IF we were to ask Zimbabweans to name just one thing they would want fixed first in the economy, they would without doubt tell you they need a stable currency to use for their day-to-day transactions.
THE United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF Zimbabwe), in collaboration with local writers, photographers and graphic designers has developed 16 story-books for children under the age of six.
AS a child, the ultimate treat was a day out to Knowsley Safari Park, a mere mile from my Merseyside home. However, it being the 70s and us not having a car, we would have to wait for four-wheeled visitors to take us.
PROVERBS 25:14 in the Bible says, “Like clouds and wind without rain is one who boasts gifts never given”, while in Jude 1:12 the Lord bemoans: “These people are blemishes at your love feasts . . . They are clouds without rain, blown along by the wind; autumn trees, without fruit and uprooted — twice dead.”
Access to information is a key ingredient in achieving democracy in any polity. The right to information is a universally acknowledged virtue and Zimbabwe’s Constitution recognises this sacrosanct value whereby citizens have the right to receive and impart information.
The Government’s economic reform programme, expressed through the Transitional Stabilisation Programme (TSP) and fleshed out in the 2019 Budget Statement, is already working rather well with Minister of Finance and Economic Development Prof Mthuli Ncube able to give concrete examples this week.
The business of journalism is to uncover the truth, while being fair and balanced in seeking the truth, Minister Counsellor for Public Affairs, US Embassy, Craig Dicker told over 100 journalists who were attending the Business of Truth Forum in Johannesburg, South Africa last week.
This week Minister of Higher and Tertiary, Science and Technology Development, Professor Amon Murwira said that the ministry was abandoning the mass production of graduates and focusing on producing quality.
As Zimbabwe joins the rest of the World to commemorate World AIDs Day today, the first religious figure to go public on his HIV status in Zimbabwe speaks about the power of antiretroviral and how it changed his life.
THE recent ruling by FIFA ordering financially-troubled local football giants Dynamos to pay compensation to Cameroonian player Christian Joel Epoupa for alleged breach of contract must not be treated in isolation, but should serve as a big lesson to all Zimbabwean sports entities.
Israel is really pushing hard to become an African Union (AU) member, with a recent call on the Ghanaian government to back its bid for an observer status, a position it lost in 2002 when the former Organisation of African Union (OAU) was dissolved and replaced by the AU.
It is time MDC-Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa realises that there are certain things which he cannot change and the best way is to leave such issues lying low for now.
Zimbabwe’s capital Harare, has been going through a crisis of managing and accommodating vendors who, in their hundreds, had literally taken over pavements in the central business district -- until recently.
Pharmacies in Zimbabwe have since a month ago introduced a three-tier pricing system, with drugs selling in US dollars or an equivalent, according to the black market prevailing rates. The whole process seemed unfair, wicked and self-enriching at the expense of the patient’s life.