Mnangagwa said the first lady was not making donations but merely handing over equipment that had been sourced by the government.
Dr. Prosper Chonzi said the clinic will remove barriers to access health care by survivors of sexual gender-based violence.
Mnangagwa said he was not aware of the ministers’ whereabouts, noting that they must personally account to parliament.
The country, they said, faces imminent disaster if donors, who are currently providing more than 80 percent of the funds required to run health care, pulled out.
Biti says only a transitional authority can save Zimbabwe from worse situations like a coup, which he believes is possible as infighting in the ruling Zanu PF gets to unprecedented levels.
According to the survey, religious leaders, with support from 70 percent of the polled adults, are the most trusted people in the country.
They told a parliamentary budget committee that the state needs to do more to create jobs as life is already tough due to continued company closures.
But they are worried that at 91, the strain of attending such huge events may just be too much for him.
Zanu PF lawmaker William Mutomba said it was disappointing that the two previous sessions of parliament had not processed any bills at all.
Harare Mayor Bernard Manyenyeni said Harare stands to benefit from Gaungzhou as it has many opportunities to offer, especially in terms of business.
Harare City coach Taurayi Mangwiro has apologized to his team’s fans following Wednesday surprise 2-0 defeat at the hands of ZPC Kariba and is hoping for a better show against the Sugar Sugar boys.
Speakers stressed the need for the country to include the youths, who now constitute the majority of the population if the country, in decision-making processes.
Most of the bills the President says will be brought to parliament this session should have been dealt with in the first or second sessions of the Eighth Parliament.
The tabling of the right speech came after two hours of intense debate during which most Members of Parliament from both sides of the aisle condemned the mix-up which led President Mugabe to deliver a wrong speech.
Presidential spokesman George Charamba acknowledged there was a mix-up in his office, leading to a delay in the correct speech that President Mugabe delivered later.
Professor Mthuli Ncube of Oxford University said much deeper reforms were needed to lift the economy out its current state.
IMF head of delegation, Dominique Fanezzi, praised Harare for intensifying its re-engagement efforts with the international financial community.
Gandawa commended colleges like Masvingo Teachers and the United College of Education in Bulawayo which now have an affirmative enrollment policy for students with disabilities.
CeSHHAR programs director, Sibongile Mtetwa, said stigmatization and discrimination are some of the major barriers to health access by sex workers in the country.
Roan, who is a colored and stays in Mucheke high density suburb, said it is wrong to believe that only blacks are affected by the prevailing harsh economic conditions.
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