Dance groups to pay tribute to Dhewa

Entertainment Reporter
THE Dancers’ Association of Zimbabwe will pay tribute to the late sungura musician, Tongai Moyo, when they host a dancers’

Christian reggae preaches word of God

Reggae music originated in Jamaica in the late 1960s and has since gained popularity with such artistes as Bob Marley, Peter

Jackson doctor found guilty of manslaughter

Los Angeles. – Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray was hauled off to jail in handcuffs last night as he was found guilty of

Sachin Tendulkar makes history

NEW DELHI. – Debutant Ravichandran Ashwin grabbed six wickets and Sachin Tendulkar completed 15 000 Test cricket runs to

Importance of contract farming

THE Food and Agriculture Organisation defines contract farming as agricultural production carried out according to an

When a community says yes!

Arthur Choga Features Writer
OUT of the early morning Rusitu Valley mist, steps a man – his shuffle betraying his age, though he is upright and his eyes

European debt crisis takes another twist

Prodigy Chinanga Money in Motion
THE euro eased losses against the dollar on concern that the European Investment Bank told European finance ministers it

Zim aims to regain gold association membership

Zimbabwe is aiming to regain membership of the London Bullion Market Association next year as gold production is steadily

‘Gay rights’ — we hear you PM

Tomorrow marks that tragic day in Zimbabwean history when in 1965 during this eleventh month (“the month of the goat  declared sacred by our people), on the eleventh day and eleventh hour, the renegade Rhodesian leader Ian Douglas Smith proclaimed the Unilateral Declaration of Independence.

History has since shown that Smith’s defiance was done on a day set aside to remember their kith and kin that fell in the 20th century’s two world wars.
With this unilateral act, he extended the quarrel started by his ancestors when they colonised Zimbabwe in 1890. This week, I look at a current issue in the context of UDI, and why it continues to be a devil in our

Designer changes perception on Chinese fashion

HONG KONG. – Like the rags she turned into clothes for her siblings in Hong Kong, Chinese-American designer Vivienne Tam

×
×