$250m credit facility gazetted

Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter Government yesterday gazetted the $250 million credit facility from a United Kingdom-based firm, Gemcorp Capital, whose draw-down has already begun. Finance and Economic Development Minister Professor…

Inclusive education funding dilemma

Its break time, pupils are having cowpeas, they will have the peas again for lunch with sadza this time and the story goes on for dinner.

Charamba Church: The take away

Zimbabwe is awash with churches.

First Lady tackles malnutrition

First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa yesterday launched a supplementary feeding programme at Ntabazinduna Clinic in Matabeleland North where she donated several tonnes of corn-soya blend porridge to alleviate malnutrition among children.

Smart bus owner accepts blame for Rusape crash

Rumbidzayi Zinyuke Manicaland Bureau SMART Express Bus Company has provided $10 000 to assist families of the Rusape bus accident that claimed 46 lives on Wednesday this week, and left…

Govt removes duty on sanitary wear

Bulawayo Bureau GOVERNMENT has removed duty on sanitary wear, a move likely to be welcomed by women as the price of basic toiletries is now beyond the reach of many.…

Bread supplies improve

Elita Chikwati  Senior Agriculture Reporter Bread supplies have improved in most parts of the country due to increased flour supplies, the Grain Millers Association of Zimbabwe (GMAZ) has said. Over the…

Wine: Beverage known for its beneficial qualities

Wine is often described as one of the world’s most important beverages, with as many as 60 centuries of contribution to human enjoyment, and it’s also a beverage that has in recent years quite rightly been recognised for its beneficial qualities.

Police name Rusape accident victims

Nyemudzai Kakore Herald Correspondent Police yesterday named 36 of the 46 people who died when two buses side-swiped at the 166-kilometre peg along the Harare-Mutare Highway on Wednesday evening. The…

Laugh at disability when dead

Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage Minister Cain Mathema might not have been off the mark when he suggested earlier this week that state employees planning a demonstration over what they called “deteriorating conditions of service” could surreptitiously have been intent on regime change in Zimbabwe above all else.

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