He urged MPs to guard against the use of offensive, provocative or threatening language in the House as that was strictly forbidden.

He further admonished MPs in the habit of debating, while seated as that was in contravention of the rules of the House.

Dr Matibini, however, rendered Mr Mutelo’s point of order inadmissible as it was made out of time.

 [times of Zambia]

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Action Aid takes on Barclays over offshore tax havens

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Monday 17th June, before the G8 officially began, L-R Ben Jackson - CEO for Bond and IF Chairman,Baaba Maal - a singer from Senegal, Pamela Chisanga - Action Aid's Zambian Country Director and Melissa and Lorcan - two school children from Enniskillen, hand the UK Prime Minister a letter on the behalf of 1.4 million people detailing our common goal.

Monday 17th June, before the G8 officially began, L-R Ben Jackson – CEO for Bond and IF Chairman,Baaba Maal – a singer from Senegal, Pamela Chisanga – Action Aid’s Zambian Country Director and Melissa and Lorcan – two school children from Enniskillen, hand the UK Prime Minister a letter on the behalf of 1.4 million people detailing our common goal.

Action Aid has called on Barclays Bank to stop promoting the use of tax havens to big businesses operating in Africa.

Action Aid Zambia country Director Pamela Chisanga says Barclays bank is promoting the use of offshore tax havens to big companies operating in Africa despite saying it wants to become a force for good international agency.

Ms Chisanga states that Barclays bank promised to change following a number of scandals that have damaged the bank’s image including allegations of corporate tax avoidance using tax havens.

She says every year; developing countries lose billions of dollars of vitally needed revenue because of tax avoidance by big companies using havens, adding that countries lose money that could otherwise be used to build schools, hospitals among other development projects.

Ms Chisanga notes that developing countries lose between one hundred and twenty and one hundred and sixty billion dollars a year in revenue as a result of money hidden in tax havens.

 

[qfm]

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Mongu-Kalabo road progress cheers Mongu and Kalabo residents

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One bridges that will suspend the road above the murky ground usually flooded during the rainy season. The bridge is 30mitres deep from the ground and 280mitres long(1) - lusakavoice.com

One bridges that will suspend the road above the murky ground usually flooded during the rainy season. The bridge is 30mitres deep from the ground and 280mitres long(1) – lusakavoice.com

A mention of the term Mongu- Kalabo road had over the years become similar with failed political and developmental undertakings.

This is because the 34kilomiters stretch from Mongu the Province capital to Tapo area, a stretch that cuts through the Barotse Flood Plain and is the problematic part of the road project has so far gobbled billions of kwacha during its first and disastrous phase.
But the current construction works of the road which is one of the most expensive and involving road projects in Zambia because of its geographical location and is being done by a Chinese company AVIC International to a tune of K1.3billion has so far shown signs of success.
Success scored by AVIC International on the road project includes, the erection of seven (7) 30mitres deep from the ground level and 280 long bridges out of 27 bridges that will suspend the road above the murky ground usually flooded during the rainy season.
This has cheered Mongu and Kalabo residents who since time in memorial have depended on canoes and banana boats to travel to and fro.
Akakulubelwa Mubiana a Kalabo resident said he was confident that the current construction of the road whose design he said was a marvel would be a success.
A bridge erected on the Mongu-Kalabo road in the Barotse flood plain - lusakavoice.com

A bridge erected on the Mongu-Kalabo road in the Barotse flood plain – lusakavoice.com

Mr. Mubiana said earlier embarkments of the road in question failed due to poor material and quality, lack of control and poor design.

He said AVIC International took time to study the geographical area adding that the company also involved locals in getting firsthand information on the flooding pattern of the and hence the success in the first phase of the road.
Mr. Mubiana said the importance of the Mongu-Kalabo road cannot be over emphasized as it will not only link Kalabo to Mongu the provincial capital but will also create business opportunities for the entire province as it will open up the area to neighboring Angola
As the much talked about road is still under construction, the  people of Kalabo still have to use dug-out canoes or banana boats- or if not, pay an amount equivalent to someone travelling to Lusaka.
The situation on the ground is worse as teachers, Nurses among other civil servants from Kalabo have to pay K110, 000 as transport fares on Land Rovers to get to Mongu so that they get their salaries.
T.M

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Zambia is one of the countries with high prematurity case mortality rate

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Zambia has called for global efforts to promote cheap and cost-effective lifesaving interventions for premature babies to reduce infant mortality, especially in developing countries.

Zambia, United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the United Nations Foundation co-hosted the third World Prematurity Day, which took place on 17 November, in New York, under the theme: “Prevention and care of the preterm births and the every newborn action plan”.

Zambia’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador Dr Mwaba Kasese-Bota said prematurity was the leading cause of new born deaths, accounting for one million deaths per year, but remained a neglected problem.

Dr Kasese-Bota said evidence has showed that 75% birth prematurity attributable deaths can be prevented by simple proven and inexpensive treatments.

She told the gathering that Zambia is one of the countries with high incidences of prematurity and high prematurity case mortality rate.

Dr Kasese-Bota said to respond to this challenge, the government of Zambia has developed the new born framework for management of and guidance provision on newborns including prematurity

 

[Qfm]

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Despite copper wealth, Zambia still remains one of the world’s poorest nations

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Zambia is one of the world’s richest nations, as long as you measure wealth by natural resources.

The country in south-central Africa is the continent’s biggest copper producer. Mining companies have extracted nearly $30 billion worth of copper from Zambia in the past 10 years, a period of high prices for the metal.

So why is Zambia still one of the world’s poorest nations, with high unemployment and 64 percent of the people living in poverty? The answer, in part, is that Zambia privatized its mines 10 years ago to pay off part of its staggering debt.

Now, the mines are owned by multinational companies. And those foreign investors  have managed to avoid paying taxes on their profits. However, in recent months, the relatively new government has stepped up its efforts to force the mining companies to pay their fair share of taxes. But there’s a downside: the companies are threatening to cut thousands of jobs in retaliation.

To learn more, Global Journalist spoke to a Bloomberg News correspondent in Zambia’s capital, and a returned Peace Corps volunteer who’s worked in the country.

Panelists:

Matthew Hill covers Zambia for Bloomberg News.

Andrew Fritz is a returned Peace Corps volunteer who now is a masters student at MU.

 

[SOURCE]

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Tribal conflicts in Zambezi worry government

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Government is saddened that tribal conflicts in Zambezi District of North Western Province are being passed on to the young generation.

Education, Science, Vocational Training and Early Education Deputy Minister Patrick Ngoma says it is unfortunate that the current confusion between the Luvale and Lunda speaking people has been extended to schools thereby affecting the school curriculum in the area.

Mr. Ngoma has expressed concern that the tribal conflicts have reached an extent were the two tribes are fighting over which language the pupils should use in schools.

He says he tried to liaise with the two traditional leaders Senior Chief Ndungu and Chief Ishindi in order to find a solution to the tribal conflict but to no avail.

Mr. Ngoma has since advised Teachers to refrain from showing pupils that they belong to a certain tribe in order to avoid disturbing pupils in class thereby affecting their curriculum.

[qfm]

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Hologram project not a flop – Kapeya

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Information and Broadcasting Services Minister Mwansa Kapeya has dismissed assertions suggesting that the Hologram project for compact audio and video articles is a flop.

The Zambia Association of Musicians (ZAM) had recently has described the introduction of holograms in Zambia as a flop pointing out that piracy is still rampant.

Mr. Kapeya has however told Qfm in a telephone interview that people claiming that the project is a flop are doing so because they have lagged behind in understanding the benefits that have come with the introduction of the hologram.

Mr. Kapeya says government is happy with the implementation of the hologram project so far and that stakeholders in the music industry are equally happy.

Mr. Kapeya says the Zambia police have been going round across the country confiscating pirated DVDs and CDs that do not have holograms.

 

qfm

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Zambia joins a CARE International UK microfinance initiative

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There is a group of women in a remote part of Zambia who know first-hand the benefits of microfinance

There is a group of women in a remote part of Zambia who know first-hand the benefits of microfinance

Making loans to entrepreneurs working together is a great way to help low-income communities

Lendwithcare, an initiative launched by CARE International UK and supported by The Co-operative, now allows supporters to make loans to groups of small-scale entrepreneurs so they can feed their families, send their children to school and pay for healthcare.

There is a group of women in a remote part of Zambia who know first-hand the benefits of microfinance. Women like Anna Mphande, 64, who is married, and has five children and three grandchildren. Anna’s business is the rearing of chickens – and it is a business that is really taking off.

Anna is a member of an all-women organisation – Tiyamike group – that has taken out Lendwithcare’s first group loan. Group loans are a great way to advance the economic growth of a community, empowering its members and supporting community economic and social development.

Zambia is the latest country to join Lendwithcare, a microfinance initiative from international development charity CARE International UK. It enables people in the UK to lend small amounts of money to entrepreneurs running their own businesses in poor communities around the world. As a lender, you can choose the person or group you would like to help and you will see your supported entrepreneur(s) work their way out of poverty. 100% of the loan goes to the entrepreneur(s).

The Tiyamike group is made up of 17 women entrepreneurs aged between 18 and 65. They live in Kaluba village, in the Lundazi district – a remote community in the east of Zambia on the border with Malawi.

Members of the group have various ways of making money, including selling secondhand clothes and shoes, peanuts, small freshwater fish called kapenta, beans, rice and other foodstuffs.

Why group loans work
Group loans provide a way for low-income communities to approach a microfinance organisation. In many cases, the customers have never approached a lending institution or commercial bank before. This is particularly true for women living in rural areas.

In group loans, the members take joint responsibility for the repayments and support each other when necessary in order to keep a good collective credit record. They are more likely than individual borrowers to get a loan, as they all act as guarantors for each other.

There are other advantages too: the members organise themselves, plan together and follow up on payments and consecutive loans. They develop important skills such as organisation, teamwork and time-management. The fact that they take a risk together and meet regularly also enables the groups to develop a strong bond.

The MicroLoan Foundation, Lendwithcare’s partner in Zambia, works with groups of women. It has seen how providing microfinance services to groups has enabled their participants to work their own way out of poverty, helping to feed families, send children to school and pay for healthcare.

Creditworthy
The Tiyamike Group took out their first loan of $1,283 in 2012. They are now applying for their fourth loan so they can buy more products to sell. The group members have noticed increased profits and most of them have been able to send their children to school. Some of the group are even building houses.

For her chicken-rearing business, Anna Mphande took out her first loan of $96 from MicroLoan Foundation in 2012. She started her business with little capital but, with the help of these loans, it has grown consistently. With her increased profits, Anna has been able to send her eldest child to college, and two of her other children to secondary school.

Anna is now applying for another loan to purchase more chickens to sell and more chicken feed to keep them fat and healthy. She is confident that increasing the quantity and quality of chickens she rears will mean that her business profits rise, and her standard of living will improve further.
To find out more about Lendwithcare, or to buy a voucher to send as a Christmas gift to your friends and family, go to lendwithcare.org

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AfDB to support Job Creation in Zambia with US$ 33.6 Million Loan

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AfDB to Support Skills Development for Job Creation in Zambia with US$ 33.6 Million Loan

The African Development Bank issued the following news release: The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank Group (AfDB) on 20 November 2013 in Tunis approved a loan of UA 22.22 million or US $33.6 million from African Development Fund (ADF) concessionary resources to finance the Support to Science and Technology Education Project (SSTEP) in Zambia . The project is designed to support Zambian government’s commitment to improve the quality and relevance of skills development in Zambia for job creation and employability of graduates. Making the presentation to the Board of Directors, the project team led by Boukary Savadogo , manager of the Division of Education , Science & Technology said the project will play a critical role in promoting human capital development in the country by enhancing its competitiveness in the global economy through improved employability of graduates in general and the youth in particular. “The project is in line with the Zambian government’s Revised Sixth National Development Plan 2013-2016, as well as the Bank’s Ten Year Strategy for 2013-2022. It will have a direct impact on increasing access to quality higher education and skills development particularly for girls and women in rural areas,” Savadogo underscored. The Board of Directors expressed satisfaction with the gender, inclusive growth and job creation aspects of the project in line with the Bank’s New Education Model in Africa (NEMA) under the Human Capital Strategy.

 

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Jobs for Zambia’s next generation

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Alice Kalumbu (left) in her tailoring shop in Lusaka. Photograph: Francois d'Elbee

Alice Kalumbu (left) in her tailoring shop in Lusaka. Photograph: Francois d’Elbee

With employment prospects failing to keep up with demand, it’s up to young people to make their own opportunities.

In the roadside village of Chongwe, the door to one hut stands apart from the others – an exasperated demand of “WHY ME?!!” is scrawled across its corrugated-iron surface, a scar of anger and dark-green paint.

The young resident, Desire Sibanda, recalls with embarrassment the desperation that compelled him to express his feelings in such a way. “Life was difficult,” he says. “I asked myself: ‘There are many rich people passing by with their expensive cars. Why wasn’t I born to a president? There are many people, why me?’”

Sibanda, 17, an orphan, lives with his elderly grandfather, who is almost completely blind. He wants to finish his schooling, but cannot find adequate employment to cover his fees. Odd jobs around the village, 60km outside the capital, Lusaka, may be poorly paid and physically demanding but are a necessary source of income for him.

Youth unemployment is a serious global concern. The International Labour Organisation (ILO) estimates that as many as 73 million young people will be unemployed by the end of 2013. This is an alarming figure for the developing world, where 90% of the global youth population resides, and for Zambia in particular, which currently has its highest-ever number of young people.

A scarred generation

Zachary Mulenga, 27, who worked in a shop for five years, found himself without any prospects when his contract ended. Unable to pay rent, he lives with an aunt and prays each morning before searching for work. “There are no jobs,” he mutters sadly, “because I’ve been looking.”

According to the United Nations, this persistent cycle of unemployment overshadows the strong economic growth that Zambia has experienced in recent years and threatens to leave a “scarring” effect on the young. The United Nations in Zambia’s recent paper, The Condition of Young People in Zambia, describes how job creation is becoming one of the most pressing development priorities. Approximately one million new jobs will be needed every year for the next decade in order to keep up with youth population growth rates.

Annie Sampa, child rights officer for Unicef Zambia, explains that job creation is a long process, requiring patience, but says that, “during that gap, youths need to survive. They can’t wait.”

In an attempt to fill this gap, Unicef and Barclays entered into a partnership and created the Building Young Futures initiative in 2008. The programme, now in its second phase, delivers business training to young people across six countries. It teaches all aspects of starting up a business, including financial discipline, networking and marketing. In addition, many of the young people involved receive mentoring and startup capital, and are encouraged to open bank accounts.

In Zambia, the training is delivered by local Barclays volunteers and a range of instructors countrywide. They are aided to extend the programme’s reach by several implementing partners, including various government ministries, the Zambia Development Agency, and local NGOs such as Africa Directions and the Trauma Healing Centre.

Isabel Kachinda, 29, runs a tailoring shop in Lusaka’s bustling Bwafwano market. At 21, she started her business from scratch with only a sewing machine donated by her father and a spool of black cotton, costing one kwacha (roughly 12p). She remembers her first customer fondly, having made her a skirt, and remarks, “on that first day, I knocked off with seven kwacha!” Since then, her business and its client list have grown dramatically.

After receiving her Building Young Futures training in 2008, Kachinda noted huge improvements to her business model, and has realised her entrepreneurial ambition to train prospective tailors. Having recently graduated from a teaching methodology course, she laughs as she muses, “The next time when you come here, you will find me at my own training institute. It will be very difficult to see me, because the first people you will find will be the students! I am very positive on that. I will do it.”

 

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Zambian ambassador to Azerbaijani presents his credentials to President Ilham Aliyev

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Frederick Shumba Hapunda

Frederick Shumba Hapunda

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev received the credentials of newly appointed ambassadors of Republic of Guinea and Zambia Mohamed Keita and Frederick Shumba Hapundy.

After the presentation of credentials President Ilham Aliyev talked to the Guinean diplomat, during which the head of state noted the high interest and great potential for development of relations between the two countries, stressing that the current level of relations is not at the desired level.

The Azerbaijani leader expressed confidence about the successful activity of the Ambassador of Guinea in the sphere of establishing relations with the relevant structures of the republic .

The diplomat, in turn, congratulated Ilham Aliyev on his reelection as President and expressed his country’s interest in deepening ties with Azerbaijan.

During the meeting with President Ilham Aliyev, Ambassador of Zambia diplomat conveyed the best wishes of the Zambian leader Michael Sata.

The Ambassador expressed his interest in the development of Zambia’s relations with Azerbaijan in the fields of tourism, industry, energy and others. He also noted the close cooperation between the two countries in the UN and other international organizations.

President Ilham Aliyev noted the importance of exploring the possibilities of development of bilateral relations in various fields, stressed the importance of active cooperation of Zambia and Azerbaijan within the UN. The President expressed hope for further development of relations between the two countries in the period of activity of the ambassador to Azerbaijan.

 

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Zambia Central Bank Sees Kwacha Rebounding From 2009 Lows

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Zambia’s central bank said the drop in the kwacha to near the weakest levels in 4 1/2 years against the dollar is temporary and that the currency of Africa’s largest copper producer is set to rebound.

The kwacha will be in “equilibrium” at a rate of 5.30 to 5.40 per dollar, Emmanuel Pamu, financial markets director at the central bank, said in an interview in Lusaka yesterday. The kwacha has retreated 4.1 percent over the past month, falling to 5.56 per dollar on Nov. 19, the lowest close since May 2009. It was unchanged at 5.5050 per dollar as of 7:17 a.m. in Lusaka, the capital, after declining 0.2 percent yesterday.

The currency’s slide is a “random walk,” Pamu said. “It doesn’t concern us too much. We expect some correction.”

African currencies from the Kenyan shilling and Nigerian naira to the South African rand and Malawi kwacha have weakened against the dollar this year partly as the Federal Reserveconsiders an end to stimulus that drove demand for emerging-market assets. A 12 percent decrease this year in the price of copper, which accounted for 82 percent of Zambian exports in September, has compounded the kwacha’s fall, Pamu said.

Fitch Ratings last month lowered Zambia one step to B, five levels below investment grade andStandard & Poor’s downgraded its outlook to negative, retaining its B+ rating. Yields on the nation’s $750 million of bonds have climbed 224 basis points, or 2.24 percentage points, to 7.4 percent since being issued in September 2012 compared with an average 133 basis-point increase for dollar-denominated African debt, JPMorgan Chase & Co. indexes show.

Deficit Swells

The nation’s budget deficit is forecast to swell to 8.5 percent of gross domestic product this year, compared with an earlier estimate of 4.3 percent, as funding needs are pushed higher bygovernment spending on wages and subsidies. A weaker currency pushes up prices in the land-locked nation that imports everything from oil to breakfast cereal.

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