Big corporates should contribute more to fight Covid-19
Big corporates in Zimbabwe should dig deeper in their pockets and contribute more towards the Government’s ongoing efforts to contain and stop the spread of Covid-19, Norton legislator, Temba Mliswa, has said
Coronavirus stops Bako in his tracks
THIS coming Saturday could have seen one of Zimbabwe’s top junior motocross riders Emmanuel Bako making his way back to South Africa to compete in the fourth round of the 2020 Inland Championship at ERORA track just outside Johannesburg.
30t pandemic cargo arrives
An Air Zimbabwe charter flight from China with 30 tonnes of Covid-19 supplies worth US$3 million landed at the Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport yesterday.
PSL clubs embrace lockdown extension
LOCAL Premiership clubs have come out in full support of the extended two-week national lockdown extension by the authorities on Sunday.
What most people do not understand about coronavirus
On Sunday, President Mnangagwa extended the Covid-19 national lockdown by a further two weeks to May 3.
There will be life after Covid-19
THE bulk of humanity’s day-to-day activities might have literally come to a screeching halt globally owing to the punishing effects of coronavirus, but the inevitable reality is that there will always be life after the pandemic.
Be compassionate Zimbabweans
Every day we have seen our first-line responders like our healthcare workers and others, sacrificing their lives to care for us.
Gender inequality, housing
There is a reckless assumption that gender is synonymous with women, and that all gender initiatives are women-centric.
Changing outcomes through people-oriented health policies
The attainment of Independence in 1980 brought more than majority rule to Zimbabweans, as it also saw citizens’ access to healthcare facilities and ancillary services improved on through Government’s commitment to the provision of social security to the previously marginalised black people.
Oil falls as stocks fill
Oil prices fell yesterday, depressed by concerns US storage facilities will soon be full as the novel coronavirus pandemic destroys demand and as companies prepare to report their worst quarterly earnings since the 2008 financial crisis.











