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Many Zimbabweans might not be aware that the country has 13 million tonnes of proven gold reserves underneath it of which only 580 tonnes have been exploited since 1980, making it a country with the second largest gold reserves per square kilometre in the world.
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A visit to Domboshava over the long weekend yielded a surprising bit of news.
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No matter how one would want to look at it, the annual summit of southern African leaders which begins tomorrow will be momentous in more ways than one.
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There is nothing peculiar in challenging an election result in a court of law as that has been the tradition in many countries.
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Southern Africa is making progress towards creation of a multi-currency regional payment system, with the United States dollar expected to become the second currency of settlement after the South African rand.
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There is a lot of talk these days about the end of jobs and the decimation of traditional employment due to rapid technological change, the much-feared rise of the robots and the emergence of new and more insecure forms of work in the so-called gig economy.
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Street markets or roadside food markets have remained a permanent feature in most developing countries.
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Drug addiction is characterised by continued drug use despite harmful consequences. It is assumed that dysfunctional decision-making processes take centre stage to perpetuate this self-destructive behaviour.
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FOR almost five decades, the United States has guided the growth of the Internet. From its origins as a small Pentagon programme to its status as a global platform that connects more than half of the world’s population and tens of billions of devices, the Internet has long been an American project.
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In the past few weeks, a terrible disease triggered by the just-ended harmonised elections broke out in Harare and later on spread to other areas.
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President Mnangagwa has appealed to Zimbabweans to put election politics behind them and start working together to accelerate economic growth and development.
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TWO weeks ago, millions of Zimbabweans queued peacefully to cast their ballots in the freest and fairest election our country has ever experienced. That day we saw what Zimbabwe should and can be. The following Wednesday, we saw what it must not be.
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Now that an electoral dispute to the 2018 election has arisen, capturing the expectations of the whole nation, we are ready to witness the contribution of electoral litigation to constitutional democracy in Zimbabwe.
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“We got a letter from the mine telling us that the mine was going to close and my husband was to stop going to work with immediate effect.”
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Significant progress has been made by countries in southern Africa to harmonise their educational systems.
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