Toilet bars, Harare must do something

PLAYERS aka Big Bite, one of the dingiest bars in Harare’s central business district (CBD), has come under stiff competition from its equally grubby neighbour down the road where Harare’s elite used to go for some classic jazz music.

ZRU retains Jani

TWO years after he successfully steadied a turbulent ship, Aaron Jani has been rewarded with the stewardship of the Zimbabwe Rugby Union and will officially be handed a fresh mandate at their annual meeting at Prince Edward School in Harare this morning.

Coronavirus Myths

In an age that is largely dominated by social media, disinformation has generally fed to some myths around coronavirus.

Below, the World Health Organisation debunks some of the largely circulated myths.

Ingwebu flows into the market

Dumisani Nsingo, Senior Business Reporter BULAWAYO Municipal Commercial Undertaking (BMCU)’s beverages manufacturing unit, Ingwebu Breweries has expressed satisfaction on the performance of its two re-launched non-alcoholic and alcoholic products as it…

Surviving at the war front

Our reporter Norman Muchemwa (NM)continues to chronicle the political life of Cde Isaac Muguti Chivendera (IMC), whose nom de guerre was Cde Busy Nyuchi Dzinoruma. This week, the former fighter narrates his encounter in the war front.

Independence opened doors for sports stars

Lovemore Dube  REPRESENTING Zimbabwe at the 1980 Moscow Olympics will always remain Shaky Toendepi  Nyathi’s highest sporting highlight in a career that saw him travel the width and breath of…

The mysterious clay pots of Great Zimbabwe

The mystique of the Great Zimbabwe monument is one of the alluring qualities of the world heritage site.

Scholars and historians have always engaged in heated and fierce debate about legends associated with the monument.

Bulawayo City Council fails to account for 600 properties

Vusumuzi Dube, Senior Municipal Reporter MORE than 600 non-residential properties belonging to the Bulawayo City Council are not captured in the local authority’s inventory, raising fears that some bigwigs were taking…

Reliving the Tsimbas’ legacy

HE holds the distinction of being one of the three blacks ever inducted into the World Rugby Hall of Fame.

The other two  — Richard Tsimba, Zimbabwe’s first black player at the World Cup, and former South African president Nelson Mandela — are both late and so in a way, it is a singular distinction of sorts.

TIMB projects 20pc fall in tobacco output

Zimbabwe is this year projecting to register a “slight” decline in tobacco output due to the late onset of the rainy season and a drought spell experienced in December.

Tobacco, which employees more than 60 percent of the agricultural workforce, earns the country about US$1 billion annually.

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