Fiscalised tax register price remains high
The price of installing fiscalised tax registers has not gone down despite Government having licensed more suppliers.
Hillary Clinton not contesting
WASHINGTON. – US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made an unannounced visit to Tripoli yesterday. During her visit she
Prince Johnson to back Sirleaf in Liberia run-off?
MONROVIA. -Liberia’s notorious former warlord Prince Johnson, who placed a strong third in presidential polls, said yesterday he
Thousands celebrate freed Palestinian prisoners
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip. – Tens of thousands of flag-waving Palestinians celebrated the home-coming yesterday of hundreds
Machel’s death: More questions than answers
Atop a hill on the border that joins Mozambique, Swaziland and South Africa, 35 steel tubes mark the site where Samora
MultiPolarity: To be or not to be is the question
Hugo Chávez Frías
Peace, peace, peace . . . We do not look for the peace of the cemetery, as said Kant ironically, but a peace based on the
Demystifying GMOs
Jetwell Mugabe
A big chicken that grows up to two metres”, one teenager answered after he was asked what a Genetically Modified Organism
Reggae: It’s a unity tool
Knowledge Mushohwe
The euphoric reception accorded to Cocoa Tea when he performed last Saturday in Harare could have caught the Jamaican
It’s payback time for MDC-T to its Western handlers
IF there is anything that proves beyond doubt that the Inclusive Government is not working as one unit it is the recent
The bird that borrowed plumage

Aesop, a slave and storyteller believed to have lived in ancient Greece, has a collection of fables that prove invaluable for the moral education of children, and even adults to this day.
Many of the stories, such as The Boy Who Cried Wolf, the Goose That Laid The Golden Eggs and The Ant and the Grasshopper are so well-known that they have spawned clichés.
In three of the fables, the raven or crow is a central character, embodying flippancy or stupidity.
One tale has it starving while waiting for figs on a fig tree to ripen, while in another it was so vain that it sought to become king of the birds on the strength of borrowed



