Missing baby found dead

Micah Zinduru Correspondent
A 19-month-old baby girl that went missing in Masvingo on Christmas Day was yesterday found dead a few metres from the family house.

Second blitz on kombis, vendors in pipeline

Crime Reporter
POLICE yesterday said they are ready to embark on the second phase of the blitz on kombis and vendors following the success of the first phase undertaken in conjunction with Harare City Council.

Council seeks US$3million for water chemicals

Takunda Maodza Senior Reporter
CITY of Harare requires US$3 million per month for water treatment chemicals after Unicef cancelled a deal to provide the chemicals.

400kg diamond ore vanishes

Mutare Bureau
TEN daring armed robbers recently vanished with 400kg of concentrated diamond ore

Passport production stopped

Felex Share Herald Reporter
THE Registrar-General’s Office has stopped processing passports following an electrical fault caused by the power blackout that hit most parts of the country on Wednesday night.  The blackout damaged the processing system at Makombe Building.
Registrar-General Mr Tobaiwa Mu-dede yesterday said the suspension affe-cted passports and Temporary Travel Documents.
He said they were only processing urgent passports using “alternative means”.

This comes at a time when thousands of people, mainly those working in South Africa, are seeking to renew their passports and process their travelling documents before returning in the New Year. Some Zimbabweans are also seeking documents which will allow them to stay in South Africa legally.
“Following the blackout in the Harare Business District area last night (Wed-nesday) we have had an electrical problem affecting our system at Makombe Building. We do not know the cause yet,” said Mr Mudede.

“However, we have not completely shut down. We are using alternative means to process urgent passports only until the problem is rectified.”
Engineers were working “flat out” to rectify the fault.
The RG’s office was hit by the same problem, at the same time last year when it suspended the issuance of identification documents following another electrical fault at the KGVI production centre.

Welshman Ncube group engages in fictional politics

During the past two weeks, there has been a plethora of articles, comments and statements which appeared in the national newspapers, emanating from the Welshman Ncube led MDC group. In an effort to cover up the imminent collapse of their group, as is increasingly becoming evident, they have become so desperate that they are now engaging in fictional politics with a view to misleading the public and hope that they will win their sympathy.

Environment world review

The year 2011 was another ecologically tumultuous year with greenhouse gases rise to record levels, Arctic sea ice nearly equalling 2007’s record melt, and temperatures the 11th highest ever recorded.

2011: Tough year for ratepayers

Michael Chideme
People have different perceptions about the performance of Harare City Council for the year 2011. There are, however, prominent issues that all people are expected to agree on regardless of political and social persuasion.

Zanu-PF bombing probes still on

Freeman Razemba Crime Reporter
The Police Forensic Unit was still to submit reports to ascertain the cause of an explosion that rocked Zanu-PF provincial offices in Gweru on Tuesday night, shattering windowpanes in a suspected politically-motivated bo-mb attack.

Shamu mourns Prince Tendai

Herald Reporters
MEDIA, Information and Publicity Minister Webster Shamu has sent a condolence message to the Mupfurutsa family following the death of musician, philanthropist and businessman Tendai Mupfurutsa on Tuesday.  Mupfurutsa, who was known as Prince Tendai, succumbed to a motor neurone disease that affected his speech and mobility since last September.
“On behalf of the Zimbabwe Union of Musicians, the Ministry of Media, Information and Publicity, on behalf of my family, and on my own behalf, I convey our deepest condolence to the Mupfurutsa family and the entire music fraternity on this sad and tragic loss. May his soul rest in eternal peace,” Minister Shamu said.

He said the country had been robbed of an inspirational figure for “our young and upcoming musicians who are warriors in Zimbabwe’s fight against western cultural imperialism”.
Minister Shamu said like the Jamai-cans who developed and sustained their own distinctive internationally renowned reggae sound, Mupfurutsa understood that as capitalism spread across the world, Western imperialism had been undermining the indi-genous cultures of developing countries.

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