Hailstorm destroys Chimanimani school

Property worth $4 000 was destroyed after a hailstorm ripped off the roof of two classroom blocks and teachers’ houses at Chayamiti Primary School in Chimanimani.

‘Victory boost for Man U’

MANCHESTER. – Manchester United defender Chris Smalling believes the 2-1 win over Chelsea was a big result for the club and breeds confidence within the squad.

Harare Sports Club pitch gets thumbs up

HARARE Sports Club grounds foreman Sam Matambanadzo says they are happy with the current state of the pitch which will host 2018 Cricket World Cup qualifiers starting from Sunday.

Prosecutors seek 30 years’ jail for ousted S. Korea president

SEOUL. – South Korean prosecutors yesterday demanded a 30-year-jail sentence for former president Park Geun-hye, sacked over a wide-ranging corruption scandal which exposed shady links between big business and politics and prompted massive street protests.

International rating agencies confident in Zambian economy: minister

LUSAKA. — The Zambian government said on Monday that the favourable rating by international rating agencies was a sign of growing confidence in the country’s economy.

Zinara bosses admit to irregular dipping

Zimbabwe National Roads Administration (Zinara) executives yesterday admitted to receiving several allowances without paying tax, including others that were above authorised levels.

Who is in and who is out: Ramaphosa’s Cabinet reshuffle

President Cyril Ramphosa announced significant changes to his Cabinet on Monday. 

ED’s first 100 days a huge success

President Mnangagwa’s first 100 days in office have been a huge success, with his administration setting the economy on a recovery trajectory.

Voters roll out by April: ZEC

The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) expects the provisional voters’ roll to be out by early April and is cleaning up the data collected during the registration blitz to weed out double registrants and ensuring the correct allocation of polling stations to prospective voters.

EDITORIAL COMMENT: Ex-president must not rewrite history

MANY Zimbabweans wished former President Robert Mugabe well when he retired near the end of November last year, under pressure from his own political party and hoped that not only would he have a dignified retirement, but that as passions cooled the record of his own legacy would highlight the successes of his long spell in power rather than the failures, and in a long public life there must be both.

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