brace for a cold spell — Met Dept

By Tendai Rupapa
ZIMBABWEANS should brace for a severe cold spell from today up to Monday next week, with overnight ground temperatures

ZRP High clinch title

By Ellina Mhlanga
ZRP High School were crowned champions in the Under-16 netball tournament at Tomlinson Depot last Friday. The tournament

Bulldogs beat spirited St John’s

By Godknows Matarutse
CHURCHILL BULLDOGS barked their way to victory by upsetting a spirited St John’s College 22-18 in a curtain-raiser to the

Iran successfully testfires missiles

TEHRAN.
Iran announced yesterday that it “successfully” testfired 14 short-range, medium-range and long- range missiles on the

Rise in prince’s spending questioned

LONDON.
Prince Charles’ income from the taxpayer and spending on travel shot up last year, prompting demands from republicans for an

Lagarde first woman IMF chief

WASHINGTON.
France’s Christine Lagarde was named yesterday to be the first-ever female chief of the IMF, facing an immediate crisis as violent

Prosecutor sees Gaddafi endgame, China cautious

TRIPOLI.
The International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor said yesterday it could be “game over” within months for Muammar Gaddafi, but China reacted cautiously to the issuing of an arrest warrant for the Libyan leader on charges of crimes against humanity.

Space junk narrowly misses station

MOSCOW.
A piece of debris travelling thousands of miles an hour narrowly missed the International Space Station yesterday in a

Remote control killing: US’ new sport

By Stephen Lendman
DEFENCE contractor giants like Boeing, Lockeed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and others, as well as smaller rivals compete for growing demand for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). They include remote control operated killer drones, also called unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs).

It’s MDC-T that needs reform

IT’S an art that has been perfected by Western rabble-rousers and, it is hardly surprising to see Morgan Tsvangirai and his  MDC-T try to employ it here. It is the art of deception that was used to start wars in Vietnam, Iraq and now Libya.
After flying the kite for the firing of Zimbabwe’s war-tempered generals, a stunt MDC-T euphemistically calls ‘‘security sector reforms,” the party has decided to manufacture the need for such reforms. This agenda setting follows Zanu-PF and the Sadc facilitation team’s insistence that there won’t be any renegotiation of the GPA through the back door since ‘‘security sector” reforms were never part of the GPA.

The need to manufacture a reason for reforms explains the potshots Tsvangirai has been throwing at the country’s service

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