CAF reach out to ZIFA over crisis

THE Confederation of African Football have reached out to ZIFA to enquire about the Covid-19 crisis in the Warriors’ camp and the additional lockdown measures ahead of the national football team’s participation at this year’s Africa Nations Championship in Cameroon.

Time to rethink the definition of an employee in Zimbabwe

The world of work is changing and digitisation is fuelling such change.

Council putting lives at risk

Harare is Zimbabwe’s biggest city, home to one in 10 citizens, and Harare City Council is the country’s largest local government authority with easily the biggest budget funded by the largest flow of revenue from rates and fees.

Covid-19 a thief, terrorist: Chipanga

As Zimbabwe reverts to total lockdown as part of measures to flatten the curve of Covid-19 infections from today, gifted lyricists Hosiah Chipanga has likened the pandemic to a thief or a terrorist who inflicts pain on his victims.

Transportation, selling of produce to continue

There will be no disruptions to the movement of agricultural produce from farms to markets as all registered agricultural markets remain operational during the prescribed hours of a level lockdown while vehicles carrying agricultural produce are allowed passage at all roadblocks and Covid-19 check points.

More Pfumvudza inputs on way

Farmers in Harare Province, who were registered, trained and whose plots were inspected by Agritex officers under the Pfumvudza programme, will get their inputs once fertiliser becomes available, Harare’s Provincial Development Coordinator Mr Tafadzwa Muguti has said.

Remdesivir and baricitinib shortened recovery time from COVID-19

Results from the ACTT-2 trial reveal that baricitinib combined with remdesivir reduced the recovery time of hospitalized COVID-19 patients from 8 to 7 days. The reduced recovery time was even more significant in patients requiring oxygen or ventilation.

Business has a big role to play in vaccinating the world

With the COVID-19 pandemic still raging and the prospect of a cold, socially distanced winter looming ahead, all of us are hoping that our jobs, businesses, schools and social lives will soon return to some semblance of normalcy. Universally, there’s the belief that the availability of a vaccine will break the spell and we can finally rid ourselves of our masks. But the last mile from ‘vaccine’ to ‘vaccination’ must be trekked before our world can truly start to become safe, and that journey is fraught with challenges.

Woman (65) killed in fight

A Harare man allegedly smashed a 65-year-old woman with a brick on the head several times, resulting in her death after she tried to restrain him from assaulting his girlfriend.

This is why we should test everyone for COVID-19

Many experts have recognized the merits of universal testing for COVID-19, arguing that the benefits outweigh the costs by a huge margin. To cite a few, Paul Romer, a Nobel laureate in economics, Michael Mina, an epidemiologist from Harvard University, the Safra Center for Ethics at Harvard University, our own IMF working paper, and many commentators have argued for a universal testing and isolation policy (TIP) to vanquish the pandemic and reopen economies safely.

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