Be exemplary, cops told

Crime Reporter
POLICE Commissioner-General Augustine Chihuri yesterday said the force will remain vigilant to ensure the forthcoming Constitutional referendum and general elections are held peacefully. Speaking at a passout parade for 355 police officers in Harare, Comm-Gen Chihuri said  people should be

Africa needs a mental overhaul

Ojijo Pascal
A ONE paragraph, two sentence, four line and forty-four word letter was delivered to the vice chancellor of Makerere University in Uganda, who is also a member of Uganda Academy of Sciences, asking his office to convene a forum to debate the de-colonisation, and de-enslaving of the

Bev, Zoey freed

Hlatini Hlatini Herald Reporter
POLE dancers Beverley Sibanda and Zoey Sifelani were yesterday released from custody after spending the night in cells at Harare Central Police Station. The pair was arrested on allegations of public indecency on Wednesday afternoon. Police spokesperson Inspector Tadius Chibanda confirmed

Prosecutor rapes maid, court told

Senior Court Reporter
A CHINHOYI regional prosecutor allegedly raped his teenage maid twice after she turned down his love proposal. Admore Shekede (35) was not asked to plead when he appeared before regional magistrate Ms Adiona Masawi who remanded the matter to October 22 this year for trial. The complainant

Address women’s challenges now

Ruth Butaumocho Gender Forum
I was going through my e-mails last week, when I came across an auto-reply from a South African colleague, saying she was away from work for a week, as part of the Woman’s Month commemorations that were taking place in that country in August. Curious, what the hype was all about, I

Dahlia Noir now in Zim

Business Reporter
COSMETICS distributor Central African Distribution Company says it will from next year be re-investing in the Givenchy Perfumes brand in Zimbabwe.
Cadco director Mr Greg Blanchfield said the company had experienced an upturn in sales since dollarisation of the economy in early 2009 and was now

A feast for the bush ants

Reflections Isdore Guvamombe
Back in the village, in the land of milk, honey and dust or Guruve, it is accepted that education is useful when one eventually plunges into the undergrowth of survival in a world of westernisation, mythology and ritual, of symbolism and belief. As each one of us picks his or her way between

No to hypocrisy, West told

From Caesar Zvayi at the UNITED NATIONS, New York
PRESIDENT Mugabe says the west­ern world should condemn the cold-blooded murder of former Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi with the same contempt and plati­tudes it displayed in the wake of the killing of Chris Stevens, who was the US ambassador to Libya, earlier this month.

Col Gaddafi was murdered in front of world cameras last October by Nato-backed rebels.
The US ambassador was killed in similar circumstances when the US embassy was stormed by Libyan rebels this month.
In his address to the General Assembly on Tuesday, US president Barack Obama made an impassioned address about the death of the US envoy, a refrain that was picked by many speakers drawn from the western block.

President Mugabe reminded the US leader that his country was a member of the same Nato that killed Col Gaddafi, and slammed the US and its allies for practising double standards.
“Mr President, may I begin my speech with reference to the most moving and glowing speech delivered by the US president yesterday. The import of which was to get us to condemn the death of the US ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens. I am sure we were all moved . . . I think we were all moved by that. It was a tragic death and we condemn it.

“But Mr President, about a year ago we saw the barbaric and brutal death of the head of state of Libya, a representative of his country and a member of the African Union.

“As we join the United States in condemning that death, shall the United States also join us in condemning the barbaric death of Gaddafi. It was a loss, great loss to Africa.

Elections set for March next year

Felex Share
Herald Reporter

HARMONISED elections will be held in the last week of March next year and the proclamation of the actual dates will be done in due course, Pres­ident Mugabe has said.

He said the referendum was expected in the first week of Novem­ber.
This came out in an urgent applica­tion which the Head of State and Gov­ernment and Commander-in-Chief of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces filed at the High Court yesterday seeking an extension of the deadline to proclaim dates for by-elections in three vacant constituencies.

“Accordingly, due to the unavailabil­ity of financial resources applicant is asking that the holding of the by-elec­tions be further extended to 31st March, 2013, the idea being to sub­sume the holding of the by-elections in the harmonised elections to be held in the last week of March 2013,” said President Mugabe in an application filed on his behalf by Justice and Legal Affairs Minister Patrick Chinamasa.

“The applicant’s desire is to hold the harmonised elections in the last week of March, 2013 and a proclamation to this effect will be made at the appro­priate time.” The High Court had given the  Pres­ident up to next Monday to announce dates for by-elections in Nkayi South, Bulilima East and Lupane.
This was after the President sought an extension of the initial deadline of August 30 by a month.

The constituencies fell vacant after the incumbents — Abednico Bhebhe (Nkayi South), Njabuliso Mguni (Lupane East) and Norman Mpofu (Bulilima East) — were fired by the MDC.

President Mugabe argued that Government did not have resources to fund the by-elections, referendum and harmonised elections within six months.

Diarrhoea outbreak forces school to close

Paidamoyo Chipunza
Health Reporter

ST DOMINICS Chishawasha Girls High School has been closed after a diarrhoea outbreak affected over half of the pupils.
When The Herald visited the school yesterday, parents were col­lecting their children.

No lessons were being conducted as most of the pupils had left.
“My daughter called this morning asking me to come and pick her up saying everyone else was going home. She just told me that there is a diarrhoea outbreak,” said a parent who declined to be named.

Pupils said the outbreak started last Thursday.
They said their affected colleagues were given medication from the school dispensary, but more children continued to exhibit the same symp­toms.
This resulted in school officials calling in health officials.

“The nurses who were called in recommended that the situation is not safe to keep us here since it might spread to other children, hence the decision to send us home,” said a pupil.

The pupil who has been suffering from diarrhoea since Tuesday said she had no clue as to what could have caused the outbreak.

“I started having diarrhoea on Tuesday evening and it got worse yesterday evening. I was also vomit­ing badly. Today, I am no longer vomiting or having diarrhoea after taking some medication from the dispensary but I still have severe stomach cramps,” she said.

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