'... As a bitter nation, we are saying as government can we not punish these players because it was done in some other African countries that players who performed dismally despite the support were taken to army barracks and worked hard for the money.'
More than 150,000 people are expected to join the protest that has been restricted to the outskirts of the Harare city center.
A large number of civic society activists converged at the Mbare Magistrates Court to show their solidarity to Linda Masarira.
Only two of the eight commercial radios stations licensed in 2013 have managed to go on air.
Chinomona ordered the two to take their flags out but they refused forcing her to enlist the services of the Sergeant-At-Arms to eject them.
She said the reforms, some of which are mandatory, were driven by the new constitution, recommendations from observer missions in previous elections.
Economist Masimba Manyanya said there cannot be any meaningful agricultural production without security of ownership.
Launching the project in Harare, EU head of delegation to Zimbabwe, Philippe Van Damme, said the project is aimed at strengthening Zimbabwe’s sanitary and phytosanitary institutions.
The retrenches and ZIBAWU members demonstrated outside the bank at its Mt. Pleasant headquarters in Harare.
The group said President Mugabe should tell the nation about when he is likely to step after allegedly failing to properly run Zimbabwe.
Some people blocked roads with stones, logs and anything they could lay their hands on and burnt tyres, preventing kombis and private vehicles from going to the city center.
The Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association added a positive voice to the mass protest saying they are fully behind the people.
The riots are spreading to other parts of Zimbabwe with students in some schools boycotting classes.
Unpaid Zimbabwean civil servants have resolved to go on an indefinite strike following the government’s failure to pay them June salaries as a result of lack of funds.
“Nkomo left us a legacy of true reconciliation, where people have to be truly reconciled despite their political backgrounds, besides their ethnic and religious backgrounds."
A visibly sick Philip Chiyangwa told lawmakers his board took a decision to dissolve the Zimbabwe Football Association or ZIFA because it was insolvent and could not pay its workers and creditors as well as carry its mandate.
The bill has come under fire from the public, opposition and civic society for among other things giving too much powers to the local government minister.
Gudyanga failed to provide information on the operations of the company and a lot of other issues, which the committee felt are important in improving the country’s diamond industry.
Ambassador Harry Thomas Jnr said he is working on improving trade between USA and Zimbabwe.
“I have approximately 8,600 schools and some 4.2 million school children and we expect that with effect from 3 May this is what they are doing."
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