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Opinion Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu An article on the history of Bulawayo published by this newspaper on May 31, 2014 generated so much interest that by 10PM on June 1, the author had received a dozen telephone calls one of which was from the city’s first black mayor, Cde Naison Khutshwekhaya Ndlovu. In addition to
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SOME 120 years ago, Cecil John Rhodes’s company, the British South Africa Chartered Company (BSAC) began pegging out stands and laying out streets and avenues in what we would call modern Bulawayo.
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Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu THE Nigerian Moslemic, anti-western education organisation, Boko Haram, has brutally established a reign of terror in some parts of Africa’s most densely populated country in the last couple of months.
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Opinion Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu QUESTIONS have been asked by predominantly people who grew up in Zimbabwe after it became independent about why thousands of this country’s black people had to fight for Zimbabwe’s freedom.
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Opinion Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu A couple of weeks ago, a so-called pastor of one of Bulawayo’s Pentecostal churches, Dennis Hungwe, claimed to have successfully prayed for a miraculous recharging of pre-paid electricity for some people who had gone to him for prayers.
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Opinion By Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu The European Union’s decision to impose sanctions on Russia and on about 20 of its government officials instead of launching a military campaign against that Slavic country for allegedly occupying the Crimea in the troubled Ukraine has averted the possibility of a Third Word War. A recent coup in the […]
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Opinion Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu Bulawayo-based Pastor Chiza’s prediction that the Zimbabwe soccer team, the Warriors, would win three-nil against Libya caused quite a bit of hullabaloo after the national squad lost through a penalty shoot-out in Bloemfontein, South Africa, recently.
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Saul Gwakuba l Continued from last Saturday Tanzania comprises two countries, former Tanganyika which was a British mandated territory and became independent on December 9, 1961, and the Indian Ocean island originally called Zanzibar, formerly administered by Britain until December 10, 1963, when it became a sovereign state. On January12, 1964, revolutionary forces overthrew the […]
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Opinion Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu Continued from last Saturday Nigeria’s most important trading partners are the European Union, especially Britain and Germany. It also trades with virtually all the Ecowas members, it being a prominent Ecowas member itself. Its founding president, Alhaji Sir Ahmed Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto, and
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Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu Continued from last Saturday The Gambia is an 11,295sq km of land stretching inland for some 480km on both sides of the Gambia River. The country has no known mineral deposits.
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Opinion By Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu Tree-planting is an important annual ecological activity in Zimbabwe, and involves many senior government officials, including both President Mugabe and the Vice-President, Cde Joice Mujuru.
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The recently reported shortage of medicines at Bulawayo’s Ingutsheni Central Hospital is an example of a prevailing situation at virtually all Zimbabwean public health institutions. The Ingutsheni case is of greater concern most probably because of the type of patients the
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Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu THE death of one of the senior officers of the Patriotic Front – Zapu’s Zimbabwe People’s Revolutionary Army’s (Zipra’s) high command, Cde Elliot Masengo, is a very sad loss to every patriotic Zimbabwean who regards the armed liberation struggle as an important
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As we enter into the New Year, 2014, many of us will make resolutions about one aspect of our lives that we feel to be a major weakness in our character. It may be an unhealthy habit such as smoking or excessive drinking. It may even be something to do with our moral
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