Muchinga RADIO and TV Station

Muchinga RADIO and TV Station WE SHALL TELL IT AS SAID AND SEEN News/Media Company

Lumezi by-election results from 88 out of 88 polling stations: UPND - 11,521, NCP - 6,821, UPPZ - 544, CF - 556, Indepen...
27/06/2025

Lumezi by-election results from 88 out of 88 polling stations:
UPND - 11,521,
NCP - 6,821,
UPPZ - 544,
CF - 556,
Independent - 512,
LM - 212.
The total number of votes cast was 20,520, with 354 rejected, at all 88 polling stations.

The Lungu family has announced that the funeral and burial of the late Dr. Edgar Chagwa Lungu will take place in South A...
20/06/2025

The Lungu family has announced that the funeral and burial of the late Dr. Edgar Chagwa Lungu will take place in South Africa. In a statement released by family spokesperson Makebi Zulu, it was confirmed that the ceremony will be held privately, in accordance with the family’s wishes.

Following President Hakainde Hichilema’s national address announcing an end to the national mourning, mourners who had g...
19/06/2025

Following President Hakainde Hichilema’s national address announcing an end to the national mourning, mourners who had gathered at the PF Secretariat have dispersed.

📸 Diamond TV

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT Republican President Hakainde Hichilema will this evening address the nation on both ZNBC radio and...
19/06/2025

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
Republican President Hakainde Hichilema will this evening address the nation on both ZNBC radio and television at exactly 19:00 hours Zambian time.

The address will also be streamed live on various media platforms
Clayson Hamasaka
Chief Communications Specialist
State House.

PHOTO FOCUS:President Hakainde Hichilema signs the book of condolence of the former sixth President Edgar Chagwa Lungu a...
13/06/2025

PHOTO FOCUS:
President Hakainde Hichilema signs the book of condolence of the former sixth President Edgar Chagwa Lungu at Belvedere Lodge in Kabulongo, Lusaka, today, June 13, 2025.

📷 PICTURE by LISTER MWABA ZANIS.

PRESIDENT Hakainde Hichilema has signed the Book of Condolence for former president Edgar Lungu in honour of the late fo...
13/06/2025

PRESIDENT Hakainde Hichilema has signed the Book of Condolence for former president Edgar Lungu in honour of the late former president at Belvedere Lodge! - Pictures by Catherine P**e

Fellow Citizens,This evening at 19hrs, I will be addressing the nation on ZNBC to speak on matters of national importanc...
12/06/2025

Fellow Citizens,

This evening at 19hrs, I will be addressing the nation on ZNBC to speak on matters of national importance.

Hakainde Hichilema,
President of the Republic of Zambia.

JUST IN,South African Government has indicated that it is obligated under international law to surrender the remains of ...
11/06/2025

JUST IN,

South African Government has indicated that it is obligated under international law to surrender the remains of the former Commander in Chief of the Republic of Zambia to the government if the Zambian Government makes a formal request.

09/06/2025

SPONSORED ADVERT

JOB OPPORTUNITIES

We are looking for

-Supervisor
-House keepers
-General workers
Security Guards
-Receptionist
-chefs

Must be

Hardworking
Honest
Clean and
No crime record

Closing date 11/6/ 2025

Drop your application letters at Nachula Questhouse , Chinsali or send to 0966443125 on Whatsap or call us on the same number for more information.

FORMER PRESIDENT EDGAR LUNGU HAS DIED Zambia’s Sixth Republican President, Dr. Edgar Chagwa Lungu, has died.He passed aw...
05/06/2025

FORMER PRESIDENT EDGAR LUNGU HAS DIED

Zambia’s Sixth Republican President, Dr. Edgar Chagwa Lungu, has died.

He passed away today, Thursday, 5th June 2025, at Mediclinic Medforum Hospital in Pretoria, South Africa, where he was receiving specialized treatment. His daughter, Hon. Tasila Lungu-Mwansa, and family lawyer Makebi Zulu have confirmed the sad news.

Dr. Lungu served as President of Zambia from January 2015 to August 2021, having first assumed office following the death of President Michael Sata. He led the Patriotic Front (PF) and was re-elected in 2016, before losing to President Hakainde Hichilema in the 2021 general election.

During his tenure, he oversaw major infrastructure expansion and economic reforms, but also faced criticism over rising debt levels, human rights concerns, and democratic backsliding. Since leaving office, he remained a polarizing but influential figure in Zambian politics.

The PF, now in opposition, has mourned his passing. Details regarding funeral arrangements will be communicated soon.

Eng. Wesley Wyman Kaluba, President  Engineering Institution of Zambia (EIZ)WritesAs the national debate on Bill 7 conti...
04/06/2025

Eng. Wesley Wyman Kaluba, President Engineering Institution of Zambia (EIZ)

Writes

As the national debate on Bill 7 continues to dominate public discourse, I rise—not as a politician, but as the President of the Engineering Institution of Zambia (EIZ), a body representing over 95,000 engineering professionals across this Republic.

For decades, engineers have remained on the sidelines of constitutional conversations, despite being central to national development.

The current constitutional review process, though marked by diverse legal and procedural views, presents a rare opportunity to confront a long-standing national oversight, the systemic exclusion of engineering, science, and technology from the foundational structures of governance.

*Engineering is The Backbone often Overlooked*

Let me be clear: Zambia cannot industrialize, modernize, or economically liberate itself without embedding engineering and technology into the heart of national governance. The Constitution is not just a legal document—it is a national blueprint. And right now, it tells the Zambian child that engineering is secondary to politics, law, or economics.

Where are the constitutional safeguards for science, innovation, and engineering capacity-building? Where are the provisions to ensure engineers have a seat at the table when infrastructure, energy, mining, manufacturing, or climate resilience policies are developed?

We have constitutional offices for economic planning, legal affairs, and communications. But we have no equivalent strategic post for engineering, science, or innovation.

Yet it is engineers who build the roads, power the homes, secure the water, design the hospitals, and maintain the telecommunications systems.

Does it not contradict logic and national interest to exclude this sector from the upper echelons of governance?

*Our Consistent Appeals Have Gone Unheeded*

The Engineering Institution of Zambia has, for more than 40 years, submitted policy and strategic papers calling for structural recognition of engineering in the public sector. We have proposed the establishment of advisory roles at State House and Cabinet level, including a Chief Technical Advisor on Engineering, Innovation, and Industrialization.

These proposals have been submitted formally—most recently through the Office of the Secretary to the Cabinet—but the responses have either been non-existent or dismissive.

This is not just an institutional slight; it is a development oversight that undermines the country’s ability to leverage its engineering talent for national progress.

*This Constitutional Review Must Correct a Structural Imbalance*

The current review process must be more than a political or electoral reform exercise. It must be a vehicle to embed long-term development priorities into our national legal framework. To that end, we propose the following constitutional considerations:

*1. Creation of a Constitutional Office for Engineering, Science & Innovation*, empowered to advise the Head of State and Parliament on infrastructure, industrialization, and technology policy.

*2. Inclusion of Registered Engineers in National Development Planning structures,* such as the National Planning Commission, to provide input on public sector projects and development strategies.

*3. Legal Mandate for Local Engineering Input in Public Procurement,* to strengthen local content and reduce reliance on external contractors.

*4. Constitutional Protection for Public Investment in Technical Education,* including predictable funding for engineering universities, vocational institutes, laboratories, and research centers.

*5. Requirement for Engineering Audits on Strategic Projects, to ensure public safety,* value-for-money, and resilience in national infrastructure.

*6. Affirmative action proposals such as protecting local content in engineering fields*—particularly in mining, construction, and infrastructure development—must be explicitly enshrined in the Republican Constitution, ensuring that Zambian engineers are not sidelined in favor of foreign firms and consultants.

These proposals are neither radical nor new. Several countries in Africa and beyond have adopted similar constitutional measures.

Rwanda, Ghana, and Kenya, for instance, have integrated scientific and engineering advisory structures into their governance models with measurable development results. Zambia cannot afford to be left behind.

*From Policy to Constitution, a Professional Call to Action*

This is not about political positioning. This is about national planning. It is about securing the Republic’s future by structurally recognizing those who are trained to build it.

Without constitutional provisions that protect, elevate, and embed engineering in governance, Zambia will continue to fall short of its industrialization goals.

Without legal recognition of technical capacity in leadership structures, we will continue to import what we should produce.

We will continue to repair what we should have prevented. We will continue to underperform where we could lead.

This must change.

*Moving Towards an Innovation-aware Constitution*

We urge the drafters of Bill 7, the Ministry of Justice and all stakeholders to view the Constitution not only as a legal tool—but as a developmental instrument.

Any modern constitution must make deliberate room for science, innovation, and engineering as national levers of transformation. Let this be the moment that Zambia chooses to be bold.

Let this be the moment that the engineer is finally given constitutional space to help build the Zambia we all envision.

Let this be the Constitution that future generations will thank us for—not for what it said, but for what it empowered us to do.

STATUE OF MARY STOLEN IN CHIPATAA statue of Mary, the mother of Jesus, valued at over K8,000, has been stolen from St An...
04/06/2025

STATUE OF MARY STOLEN IN CHIPATA

A statue of Mary, the mother of Jesus, valued at over K8,000, has been stolen from St Anne's Cathedral Parish in Chipata.

The statue was located at Radio Maria Zambia in Chipata within St Anne's premises.

According to Radio Maria FM the theft is believed to have occurred in the early hours of Wednesday.

The statue – a significant religious symbol for the Catholic faithful worldwide – was erected in 2014 by Friends of Radio Maria Chipata.

It was discovered missing by Masupe Ward Councilor Johnson Silungwe who visited the station for radio appearance.

©️ MAYENGO NYIRENDA/DAILY MAIL

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