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Harare City Council says it will soon conduct a door-to-door dog registration and vaccination inspection programme in accordance with council by-laws and animal management control measures.
City spokesman Mr Leslie Gwindi said the move was in response to the high number of unlicensed dogs in the city.
"City by-laws provide for the licensing of dogs. A household in the high density suburbs is allowed a maximum of two dogs while in the low-density residents can keep up to three dogs," he said.
"We will be visiting households to audit the number of dogs kept at premises and to verify their vaccination."
Mr Gwindi said the premises should be fenced and gated and if a dog bites a person the owner should produce proof of vaccination against rabies.
The audit, he said, will also help establish the population of dogs in the capital.
Between January and March this year 1 050 dogs were licensed in Harare contributing US$6 060 in revenue.
Residents complain of the high number of stray dogs which often cause road traffic accidents.
Residents were also advised to pay bicycle licences to avoid unnecessary inconveniences.
"Between January and March this year only 625 bicycle owners renewed their licences.
"Highlands had the highest compliance with 68 people paying for their licences, Greendale 11, Mt Pleasant 21, Greendale 3 and Marlborough 3," Mr Gwindi said.
Source: The Herald
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A GUTU woman died from excessive genital burns after her polygamist husband burnt her buttocks and thighs with a red hot log before shoving it into her privates.
Grace Johanisi was subjected to the horrific attack by the drunk husband after he accused her of having an extra marital affair, a local court heard on Thursday.
The husband, Israel Chimwai (age not given), was granted bail for the vile December 21, 2009 attack when he made his initial appearance at the Masvingo magistrate's court.
Chimwai, Dewure East farms, failed to turn up for trial Thursday on murder charges at the High Court, which is currently on circuit in Masvingo. A warrant was immediately issued for his arrest.
According to court papers, Israel, a polygamist with two wives, first battered his second spouse with a cooking stick until it broke into pieces.
He then pulled a smouldering piece of wood from the fire and burnt his wife's thighs and buttocks before shoving the burning wood into her privates.
A doctor's report attached to court documents shows that the woman died five days later from extensive sepsis, an infection resulting from deep and large openings in the skin.
Prosecutors said the fatal row was sparked by a bar of soap brought home by Isriel's son with his first wife, Clive.
The boy is said to have picked up the bar of soap while herding cattle along the nearby Dewure River and took it to his mother who was milking some cows at the time with his father.
Israel however, instructed the boy to take the soap to the second wife, Grace.
But in the evening Israel returned home drunk and threatened to throw the boy into the fire if he did not reveal where he had got the soap from.
Frightened for his life, the boy allegedly said he got the soap from a man he met at the river who asked him to take it to his step-mother.
Israel lost his temper and started assaulting his second wife, until he shoved the burning log into her private parts.
Source: newzimbabwe
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Alessandro Garofalo/Reuters
Most of Germany's soccer hooligans are now neo-Nazis. And this spring, Switzerland voted to curb immigration, defying the spirit of laws that allow citizens freedom of movement across the European Union.
But amid all the bad blood, has anyone thought about how sending immigrants packing would affect the teams playing the world's greatest game?
Broadly defining “foreigner” as anyone with at least one foreign-born parent, Switzerland would lose two-thirds of its players.
France and the Netherlands might be knocked out of contention. And Algeria, Ghana, Turkey or even Suriname could win it all.
Here's how the world's best would stack up in a World Cup with no first-generation immigrants.
(Odds come from here, and stats from here.)
Group A: Brazil, Croatia, Mexico, Cameroon
A heavy favorite in their real-world group, Brazil retains all of its star players in the no-immigrants-allowed version. Better still, Brazil picks up a few more of its nationals from other country's teams: Shakhtar Donetsk striker Eduardo Alves da Silva and Getafe midfielder Jorge Sammir Cruz Campos from Croatia, and Real Madrid defender Kepler Laveran Lima Ferreira from Portugal.Brazil
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
Croatia
A heavy favorite in their real-world group, Brazil retains all of its star players in the no-immigrants-allowed version. Better still, Brazil picks up a few more of its nationals from other country's teams: Shakhtar Donetsk striker Eduardo Alves da Silva and Getafe midfielder Jorge Sammir Cruz Campos from Croatia, and Real Madrid defender Kepler Laveran Lima Ferreira from Portugal.
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
Although Croatia has only a slim shot at winning the real Group A, it would gain ground if it got some of the Balkan immigrants back from other teams. In the no-immigrant tourney, it keeps Bayern Munich striker Mario Mandzukic, Hull striker Nikica Jelavic, and Queens Park Rangers midfielder Niko Kranjcar.
As noted above, it loses da Silva to Brazil. But if we're generous about allotting the players from the former Yugoslavia, Croatia could get Napoli midfielder Blerim Dzemaili (born in Macedonia) and Bayern Munich midfielder Xherdan Shaqiri (born in Kosovo) from Switzerland. (We'll send Real Sociedad striker Haris Seferovic, whose parents came from Sanski Most, and FC Zurich striker Mario Gavranovic, whose parents are from Gradacac, to Bosnia-Herzegovina).
Group B: Spain, Netherlands, Chile, Australia
Spain
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
It keeps Barcelona striker Pedro Eliezer Rodriguez Ledesma, Barcelona defender Jordi Alba Ramos, Atletico Madrid striker David Villa, Manchester United midfielder Juan Mata, Real Madrid defender Sergio Ramos, and Manchester City striker Alvaro Negredo.
But it loses Manchester City striker David Silva, whose mother is from Japan and whose father is from the Canary Islands.
Netherlands
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
The Dutch keep Manchester United striker Martin van Persie, Hamburger SV midfielder Rafael van der Vaart, Bayern Munich winger Arjen Robben, and Schalke striker Klaas-Jan Huntelaar. But we're taking back Dynamo Kviv striker Jeremain Lens, Swansea City goalkeeper Michel Vorm, and AC Milan midfielder Nigel de Jong — all of whom have roots in Suriname.
We'll also take Norwich City midfielder Leroy Fer, whose grandfather played for Curacao. And we'll grab Feyenoord defender Rolando Maximiliano "Bruno" Martins, born in Portugal, and Swansea City midfielder Jonathan de Guzman, whose father was born in Jamaica.
Group C: Colombia, Ivory Coast, Japan, Greece
Colombia
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
Group D: Italy, Uruguay, England, Costa Rica
Uruguay
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
We'll also let them keep Diego Forlan, whose father and grandfather both played for Uruguay, though they're technically of Basque descent.
Atletico Madrid winger Cristian RodrÃguez has roots in Spain, and Sao Paolo striker Alvaro Pereira and Palermo striker Abel Hernandez have roots in Africa, but none of them meet our definition of immigrants. However, they do lose Galatasaray goalkeeper Fernando Muslera, who was born in Argentina.
Italy
(Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
Co-favored to win the group in the no-limit cup, Italy loses less than you might expect in the no-immigrant version. It keeps Juventus defender Giorgio Chiellini, AC Milan midfielder Riccardo Montolivo, Roma midfielder Daniele De Rossi, Juventus midfielder Andrea Pirlo, and Roma striker Mattia Destro.
However, the Italians do lose a few guys. Fiorentina forward Giuseppe Rossi was born in New Jersey. And AC Milan striker Mario Balotelli, born in Palermo, has parents who immigrated from Ghana.
Group E: France, Switzerland, Ecuador, Honduras
France
(Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
It drops Arsenal defender Bacary Sagna and Liverpool defender Mamadou Sakho, whose parents were born in Senegal, and Manchester United defender Patrice Evra, who was born there himself.
It also loses Real Madrid defender Raphael Varane and Queens Park Rangers striker Loic Remy, both of whom have fathers who were born in Martinique; Paris St.-Germain midfielder Blaise Matuidi, whose father was born in Angola; and Porto defender Eliaquim Mangala, whose parents were born in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
France also gives up Lille OSC midfielder Rio Mavuba, whose father was born in Zaire and mother in Angola; Newcastle United midfielder Moussa Sissoko, whose parents were born in Mali; and Marseille midfielder Matthieu Valbuena, whose father was born in Spain.
And don't look for as much flash without Real Madrid striker Karim Benzema, whose father was born in Algeria. France also loses Juventus midfielder Paul Pogba, whose parents were born in Guinea.
Switzerland
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
“No more immigrants” Switzerland loses about two-thirds of its players if it goes all-Swiss, all but erasing its chances of getting out of Group E. It keeps Grasshopper Club Zurich defender Michael Lang, FC Basel defender Fabian Schär, and Juventus defender Stephan Lichtsteiner. But it loses a lot more. Eintracht Frankfurt midfielder Tranquillo Barnetta is of Italian descent and holds dual citizenship.
Napoli midfielder Gokhan Inler's parents were born in Turkey. Borussia Monchengladbach midfielder Granit Xhaka, Napoli midfielder Blerim Dzemaili and Bayern Munich midfielder Xherdan Shaqiri were all born in the former Yugoslavia, while Real Sociedad striker Haris Seferovic and FC Zurich striker Mario Gavranovic are of Bosnian descent.
Ecudaor
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
Wee little Ecuador has a slim chance of getting out of Group E in the real cup. But its odds look much better against the almost-empty rosters of France and Switzerland in the no-immigrants version.
Monarcas Morelia winger Jefferson Antonio Montero hails from one of Ecuador's indigenous tribes. Al-Jazira striker Felipe Caicedo, Al-Hilal midfielder Segundo Castillo, Santa Fe midfielder Edison Mendez and Tijuana striker J. Ayovi don't meet our definition for immigrants, although all are of African descent.
Group F: Argentina, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Nigeria, Iran
Argentina
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However, Argentina loses Napoli striker Gonzalo Higuain, of Basque descent, who was born in France. On the plus side, it picks up Juventus striker Pablo Osvaldo from Italy.
Group G: Germany, Portugal, USA, Ghana
Ghana
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
The team also keeps Schalke midfielder Kevin-Prince Boateng and gets back Bayern Munich defender Jerome Boateng from Germany — their father was born in Ghana, though the brothers were born in Berlin. The same goes for Marseille striker Jordan Ayew, whose parents were born in Ghana though he was born in France. As a final bonus, Ghana picks up AC Milan striker Mario Balotelli, whose biological parents were born in Ghana, from Italy. It also gets Danny Welbeck, whose parents were born in Ghana, from England.
Germany
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
The Germans get our moral support in honor of their recent decision to allow dual citizenship to the children of immigrants. But their football team doesn't look too good without the guys that the red-faced chap at the end of the bar still calls “foreigners.”
Germany keeps Arsenal defender Per Mertesacker, Bayern Munich midfielder Thomas Mueller, Bayern Munich midfielder Toni Kroos, Bayern Munich midfielder Mario Goetze, and Chelsea winger Andre Schuerrle. They retain Schalke defender Benedikt Howedes, whose parents were born in Germany though the family has roots in Norway.
But they lose superstar Arsenal midfielder Mesut Ozil, whose father was born in Turkey; Real Madrid midfielder Sami Khedira, whose father was born in Tunisia; and Lazio striker Miroslav Klose, who was born in Poland.
They'll also take the field without Bayern Munich defender Jerome Boateng, who has roots in Ghana; Sampdori defender Shkodran Mustafi, whose parents are Albanians born in Macedonia; and Lukas Podolski, who was born in Poland.
Portugal
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
Lesser-known colonizer Portugal keeps Fenerbahce S.K. Defender Bruno Alves, Real Madrid defender Fabio Coentrao, Valencia defender Ricardo Costa, Besiktas J.K. forward Hugo Almeida and Lazio striker Helder Postiga. But it loses Real Madrid defender Kepler Laveran Lima Ferreira, aka Pepe, to his native Brazil.
It also drops Luis Carlos Almeida da Cunha, aka Nani, who was born in Cape Verde, and FC Porto winger Silvestre Varela, whose parents were born there. Lucky for them, Real Madrid striker Cristiano Ronaldo, whose great grandmother was from Cape Verde, isn't an immigrant by our rules.
United States
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
Team USA gets to keep San Jose Earthquakes striker Chris Wondolowski — half Native American, with a grandfather from Poland — as well as Seattle Sounders midfielder Clint Dempsey and Stoke City defender Geoff Cameron.
However, the melting-pot nation loses Sunderland striker Jozy Altidore, whose parents were born in Haiti; Tim Howard, whose mother is Hungarian; AZ striker Aron Johannsson, who was born to Icelandic parents in Alabama; and Rosenborg midfielder Mix Diskerud, who was born in Norway.
We'll also take away LA Galaxy defender Omar Gonzalez, whose parents were born in Mexico, and Nantes midfielder Alejandro Bedoya, whose father was born in Colombia.
Finally, we'll take back Hertha defender John Brooks, Nurnberg defender Timmy Chandler, Bayern Munich winger Julian Green, Besiktas midfielder Jermaine Jones, and 1899 Hoffenheim defender Fabian Johnson — all of whom were born in Germany or have a German parent.
Group H: Belgium, Russia, South Korea Algeria
Russia
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
Bookies say Russia has an outside chance of winning the real Group H. But Vladimir Putin's men become the odds-on favorite when we take away the immigrants. Among scorers, the Russians keep Zenit St.
Petersburg striker Aleksandr Kerzhakov, Dynamo Moscow striker Aleksandr Kokorin, FC Krasnodar midfielder Roman Shirokov, Zenit St. Petersburg midfielder Viktor Faizulin, Zenit St. Petersburg midfielder Igor Denisov, Spartak Moscow midfielder Dmitriy Kombarov and Spartak Moscow midfielder Denis Glushakov.
We'll also let them keep CSKA Moscow midfielder Alan Dzagoev (3 goals). Strictly speaking, Dzagoev is of Ossetian descent — his parents moved from Georgia in 1989. But we've seen Putin without his shirt, and we don't want another Crimea-type situation.
Belgium
Simran Khosla/GlobalPost
A strong favorite to win the real Group H, Belgium loses some stars without its immigrants. Among scorers, the Belgians keep Vfl Wolfsburg midfielder Kevin De Bruyne, Chelsea midfielder Eden Hazard, Tottenham Hotspur defender Jan Vertonghen and FC Porto midfielder Steven Defour. But they lose a lot.
The fathers of both Manchester City defender Vincent Kompany and Everton striker Romelu Lukaku were born in what is today the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Everton striker Kevin Mirallas' father was born in Spain. Marouane Fellaini's parents were born in Morocco. FC Zenit Saint Petersburgmidfielder Axel Witsel's father is from Martinique. And Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Mousa Dembele's father was born in Mali.
This article originally appeared at GlobalPost. Copyright 2014. Follow GlobalPost on Twitter.
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FAST food lovers in Gweru were given a scare on Tuesday when a young woman had a miscarriage at the Chicken Inn food court in the city centre. The unusual development took place in the afternoon within the chicken inn toilets. According to an employee who spoke on condition of anonymity the girl (name withheld) who is a student at Midlands State University arrived at the popular food court at about 6AM.
“She came here at around 6AM and spent the greater part of her time sitting alone. The girl was not ordering anything till around 10AM when an unidentified man who, judging by the body language, appeared to be the boyfriend, joined her at the table.
“The girl ordered chicken and chips at this very counter. That is when she started groaning, showing signs she was in terrible pain. The young man tried to run away but we intercepted him before he could escape,” said the food court attendant.
The Chicken Inn employee said the girl started bleeding heavily and was swiftly led to the ladies restroom where she was attended before an ambulance came and took her away.
However, the incident has since sparked debate among vendors and shoppers.
Speculation is rife on whether the incident was genuine miscarriage or attempted abortion.
An air time recharge card vendor who witnessed the event had this to say:
“In my opinion I think this girl was afraid to go home because of her pregnancy, so she asked her boyfriend to bring her something to abort. Why did the girl experience the miscarriage after the guy had arrived? It is clear that the miscarriage was induced.”
It’s alleged that the lady was taken to Clay bank although this has not been verified.
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MDC-T Bulawayo provincial chairman Gorden Moyo has resigned from his
post citing failure of leadership and lack of direction in his party.He
said he would remain an ordinary party member and Member of Parliament
for Makokoba constituency non-aligned to either of the two factions
battling for control of the beleaguered party.
Moyo resurfaced after a three month-long sabbatical yesterday to announce his disdain for the troubled MDC-T leadership, which has seen the party split into two camps, one aligned to party leader Morgan Tsvangirai and the other led by secretary general Tendai Biti that is calling for leadership renewal.
He told a Press briefing in Bulawayo that the infighting rocking the troubled opposition was a symptom of leadership failure after the party lost last year’s July 31 harmonised elections to Zanu-PF.
Moyo, once believed to be a close ally of Tsvangirai due to his links to donors, said he chose to resign than be part of a failed leadership.
“On this day, the 13th of June 2014, I, Gorden Moyo, am stepping down from the office of the chair of Bulawayo province with immediate effect,” he said.
“An angel of darkness has visited our party. We have been raped by a demon and become like the Tower of Babel, full of confusion. The MDC has ceased to prioritise serious issues of the state.”
Moyo, also Member of Parliament for Makokoba, said he had submitted his resignation letter to the secretary generals of both MDC factions.
“I can’t pretend there is one MDC and so for avoidance of doubt I wrote to both of them,” he said.
Moyo also said he met acting Bulawayo provincial chair, Dorcas Sibanda, and notified her of his resignation and his intention to remain an ordinary party member.
The former civic society activist once labelled a mafikizolo after he dribbled his way into party leadership ahead of founder members during the 2010 congress, said the MDC-T had betrayed the people of Zimbabwe and lost relevance in the country’s politics.
Source: Chronicle
“The problem is leadership which has failed to handle the outcome of
the 2013 poll. We are busy chasing lizards when crocodiles are against
us. We are pushing a self destruction button,” he said adding, “Given
circumstances in the current context, I find it difficult to operate in
such an environment where we fight friends and not foes. Because of that
I strongly believe this province needs a different type of leadership.”
Moyo bragged he was a “principled” leader who could not reduce himself to petty fights currently rocking the MDC-T and distanced himself from the ongoing skirmishes.
“My own competitiveness and skills are no longer relevant in this situation. What I don’t want is to implement decisions that I don’t believe in,” he said.
“I don’t care whether some will view this as cowardice. I simply don’t believe fragrance can solve Zimbabwe’s problems.”
Moyo said the MDC-T’s latest split was a replica of the 2005 split which gave birth to a faction led by Professor Welshman Ncube.
There was growing suspicion that Moyo was aligned to the Renewal Team which he dismissed yesterday but could not denounce Biti and his camp saying it was their “democratic right” to demand leadership change.
Moyo said he did not believe in splinter groups whether led by Tsvangirai or Biti but “a fragmented MDC-T was headed for more doom”.
“We failed to dislodge Zanu-PF as a united MDC, what more as a fragmented party?” said Moyo who declined to comment about the future of his party.
On whether he had planned to resign before going on leave Moyo said, “I was on leave and when I came back I found this”.
National organising secretary Nelson Chamisa said Moyo’s departure was not a surprise given that “he only joined the party just before the formation of the inclusive government in 2009”.
“That’s the normal life of a party. People choose to serve and not to serve. When the vehicle is moving some people jump out to safety at the slightest bump but we will get to the destination. It’s a comfortable development. It’s his democratic right,” said Chamisa. Sibanda confirmed meeting Moyo.
“Yes, we met this afternoon before he announced his resignation. We respect his decision especially since he will remain a party member,” she said.
“We will remain working. It will be business as usual.”
Moyo resurfaced after a three month-long sabbatical yesterday to announce his disdain for the troubled MDC-T leadership, which has seen the party split into two camps, one aligned to party leader Morgan Tsvangirai and the other led by secretary general Tendai Biti that is calling for leadership renewal.
He told a Press briefing in Bulawayo that the infighting rocking the troubled opposition was a symptom of leadership failure after the party lost last year’s July 31 harmonised elections to Zanu-PF.
Moyo, once believed to be a close ally of Tsvangirai due to his links to donors, said he chose to resign than be part of a failed leadership.
“On this day, the 13th of June 2014, I, Gorden Moyo, am stepping down from the office of the chair of Bulawayo province with immediate effect,” he said.
“An angel of darkness has visited our party. We have been raped by a demon and become like the Tower of Babel, full of confusion. The MDC has ceased to prioritise serious issues of the state.”
Moyo, also Member of Parliament for Makokoba, said he had submitted his resignation letter to the secretary generals of both MDC factions.
“I can’t pretend there is one MDC and so for avoidance of doubt I wrote to both of them,” he said.
Moyo also said he met acting Bulawayo provincial chair, Dorcas Sibanda, and notified her of his resignation and his intention to remain an ordinary party member.
The former civic society activist once labelled a mafikizolo after he dribbled his way into party leadership ahead of founder members during the 2010 congress, said the MDC-T had betrayed the people of Zimbabwe and lost relevance in the country’s politics.
Source: Chronicle
Moyo bragged he was a “principled” leader who could not reduce himself to petty fights currently rocking the MDC-T and distanced himself from the ongoing skirmishes.
“My own competitiveness and skills are no longer relevant in this situation. What I don’t want is to implement decisions that I don’t believe in,” he said.
“I don’t care whether some will view this as cowardice. I simply don’t believe fragrance can solve Zimbabwe’s problems.”
Moyo said the MDC-T’s latest split was a replica of the 2005 split which gave birth to a faction led by Professor Welshman Ncube.
There was growing suspicion that Moyo was aligned to the Renewal Team which he dismissed yesterday but could not denounce Biti and his camp saying it was their “democratic right” to demand leadership change.
Moyo said he did not believe in splinter groups whether led by Tsvangirai or Biti but “a fragmented MDC-T was headed for more doom”.
“We failed to dislodge Zanu-PF as a united MDC, what more as a fragmented party?” said Moyo who declined to comment about the future of his party.
On whether he had planned to resign before going on leave Moyo said, “I was on leave and when I came back I found this”.
National organising secretary Nelson Chamisa said Moyo’s departure was not a surprise given that “he only joined the party just before the formation of the inclusive government in 2009”.
“That’s the normal life of a party. People choose to serve and not to serve. When the vehicle is moving some people jump out to safety at the slightest bump but we will get to the destination. It’s a comfortable development. It’s his democratic right,” said Chamisa. Sibanda confirmed meeting Moyo.
“Yes, we met this afternoon before he announced his resignation. We respect his decision especially since he will remain a party member,” she said.
“We will remain working. It will be business as usual.”
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Nkosentsha Ndlovu
A 19-YEAR-OLD Bulawayo man has been sentenced to seven years in prison for sodomy.
Nkosentsha Ndlovu from Lobengula, who was being charged with indecent assault, pleaded not guilty to the charge following his appearance in court for abusing a 12-year-old boy in a school toilet.
In passing sentence, regional magistrate Crispen James Mberewere said the courts also served to express society’s indignation to acts of sodomy or same sex relationships.
“The Zimbabwean society views acts of sodomy as an abomination and is highly rooted in Christian beliefs. This court also bemoans the high prevalence of child sexual abuse cases in the country thus we should send a message to all perpetrators,” he said.
Mberewere sentenced Ndlovu to 10 years in jail and suspended three years on condition that he does not commit a similar offence.
He said Ndlovu’s upbringing could have contributed to his behaviour as he lacked parental love.
“It is very important for one to get parental love from both parents. You indicated that your father went to the United Kingdom when you were very young and you did not stay with him and that your mother’s whereabouts are not known.
“However sad it may be, the court does not condone such behaviour and a custodial sentence is appropriate in this case,” said the magistrate.
Prosecuting, Trust Mudume told the court that on June 11 last year at around 11AM, the minor went into the boys’ toilet at Mawaba Primary School in Lobengula to relieve himself.
Ndlovu and an unknown friend entered the toilet and closed the boy’s mouth.
“They forced him to bend down, removed his shorts and underwear before Ndlovu sodomised him. After the act, Ndlovu threatened the juvenile with a knife if he told anyone about the incident,” said Mudume.
The schoolboy went back to class but did not tell his teacher as he had been threatened.
The issue only came to light after three days when the pupil’s mother noticed that he had been unusually quiet after coming back from school and always complained of stomach pains.
When quizzed, he opened up to his mother who later made a report to the police.
The boy told the police that he knew the person who had sodomised him as he often saw him accompanying a Grade Zero pupil to school in the morning.
Ndlovu and a friend Nkosiphile Phiri, who accompanied the Grade Zero pupil to school, were both arrested. The boy later picked out Ndlovu as the man who sodomised him during an identification parade conducted at Magwegwe Police Station.
The boy told the court that he was positive it was Ndlovu who had abused him in the toilet because he often saw him sitting with friends at a bridge near the school gate.
“I only collect the boy from school in the afternoon and I am not the one who did it, it must be a case of mistaken identity,” insisted Ndlovu in his defence.
Source: Chronicle
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EDGARS
Stores is eyeing exporting its recently-launched men’s casual clothing
label, Quote, to South Africa following its acceptance on the local
market.The Zimbabwe Stock Exchange listed
firm in February this year launched Quote, a men’s clothing brand, as
part of initiatives to drive its sales volumes.
Edgars Stores sales and marketing executive Peter Munyama told New Ziana the planned move followed success of the label in Zimbabwe.
“We’re trying to get the fabric in Tanzania so that we can be able to sell clothing in the huge South African market,” he said.
Although their products can compete with any other in the region, Edgars Zimbabwe cannot penetrate the huge South African market because of a bilateral trade agreement between Zimbabwe and its southern neighbour.
Zimbabwe has preferential access on clothing to most parts of the world on a single transformation basis.
This means that manufacturing of the garment must occur in Zimbabwe, but the fabric can originate from anywhere.
But there are restrictive Rules of Origin in the Southern African Development Community (Sadc) region which maintain a double transformation rule on clothing.
This means in order to participate in preferential access, clothing must not only be manufactured within Zimbabwe, but it must also be manufactured from fabric which was manufactured within Sadc, to enjoy duty-free access to regional markets, or pricing for Zimbabwean products will remain uncompetitive.
Sadc governments have been seeking to relax this rule through request for waivers.
Munyama said the number of retail partners selling the Quote brand locally had doubled since its launch.
The services of five retailers among them, Topics, Barons and Raffles were enlisted to push the label into the market at its launch.
Munyama added: “From the five retail partners we started with, we have now doubled to 10. These include Ceembe, Five Kings, to mention but a few.
“A couple of indigenous partners have also come on board to retail the Quote clothing line.”
Munyama said Edgars was currently selling summer wear of the Quote men’s designer clothes and demand was already high.
“We launched the brand in February and then we were selling winter wear until this June. The summer range sales have already out-competed the winter clothing by 44 percent,” he said. — New Ziana
Edgars Stores sales and marketing executive Peter Munyama told New Ziana the planned move followed success of the label in Zimbabwe.
“We’re trying to get the fabric in Tanzania so that we can be able to sell clothing in the huge South African market,” he said.
Although their products can compete with any other in the region, Edgars Zimbabwe cannot penetrate the huge South African market because of a bilateral trade agreement between Zimbabwe and its southern neighbour.
Zimbabwe has preferential access on clothing to most parts of the world on a single transformation basis.
This means that manufacturing of the garment must occur in Zimbabwe, but the fabric can originate from anywhere.
But there are restrictive Rules of Origin in the Southern African Development Community (Sadc) region which maintain a double transformation rule on clothing.
This means in order to participate in preferential access, clothing must not only be manufactured within Zimbabwe, but it must also be manufactured from fabric which was manufactured within Sadc, to enjoy duty-free access to regional markets, or pricing for Zimbabwean products will remain uncompetitive.
Sadc governments have been seeking to relax this rule through request for waivers.
Munyama said the number of retail partners selling the Quote brand locally had doubled since its launch.
The services of five retailers among them, Topics, Barons and Raffles were enlisted to push the label into the market at its launch.
Munyama added: “From the five retail partners we started with, we have now doubled to 10. These include Ceembe, Five Kings, to mention but a few.
“A couple of indigenous partners have also come on board to retail the Quote clothing line.”
Munyama said Edgars was currently selling summer wear of the Quote men’s designer clothes and demand was already high.
“We launched the brand in February and then we were selling winter wear until this June. The summer range sales have already out-competed the winter clothing by 44 percent,” he said. — New Ziana