CAPS secure clubhouse
Robson Sharuko and Eddie Chikamhi
CAPS United have secured a double storey property in the capital that the Green Machine intends to convert into a state-of-the-art clubhouse that will host the offices of the team’s management, coaching and medical staff. The property, located
Most Harare boreholes not safe, says expert

Paidamoyo Chipunza Health Reporter
MOST of the boreholes sunk in Harare’s high-density suburbs are susceptible to contamination from
No to illegal use of wetlands: Govt

Tsungirirai Dhambuza Herald Reporter
GOVERNMENT has warned that it will descend heavily on people who use wetlands illegally.
Textile, clothing firms warn Minister Biti
Herald Reporter
TEXTILE and clothing manufacturers have warned that Finance Minister Tendai Biti’s plans to slash import duty on fabrics and garments will lead to collapse of the industry. Minister Biti announced last Wednesday that he would review import duty
Civil servants reject rural allowance: Matibenga
Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter
Civil servants leaders rejected the re-introduction of the rural allowance which would have benefited more than 60 percent of those in the service, Public Service Minister Lucia Matibenga said yesterday. The minister lashed out at the Apex Council for
Mermaids stopping Govt work: Sipepa Nkomo
Herald Reporter
WATER Resources Development and Management Minister Samuel Sipepa Nkomo had a Senate Committee on Gender and Development in stitches when he alleged that mermaids were preventing Government officials from installing water pumps at
280 students off to SA varsities
Herald Reporters
TWO hundred and eighty students who qualified for the Presidential Scholarship Programme left for South Africa yesterday to study at 10 South African universities. The students, drawn from disadvantaged families, but academically gifted, were seen off
New Era to meet Bwititi’s repatriation costs

Herald Reporter
New Era newspaper has pledged to pay for the repatriation of the body of veteran journalist Makuwerere Bwititi who died in Namibia on Sunday. Bwititi, a former editor of Chronicle, Manica Post and Southern Times, was now working for the Namibian
Ruling on Mujuru inquest deferred
Innocent Ruwende Senior Reporter
THE magistrate presiding over the inquest into the death of General Solomon Mujuru says he will only consider the family’s request to bring in a foreign pathologist after the local expert who first examined the remains testifies in court.
The Mujuru family last week asked the court to call in a South African forensic expert to question the local pathologist.
The family said should questions arise, it might apply for the exhumation of the remains to enable the South African expert to conduct another examination.
However, in his ruling on the 10th day of the inquest at the Harare Magistrates’ Courts yesterday, magistrate Mr Walter Chikwanha, said it was his prerogative to subpoena witnesses.
“In pursuance of this mandate, I have already subpoenaed all the witnesses who I think are relevant. These witnesses subpoenaed include a pathologist who examined the body at the scene and at One Commando Barracks and is yet to testify,” he said.
He said the Mujuru family lawyer, Mr Thakor Kewada, was seeking a second opinion before the pathologist had given evidence.
“While I would not refuse the calling of other witnesses other than the ones I have subpoenaed, they should add value to the
Vote for AU commission chief ends in deadlock

ADDIS ABABA – A vote by African leaders for the head of their bloc’s executive ended in deadlock yesterday. Gabon’s Jean Ping, who has headed the African Union Commission since 2008 and was seeking a new term, was challenged by South Africa’s Home Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma.
Intense campaigns had preceded the vote and dominated the African Union summit in Addis Ababa, where leaders gathered to discuss broadening trade within Africa and tackle conflict hot spots.
“We went for an election and none of the two candidates emerged as a winner,” Zambian President Michael Sata said. “The next elections will be held in June.”
Deputy AU commission chief, Erastus Mwencha from Kenya, will step in until fresh polls are held during the next summit in Malawi.
Analysts say the vote for the AU agenda-setting position has exposed political fault lines between English-and French-speaking Africa, as well as between different geographic regions.
AU sources said the election was tight, with Ping holding a slender lead in three rounds of voting in which neither candidate obtained






