Don’t jeopardise Green Fuel project, says Arda

Tendai Mugabe Senior Reporter
Government’s proposed joint ven­ture in the Chisumbanje ethanol project should secure the value of the US$1,4 billion invested by the other partners, Agricultural Rural Development Authority board chairman Mr Basil Nyabadza has said.

Parliament adopts President’s speech

Herald Reporter
PARLIAMENT yesterday adopted the speech delivered by President Mugabe at the official opening of the Fourth Session of the Seventh Parliament last year. The motion was moved by Zvimba East representative Cde Patrick Zhuwawo.

Nato’s support for rebels exposed

Herald Reporter
NATO has been exposed for support­ing rebels and puppet regimes to kill their own people to justify foreign invasion in those countries. In a report published by a German newspaper, the Frankfurter Allge­meine Zeitung recently, Nato-backed rebels killed at least

Cabinet okays new youth policy

Kelvin Benjamin Herald Reporter
CABINET has approved a new youth policy setting 35 years as the maximum age limit for one to participate in youth activities. Youth Development, Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment Minister Saviour Kasukuwere revealed this yes­terday during the

Met Department warns of low temperatures

Herald Reporter
THE Meteorological Services Depart­ment has warned of predominantly low temperatures of at least minus 6 Degrees Celsius during the night in some parts of Zimbabwe until Mon­day next week. Senior Meteorological Officer Mr Jonathan Chifuna yesterday said

Ruling reserved in Zinara licensing case

Court Reporter
THE High Court has reserved ruling in a matter in which a human rights lawyer and motorist Ms Roselyn Hanzi is seeking to bar the Government from penalising motorists for failure to dis­play licence discs until end of June. Ms Hanzi, who was recently fined US$10

Zuma’s team meets minority parties

Herald Reporter
PRESIDENT Zuma’s facilitation team has conceded that small parties which are not part of the inclusive Govern­ment should participate in national processes such as the Constitution-making process. This follows a petition submitted to the South African embassy

Zesa staffer electrocuted

Herald Reporter
A Zimbabwe Rural Electrification Agency project co-ordinator was elec­trocuted while connecting a school to a power grid in Mutoko last week. The tragedy occurred at Tsinga Pri­mary School under Chief Mutoko where Xavier Revesai Katomari (48) was connecting power to the school.

Canada’s UNWTO pullout reasons false

Takunda Maodza Senior Reporter
CANADA quit the United Nations World Tourism Organisation before President Mugabe’s appointment as a special tourism ambassador, but went on to give a false claim for its pullout, it has emerged.
President Mugabe and his Zambian counterpart Michael Sata were appointed tourism ambassadors by the

UNWTO last month during the sign­ing of a trilateral agreement for the co-hosting of the general assembly in Vic­toria Falls next year.

Canada also owed the UNTWO close to US$400 000 in overdue sub­scriptions.
Foreign Minister John Baird told the Canadian House of Commons that the move to appoint President Mugabe a tourism ambassador was “outra­geous”.

Facts on the grounds, however, show Canada had long ceased to be a UNTWO member when it made the announcement.

Analysts believe the North Ameri­can state was only trying to be mischie­vous in citing President Mugabe’s appointment as the reason for its with­drawal.

A reliable Government source told The Herald yesterday that “Canada was making cheap political mileage”.
“The UNTWO communications chief Sandra Carvao said that Canada had formally tendered its withdrawal notice on 12 May 2011 in a letter not made public. Canada did not cite any reasons in that letter,” the source said.

Estimate bills to stay: Zesa

Lloyd Gumbo Herald Reporter
ZIMBABWEANS will continue pay­ing electricity bills based on estimates because Zesa Holdings says it cannot entirely bill them based on actual meter readings.
The power utility says it is expensive to deploy meter readers countrywide.

Zesa Holdings chief executive offi­cer Engineer Josh Chifamba told the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on State Enterprises and Parastatals Management yesterday that they would have to increase tariffs to achieve 100 percent meter reading.

Zvishavane-Runde legislator Cde Larry Mavima (Zanu-PF) chairs the committee.
“The committee was also informed that Zesa experienced challenges with the billing system in Harare and west­ern regions resulting in erroneous bills,” read the report that has been tabled in Parliament.
“The majority of citizens have endured the agony of receiving esti­mated bills most of the time.”

From public hearings the commit­tee conducted, it was revealed that there was no correlation between the charges and services rendered.

The committee said it emerged that consumers who had gone for days without electricity due to faults in their system continued to receive high bills every month.
“For example, one lady in Cowdray Park, Bulawayo, during one of the meetings stated that while she was away in South Africa for three months after having

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