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Constitutional Court Refuses ECL Appeal...."don't appeal to us directly"The Constitutional Court of South Africa has rul...
26/08/2025

Constitutional Court Refuses ECL Appeal...."don't appeal to us directly"

The Constitutional Court of South Africa has ruled;

"Constitutional Court has considered the application for leave to appeal directly to it and has concluded that no case has been made out for a direct appeal. Consequently, leave to appeal must be refused."

Order:
"Leave to appeal directly to this Court is refused."

S*x for Maize in Kasama
21/08/2025

S*x for Maize in Kasama

S*x-for-Maize Scandal

By Angela Mtambo in Kasama

-Some FRA clerks are being accused of demanding sexual favours from women farmers in exchange for buying their maize quickly.
-One woman said a clerk told her she would only be helped fast if she “cooperated,” and she had seen other women giving in.
-Another reported being harassed with compliments and requests to meet at night. When she refused, her maize was ignored for a week.

Farmers in Northern Province are raising alarm over what they describe as widespread corruption, inefficiency, and mistreatment by Food Reserve Agency (FRA) officers at satellite depots during this year’s maize marketing season.

Radio Mano visited several FRA depots dotted in five districts in Northern Province, and the situation was almost the same everywhere. Piles of maize were stacked high, while tired farmers—men and women and in some cases children—sat nearby, unsure of when they would be attended to. Their names were written down, but the lists were never followed.

At Lubushi depot in Lunte district, farmers complained that waiting lists were ignored, leaving them frustrated and hopeless. And in Misambo in the same district, hundreds of bags of maize already bought were left uncollected—a clear sign of inefficiency.

Robert Mutale, a farmer at Misengo depot, told Radio Mano that he had spent more than a month sleeping at the satellite depot without being attended to.

"We are suffering here. Some of us have been here for weeks. If you speak out, they tell you they won’t attend to you unless you pay them," Mutale said.

Sharon Kabwe, a farmer from Kasama, accused depot clerks of demanding money for empty grain bags—sometimes up to K800 for 150 bags—and showing favouritism to wealthier suppliers.

"They buy from big suppliers first and leave us small-scale farmers stranded. Some women have even been sexually harassed in exchange for having their maize bought quickly," Kabwe alleged.

S*xual Favour Demands Targeting Women Farmers

Even more disturbing are allegations by some female farmers that some FRA clerks are demanding sexual favours in exchange for faster service.

“He told me I would be helped quickly if I ‘cooperated’,” said a female farmer from Kasama, her voice trembling. “I have seen other women accepting.”

“He kept saying I’m beautiful and asked me to meet him at night. When I said no, my maize stayed for a week.”

Favouritism and Inefficiency

Farmers also report that even when they arrive early, they are pushed back in the line if they don’t have connections within FRA or money.

“They serve their friends and relatives first,” said a farmer from Misengo village. “Some even arrive late and still go ahead of the queue.”

Farmers also complain about slow operations and absenteeism by depot staff.

“By 11am, they say they are going for lunch. We are left sitting with our maize in the sun,” said a farmer at Kasama Central satellite depot.

Poor Sanitation and Inhumane Conditions

Some farmers, especially women, spend multiple nights at depots, waiting for their turn without access to clean water or toilets.

“There is nowhere to bathe or relieve ourselves,” said a woman from Lubushi. “It’s not safe or healthy.”

In one video clip reviewed by Mano filmed at Musuba satelite in chilunga ward in kasama central constituency, women are seen cooking by the roadside, their maize stacked beside them, as children play nearby in dust and heat.

Mano has also established that clerks are extorting farmers and traders, demanding unofficial payments before granting access to depot services. In one instance, this reporter, posing as a customer during an undercover investigation, was asked to pay K1,865 to sell 200 bags of maize.

A source within the FRA, who asked to remain anonymous, claimed that some of the misconduct could be linked to the fact that depot clerks have not been paid for the past month.

"Although this does not justify the corruption, the workers are frustrated," the source said.

Chiefs and Clergy Speak Out

Senior Chief Mwamba confirmed that he has received multiple reports from his subjects regarding corruption at depots in Kasama.

"These are serious allegations. I am warning both farmers and depot clerks to refrain from such acts," he said.

Fr. Christian Muselela of Lubushi Minor Seminary, urged the government to open alternative markets, specify the number of maize bags to be purchased this year, and improve road infrastructure to ease transportation.

"Corruption is killing the country’s growth. Farmers must resist it, and the government must act," he stressed.

When Mano contacted some of the accused depot clerks, they declined to comment. One of them responded: “We don’t talk to the media. Go ahead and report the matter to the PMC (Provincial Marketing Coordinator).”

FRA’s Zero Tolerance to Corruption

In response to the allegations, the FRA issued a statement condemning the reported misconduct.

“The Agency wishes to categorically state that such behaviour, if proven to be true, is wholly unacceptable, unethical, and illegal,” said John Chipandwe, FRA’s Public Relations Coordinator. “The Agency maintains a zero-tolerance policy towards any form of corruption, bribery, and abuse of authority.”

He confirmed that investigations would be launched and that any individuals found culpable would face disciplinary action.
On the allegations of sexual harassment, the FRA described them as “extremely disturbing.”

“Any form of sexual harassment, exploitation, or abuse is strictly prohibited,” Chipandwe added. “We encourage farmers, especially those affected, to report such cases to the nearest FRA regional offices or police stations.”

Responding to complaints about unfair treatment of farmers, Chipandwe said: “FRA operates on a first-come, first-served basis. Farmers are encouraged to clean their grain at home to reduce waiting time.” He explained that FRA field officers conduct regular monitoring to ensure procedures are followed.

However, farmers like Mutale and Kabwe insist the situation on the ground is far different from what the agency describes.

“We just want fairness. If they can pay us on time and stop corruption, we will all be happy,” Robert said.

FRA is currently buying maize nationwide and aims to purchase more than 500,000 metric tons this year. Official guidelines state that depot clerks are entitled to overtime pay through the agency—not from farmers.

Government’s Response

Northern Province Permanent Secretary Bernard Mpundu, warned depot clerks against collecting money from farmers under the pretext of overtime.

"If this continues, those involved risk being taken to court for corruption," Mpundu said.

Angela is an investigative journalist based in Kasama

Photo Credit. Victor Musonda | FRA Depot Kasama.

Produced by Radio Mano for Makanday Centre for Investigative Journalism - Zambia. The article has been edited and fact-checked by MakanDay.

MEDIA STATEMENT FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ZAMBIAN PREMIER LEAGUE DECISION ON WEEK ONE MATCH BETWEEN ZESCO UNITED FC AND KONK...
20/08/2025

MEDIA STATEMENT
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

ZAMBIAN PREMIER LEAGUE DECISION ON WEEK ONE MATCH BETWEEN ZESCO UNITED FC AND KONKOLA BLADES FC

ZESCO United Football Club acknowledges the Zambian Premier League’s (ZPL) ruling concerning our week one fixture against Konkola Blades FC, which was played on 16th August, 2025 at Levy Mwanawasa Stadium in Ndola.

The club acknowledges an administrative lapse that led to the fielding of ineligible players due to an incomplete team registration process. We take full and unconditional responsibility for this error.

This lapse is a clear breach of set standards, which our league managers, sponsors, fans and supporters expect of us. Effective immediately, the club has instituted remedial action and are implementing corrective measures to prevent any recurrence.

We extend our sincerest apologies to our players, our dedicated supporters, our partners, the Zambian Premier League, and the wider football community.

Our commitment to the integrity of the game and to restoring faith in our operations is absolute.

Issued by:
ZESCO United Football Club

(Original Copy Signed)
Ponga Liwewe
Chief Executive Officer
20th August 2025, Ndola.

Copperbelt University Student Found Dead on Ndola–Kitwe RoadFred Kapuku, a 34-year-old medical student at Copperbelt Uni...
19/08/2025

Copperbelt University Student Found Dead on Ndola–Kitwe Road

Fred Kapuku, a 34-year-old medical student at Copperbelt University (CBU), Ndola Campus, has been identified as the victim whose remains were found in a trunk along the Ndola–Kitwe dual carriageway.

Kapuku’s torso was discovered by community members, while his head and lower limbs were later recovered at a separate location.

Copperbelt Police Commanding Officer, Pathias Siandenge, confirmed that the victim was identified by his girlfriend, also a CBU student, who reported that he was last seen on Saturday, August 16, 2025. At the time, he was driving a black Toyota Mark X, registration number BCG 7441, which is still missing, along with his mobile phone.

“The deceased has been positively identified by his girlfriend as her boyfriend, Kapuku Fred, aged 34, of Room 13, Hospital Hostels. Investigations have been intensified to apprehend those responsible,” Mr. Siandenge said.

Blood on the Copper.. another great Investigative story.
19/08/2025

Blood on the Copper.. another great Investigative story.

Child miners risk death in Zambia’s copper pits (Part I)

By Charles Mafa and Beverly Subeti

Drawn by the promise of quick money, young men, many still in their teens, risk their lives as illegal miners in Zambia’s dangerous copper mines. Politically connected people profit from this, while state institutions grow weaker. This illicit mineral trade extends beyond Zambia, forming part of a wider cross-border network across Southern Africa.

Mourners gather at a grave on the outskirts of Chingola, Zambia. They are burying 21-year-old Paul Chishimba, one of three informal miners killed when a pit collapsed at Sensele Mine in early July. The other two killed were boys, just 14 and 16 years old.

We interviewed Chishimba’s grandmother at her home in Mikiloni township, near the mine. She said the pit was the only source of income for her grandson and many other children in the nearby informal settlement.

“It wasn’t even a deep pit … The ground gave way and buried all three of them. I don’t know exactly what happened. I was only told that Paul was trapped,” she said.

The man who hired Chishimba and his friends to extract copper from the pit paid for the funeral and provided food and transport for the burial. But the family says they do not know his name, only that he lives in the area. The families of the two boys would not speak to us.

A businessman involved in mining claimed that many people die mining, but hospitals often log these deaths as traffic accidents to avoid scrutiny.

Staff at Nchanga North General Hospital told us they have observed a steady increase in “brought in dead” (BID) cases. As at 22 July, the hospital’s mortuary had recorded 116 BIDs for the month, of which only five were officially linked to mine accidents.

The medical superintendent, Dr Charles Chishimba, requested we send a formal query. We asked for mine-related death statistics and whether the hospital reports these to the ministry of mines. He never responded.

A hospital source, who asked not to be named, said bodies from illegal mining accidents arrive in bad condition. The ages of the dead vary, they said, from about 14 to 35.

Mining insiders say children as young as 14 are sought after because their small bodies allow them to get into narrow underground tunnels. Using only picks and shovels, they risk their lives for around K100 (about US$4 or R70) per day.

Ministry of Mines and Minerals Development Permanent Secretary Hapenga Kabeta, interviewed in Lusaka, said security at any private mine lies with the licence holder, not the ministry.

“Sensele [Mine] is licenced to a private individual, and according to the law, it is that individual’s responsibility to secure the area,” he said, referring to the Chingola mine where on 1 December 2023 over 30 informal miners were trapped in a collapse during unauthorised mining.

“They are required to hire security personnel or put in place security infrastructure … There was a security presence at the site, but it was provided at the expense of the developer, not the government.”

Kabeta said the government would take action. “Government has made a decision that security in all mining areas will not be compromised. If there are lapses, they are not the government’s lapses, but those of individuals deployed in those areas.”

Trafficked

But the illicit mining economy is driven by powerful government officials, ruling party representatives, and the businesspeople with whom they collaborate.

A local businessman from Chingola told us that the police “simply take instructions from politicians and their allies”. He said police officers who try to do the right thing are often threatened with dismissal or transferred elsewhere.

Police spokesperson Rae Hamoonga urged the public to report any officers who take bribes for allowing unauthorised access to mining areas.

Police we spoke to say they are struggling to monitor illegal mining sites because the areas are large and the miners frequently change location to avoid detection.

Two local businessmen with mining experience said illegal mining encourages child labour.

“As we speak,” said one, “there was an accident at the mine. The earth collapsed, killing two youth and leaving two others seriously injured. One of the boys who died was about 16.”

Some of the children working in illegal mines come from nearby townships in Chingola. Others, from different regions, are enticed with false promises of good pay and better lives. Local businessmen as well as foreign nationals – some from China – drive this recruitment network.

Zambia’s Anti-Trafficking Act of 2008 was aligned with international standards in 2022. There is no longer a need to prove force or coercion in trafficking cases involving children. The law now criminalises labour trafficking, setting penalties of 20 years to life imprisonment for trafficking adults and 30 years to life for trafficking children.

Despite these amendments, enforcement is weak. According to the 2023 Trafficking in Persons Report by the US government, some government officials, including police, immigration, military and security officers, are involved in trafficking. In 2022, two government drivers and a police officer were charged for transporting suspected victims. It is unclear if the case is resolved.
A new department of anti-human trafficking (DAHT) was set up to work with the existing state secretariat dealing with human trafficking.

The report notes that Zambian children may be forced by criminal groups known as Jerabos (jail boys) to work in illegal mining, including loading stolen copper and crushing rocks.

On 27 July, our investigations led to a house in Chiwempala township, Chingola district, where 34 underage children, recruited from other areas to work on illegal mines, were reportedly living. A Jerabo member who rented the house agreed to allow interviews but only when the children returned from the mine, which could be after several days. But the following day, a police officer at Chingola police station informed our journalists that 38 children had been rescued from Sensele Mine. Some had been returned to their parents; others were still with the police.

An officer offered to accompany journalists to the mine, but then reports came in of rioting after police had tried to remove illegal miners.

One of the journalists working on this story who went to the scene was injured. While at the hospital for a check-up, she saw ten other people, including six police officers, being treated for injuries sustained during the riot.

Police later confirmed the death of one person and said four civilians and seven police officers had been injured. Property damage, police also confirmed, was extensive, with vehicles and earth-moving equipment – a compactor and grader – set ablaze near Chawama Clinic in Chiwempala, where roadworks were underway.

Young men

With the Jerabo member now unwilling to put us in touch with young miners, our journalists turned to two young men they had met at a local barbershop, who said they had taken the body of a colleague to the morgue on 28 July. He had collapsed at an illegal mining site and was suspected to be a victim of trafficking.
We traced the body to Nchanga North Mine Hospital mortuary. The boy’s body was covered in brown soil. His name was listed as Peter Mwansa or Chansa; his friends were unsure of his real name. He was not from the area and his body was not claimed.

Records from Zambia’s Patents and Companies Registration Agency (PACRA) confirm that Sensele Mine is a family business registered in January 2006. It has eight Zambian owners, seven are listed as directors, six as shareholders.

The mine sits on land that was once part of Konkola Copper Mines (KCM), which is 80% owned by Vedanta Resources and 20% by Zambia’s state-owned ZCCM Investments Holdings. As a result, Sensele is privately owned, and KCM no longer holds the surface rights.

The mine, licenced under Small-Scale Mining Licence Nos. 8723-HQ-SML and 8724-HQ-SML, remains a hotspot for illegal mining activities in Chingola. The site was the scene of a fatal disaster in December 2023, when a mudslide caused by informal mining claimed 30 lives.

We asked Permanent Secretary Kabeta what the government is doing to monitor mining sites to prevent children from working these dangerous sites.

“The issue of Sensele involves illegal activity, and when people engage in such acts, the government cannot regulate who enters those areas, whether young or old,” he told MakanDay.

Beverly is a journalist based in Chingola

19/08/2025

1092 people selected for the ZNS Voluntary Training Program to start medicals on August 25 -Defense PS Hamaundu

19/08/2025

Chipolopolo back in the country after a disappointing CHAN outing in Kenya.

FYA
19/08/2025

FYA

PRISON CLAIM: Lusambo Battles Chief Nkana Over US$165,000 From Disputed Mine Sale

By Linda Soko Tembo

After the Ndola High Court lifted a seizure order on US$215,000 in Chief Nkana’s account—frozen by the ACC in 2022 over suspected proceeds of crime—former Lusaka Province Minister Bowman Lusambo, now serving a four-year sentence for corruption and tax evasion, claimed a large share, sparking a fresh legal battle between the two.

The Commission says the seizure was lawful and necessary for its money-laundering investigation, but Godfrey Shamanena, the current Chief Nkana disputes this and has taken the ACC to the Economic and Financial Crimes Court claiming for damages. Trial for this case is scheduled for July 29, 2025.

While that case proceeds, Lusambo—speaking through his lawyers from prison—has launched his own claim. He alleges that between 2021 and 2022, he played a key role in negotiations for the sale of Bisma Mining Limited to Grizzly Mining Limited, owned by businessman Ndiaye Abdoulaye, widely known as Gunnase.

Lusambo says he resolved legal disputes that paved the way for the sale, and as part of the deal, US$165,000 was to be shared between himself (US$105,000), Chieftainess Malembeka (US$50,000), and Chief Nkana (US$30,000).

He points to a letter, allegedly authored by the Chief to Grizzly Mining, instructing payment of his share. Instead, he claims, the full US$165,000 was deposited into the Chief’s personal account—the same account later frozen by the ACC.

When the court released the funds this year, Lusambo says the Chief refused to pay, prompting his lawyers at Makebi Zulu Advocates to issue a demand letter on June 24, 2025. With no response, Lusambo secured an injunction freezing the account again.

Chief Nkana rejects the allegations, insisting Lusambo had no role in the US$5 million transaction, which he says was handled solely by Muya and Company. He is now seeking to have the injunction lifted.

ECL Leave to Appeal adjourned sine die(with no appointed date for resumption)
18/08/2025

ECL Leave to Appeal adjourned sine die(with no appointed date for resumption)

Week One Standings -ZPL
16/08/2025

Week One Standings -ZPL

We wish to notify you that the page name has been renamed from "Yukai Media" to "Independent Eye Media" our objective re...
16/08/2025

We wish to notify you that the page name has been renamed from "Yukai Media" to "Independent Eye Media" our objective remains the same, to furnish you with verified and indepth news stories.

We wait for Facebook to approve the new brand name.


The 2025/26 Zambian Premier League kicks off today.
16/08/2025

The 2025/26 Zambian Premier League kicks off today.

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