Limpopo strikers reject Malema’s ‘friend’

Polokwane — Cosatu supporters refused to be addressed by a Limpopo ANC representative in Polokwane on Wednesday, calling him a friend of youth league leader Julius Malema.

Annan urges end to Syria violence, calls for talks

BEIRUT — Kofi Annan, the UN-Arab League special envoy on Syria, said yesterday he would urge President Bashar al-Assad and his foes to stop fighting and seek a political solution to end a year of conflict.

Zim third most favoured investment destination

Zimbabwe has been ranked the third most favoured investment market on the continent over the next three years behind Nigeria and Kenya.
According to results of the Institutional Investor Intentions survey to 2016 which an Abu Dhabi investment company, the Economic Intelligence Unit, conducted recently, Zimbabwe garnered 35 percent while second-placed Kenya had 48 percent and Nigeria had 51 percent.

President blasts homosexuality

Chronicle Reporter
President Mugabe yesterday blasted homosexuality as anathema to humanity and promiscuous men for fuelling the Aids  pandemic.
“Who has the power to make a woman a man and a man a woman?” he asked to a round of applause during the chiefs conference.

Intwasa invites participants

Entertainment Reporter
Intwasa Arts Festival koBulawayo, one of the biggest arts gatherings in Zimbabwe, is calling for participants for the eighth edition of the festival.
Festival director Raisedon Baya said Intwasa 2012 will take place from 18 to 22 September and will run under the theme “Blooming”.

Mpilo Central Hospital employees’ trial postponed again

Court Reporter
THE trial of two Mpilo Central Hospital employees who are facing charges of fraud involving R200 000 which was scheduled for Tuesday was once again postponed to next month.

Sandra lands role in The Nyaminyami

Raunchy dancer and theatre actress Sandra Ndebele is set to star in Cont Mhlanga’s upcoming drama called The Nyaminyami.
This follows her impressive act during the auditions recently held at Amakhosi Cultural Centre.

‘No going back on elections’

By Kennedy Mavhumashava
PARTIES in the inclusive Government did not sign the Global Political Agreement for a new Constitution, but to pave way for an undisputed election result, President Mugabe has said.

Addressing the belated 2011 Annual Chiefs’ Conference at the Large City Hall here yesterday, the President said the parties wanted to deal with issues of alleged violence in the 2008 elections.
“The quarrel that led us into the Global Political Agreement was not about the Constitution, but it was about allegations of violence in the elections in 2008. Our neighbours were saying there was a lot of violence during the elections and we should have another election without violence,” he said.

The Head of State and Government and Commander-in-Chief of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces said Sadc and the African Union urged the parties to hold elections without violence.
“It was never the issue of the Constitution, no, no, no but another election without violence and not the Constitution,” he said.

President Mugabe said Zanu-PF wanted to go for elections using the Kariba Draft as the basis of the new Constitution.

Chiefs demand to be resettled on farms

By Prosper Ndlovu
AT least 80 percent of the 270 chiefs from the country’s 10 provinces have not benefited from the land reform programme, Chiefs’ Council president Chief Fortune Charumbira said yesterday.

Delivering his speech during the ongoing Annual Chiefs’ Conference in Bulawayo, Chief Charumbira said the matter was a cause for concern and said the Government should look into it urgently and ensure that chiefs also benefit.
President Mugabe officially opened the conference yesterday.

“Your Excellency, you have given us the land to cultivate and we applaud that. But 80 percent of the chiefs here do not have the land,” said Chief Charumbira, asking chiefs who did not benefit from the land reform programme to stand up.

NGOs hail Marange diamond firms

From Temba Dube in Marange
MEMBERS of civil society yesterday called for the immediate lifting of sanctions on diamond mining companies at Marange in Manicaland Province after being impressed by the developments the firms have brought in the area.

The group, drawn from about eight organisations, was on a two-day tour aimed at promoting an understanding of the mining process.
The group had hitherto been calling for increased sanctions on the four companies, citing human rights abuses at the mines.

However, after touring the mines and seeing the modern houses that the companies, Mbada Diamonds, Diamond Mining Corporation, Marange Resources and Anjin had built to resettle people who were displaced by the establishment of the mines, they called on other mining companies in the country and the rest of Africa to emulate the diamond mining companies.

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