Tanzania says 19 years of mining fraud cost $84bn
NAIROBI. – Fraud in the mining sector since 1998 has cost Tanzania 75 billion euros ($84 billion), an investigating commission said Monday, blaming foreign companies failing to declare revenues.
Agric lenders urged to charge just 4pc interest
Livingstone Marufu Business Reporter GOVERNMENT has called on lenders to the agriculture sector to lower their interest rates to single digit figures as a way of making loans affordable to farmers.
Chiyangwa in tour
Petros Kausiyo Deputy Sports Editor ZIFA and COSAFA president Philip Chiyangwa left the country for Zambia yesterday to begin what is set to be a whirlwind tour that will take him…
‘Advocate and instructing attorney’: Hidden dangers
Sharon Hofisi Legal Letters The bench in Zimbabwe seems to have some judges who want to maintain the language of fission of the legal profession.
ZiMA calls for health insurance regulatory authority
Paidamoyo Chipunza Senior Reporter The Zimbabwe Medical Association (ZiMA) has called for speedy establishment of a regulatory authority for medical health insurance in Zimbabwe, saying insurers continue to defy existing rules…
Fake cop jailed 4 years
Court Reporter A criminal who teamed up with his accomplices and masqueraded as police officers to steal a Toyota Fortuner on the pretext that they were impounding the vehicle because…
Book exposes spiritual deceit
Beaven Tapureta Bookshelf Some of the reasons why Apostle John Shava’s book “The Battle for Altars” (2017, Days of My Youth Press, Harare) is really absorbing are the author’s in-depth knowledge…
CAPS run past Bantu
Grace Chingoma Senior Sports Reporter CAPS United . . . . . . . . . . . .(0)3 Bantu Rovers . . . . . . . . . .…
Hwange pays outstanding salaries
Business Reporters HWANGE Colliery Company Ltd has paid its workers part of their outstanding salaries in line with the Scheme of Arrangement, workers committee chairman Mr Garikai Sigauke said.
Indigenous knowledge systems: The missing link
Leroy Dzenga Features Writer Intellectuals have raised concerns that the indigenous Zimbabwean way of life is being lost as the elderly die. This is because the knowledge is transferred through word…











