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Christopher Farai Charamba The Reader Facebook has this feature, memories, where it reminds of your posts from time gone by. Those who are frequent users of the social media application might be familiar with these flash- backs.
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THE Zimbabwe Warriors left Harare yesterday for Namibia, to begin another qualifying campaign for a place at the African Championship of Nations (CHAN) finals, buoyed by their brilliant performance at the COSAFA Castle Cup which helped us win that tournament for a record fifth time.
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Zimbabwe is hurtling towards elections and it’s getting exciting, as usual.
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Patrick Chitumba Midlands Bureau Chief “There is a stranger in my homestead and I don’t want her. She must leave at once or I will kill Urayayi. The person I want in my homestead is the daughter to my brother, Linda. She must be married to Urayayi,” shrieks a young woman in the middle of a […]
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Bishop B. Manjoro Dunamis The year 2017 is a year of restoration. Whatever the enemy had stolen, the joy, the peace the prosperity we are in a season of restoration!
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THE INTERVIEW Christopher Farai Charamba CC: There is this ban on kaylite which has been imposed and one of the reactions from people is that it has come at short notice. Going by that, why has this ban suddenly been put forward?
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Edna Molewa Correspondent The decision by the Pre-Trial chamber of the International Criminal Court (ICC) two week’s ago that South Africa violated its legal obligations to the court in failing to arrest Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir in 2015; vindicates the ANC’s position that South Africa should withdraw from the ICC.
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TODAY is France’s National Day as the European country celebrates 228 years of the Storming of the Bastille during the French Revolution.
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Joram Nyathi Spectrum THE idea of the youth dividend is topical nowadays. It is in vogue. It is the talk of town from Europe to Africa. The focus among political parties in Zimbabwe is largely on the forthcoming harmonised elections.
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Joseph Ngwawi Correspondent Efforts to achieve energy security in southern Africa appear to be achieving results as the region continues on a positive trajectory that has seen it enjoying surplus electricity generation since the beginning of the year.
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Victoria Ruzvidzo In Focus On Wednesday, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Dr John Mangudya was raving mad as he lamented the failure by Zimbabweans to maximise on natural endowments, saying we were blaming cash shortages on wrong things, when it was poor production levels and attendant challenges that were causing the current liquidity constraints.
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Leroy Dzenga Features Writer Extension worker shortage has been cited as a challenge bedevilling Zimbabwean farmers, especially those operating in communal areas.
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Collen Murahwa Features Correspondent Over the last few months, households in Zimbabwe have been affected by longer than usual power outages caused by transformer vandalism and component theft.
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Siji Jabbar Correspondent INCIDENTALLY, once you read this you’ll no longer wonder why French presidents and ministers are sometimes greeted by protests when they visit former French colonies in Africa, even if the protests are about other issues.
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John Pilger Correspondent WHEN I first went to Palestine as a young reporter in the 1960s, I stayed on a kibbutz.
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