Olympics not the same without spectators
Dingilizwe Ntuli, Sports Editor COVID-19 has had a ravaging impact on every facet of life, forcing people to adapt to the ‘new normal’. Everyday life has been significantly altered by…
June 7, 1979 remains a talking point up to today
Isdore Guvamombe Saturday Lounge Reflections By 1978 Ian Smith’s Rhodesian regime had set up more than 200 such protected areas, the “Keeps” as a way to destroy interface between the…
Parents seek support for baby
A Bindura rural family in Nyakudya Village is seeking financial assistance for their one-month old baby born without a reproductive organ to undergo medical examination at Sally Mugabe Central Hospital in Harare.
Editorial Comment: While watching Olympics, resolve to get your jabs
The Tokyo Olympics, which opened last night, have one certain claim to fame: They will without doubt attract the largest television audience in history for a sporting event and bring…
Top academic Prof Kahari dies
Herald Reporter Veteran academic, nationalist and former Zimbabwean Ambassador to Germany, Professor George Kahari, has died. He died three days after turning 91. Prof Kahari died yesterday morning from Covid-19…
Covid-19 impact on journalism
Sukulwenkosi Dube-Matutu, Chronicle Reporter JOURNALISTS in the country have not been spared from the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic which has forced them to be innovative when it comes to…
Samuriwo hailed for black advancement
THE late liberation war hero Cde Charles “Salad” Samuriwo, who died on July 14 in South Africa aged 66, was buried yesterday in Mahusekwa, Mashonaland East Province.
Five feared dead after boat capsizes
At least one person drowned and another four are feared dead after a boat carrying eight people capsized on Lake Kariba yesterday.
Sanitary wear access, a nightmare for rural school girls
Andile Tshuma Access to sanitary wear has become a nightmare for many rural school girls in the country. Not only thinking about having enough water to stay clean and fresh…
UK deportees: Rapists, murderers leave trail of broken lives
Zimbabweans in the United Kingdom are divided on the deportations of their counterparts, mainly criminals living in that country who have served more than a year in prison.











