Mealie-meal shortage artificial — Grain Millers Association of Zimbabwe

Theseus Shambare, Harare Bureau MEALIE-MEAL stockouts in retail outlets witnessed over the last few weeks were a result of “logistical challenges” that were being faced by local milling companies, which have since been resolved and consumers should not panic over supply shortages, the Grain  Millers Association of Zimbabwe (GMAZ) has said. GMAZ chairperson Mr Tafadzwa […]

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Theseus Shambare, Harare Bureau

MEALIE-MEAL stockouts in retail outlets witnessed over the last few weeks were a result of “logistical challenges” that were being faced by local milling companies, which have since been resolved and consumers should not panic over supply shortages, the Grain  Millers Association of Zimbabwe (GMAZ) has said.

GMAZ chairperson Mr Tafadzwa Musarara made these remarks yesterday while on an inspection tour of retail outlets in Harare to assess the availability of the country’s staple in shops.

The tour was held in conjunction with the Confederation of Zimbabwe Retailers (CZR).

“In the past week or so, we experienced a shortage of mealie-meal in both wholesale and retail shops,” he said.

“This was due to logistical challenges that we have been experiencing.

“However, after engagement with Government and all stakeholders involved, deliveries have resumed and in the next 10 days, both the formal and informal markets will be flooded.

“This is an artificial shortage we are addressing.”

The disruption, he said, only affected roller meal, while all other products such as rice, salt and flour were not impacted.

“Next week (this week), we will be in Mutare, Gweru and Kwekwe,” he continued.

“The shortage has been affecting the northern part of the country.

“In the southern part, there is more than adequate supplies.”

CZR president Mr Denford Mutashu said: “I can confirm that there have been shortages in mealie-meal supplies.

“However, we have found a solution to this problem after crowding in the Government and private sector.

“As you can see here, truckloads of mealie -meal have come to deliver and we would want to assure the consumers that there is no need for panic buying.”

He added: “Now that we have addressed the shortage problem, the next step is to ensure that consumers are not overpriced by unscrupulous retailers.”

Last week, supermarkets in Harare experienced mealie-meal stockouts, prompting Industry and Commerce Minister Dr Sithembiso Nyoni to assure the nation of the availability of the staple.

Said Minister Nyoni: “The responsibility of the Government is to monitor the supply of goods in the market and there have been a few days where there has been a shortage of mealie-meal, so because of that we have called an all stakeholders’ meeting to prevent a catastrophe.

“We have made sure that before the situation gets worse, we make sure that maize meal is available since there has been a shortage.” — * X: @TheseusShambare

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Maintaining graves not our job – Bulawayo City Council

Robin Muchetu, Senior Reporter THE Bulawayo City Council has urged residents with relatives buried at different cemeteries in the city to constantly check and maintain the graves as it is not the duty of the local authority to do that for them. Council made it clear that they were overwhelmed in maintaining the vast area […]

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Robin Muchetu, Senior Reporter

THE Bulawayo City Council has urged residents with relatives buried at different cemeteries in the city to constantly check and maintain the graves as it is not the duty of the local authority to do that for them.

Council made it clear that they were overwhelmed in maintaining the vast area the cemeteries cover and urged  relatives of the deceased to play ball after panic buttons were pressed last week with reports that graves were collapsing at Luveve Cemetery as a result of rains.

The comments by BCC come in the wake of some residents who were quick to blame the local authority for not doing enough to ensure the graves were taken care of.

BCC corporate communications manager Mrs Nesisa Mpofu said the council conducts the general maintenance of the cemetery to ensure that they do not look unkempt.

She said they trim overgrown vegetation so that people have access to the cemeteries.

“It is a challenge for the city to maintain individual graves due to the size and number of graves in each cemetery. The City of Bulawayo has seven cemeteries. Three of the cemeteries are commissioned, namely Luveve Cemetery Extension, Umvutsha Park Cemetery and Lady Stanley which is reserved for senior citizens. The decommissioned cemeteries are four, namely Luveve, Hyde Park, West Park and Athlone.

“The city faces shortage of human resources to cover all seven cemeteries at once taking into consideration that some cemeteries like Luveve are over 22 hectares in size and Athlone 17 hectares,” she said.

She called on relatives to ensure their relatives’ graves were taken care of.

The maintenance of graves has seen entrepreneurial residents such as Mr Shadreck Marara starting a grave cleaning services venture to assist those, especially in the diaspora, who cannot physically clean and maintain their relatives’ graves.

Mr Marara said it is an important activity that communities should engage in wherever possible.

“Council does not clean up individual graves. They only cut grass, they do not go into it case by case and rebuild collapsed graves and fallen tombstones to mention a few. The families must do all other repairs that need to be done to the graves as a grave is a sacred thing, strangers cannot be seen doing things on someone’s grave without the blessings of the family,” said Mr Marara.

Mr Marara said failure to do personal grave maintenance was going to see the graves continuing to dilapidate with no one tending to them.

“It is a mess if you do not go there often to just check. I advise that you visit the sites twice a year, soon after the rainy season to get rid of weeds and also at the end of the year to see if all is well. But never neglect the graves of your loved ones.

Sign posts get rusty over time and you need to repaint them and have clear details. Thieves also steal these pegs that show grave numbers and resell them. So people must go and inspect if things are still the same,” he said.

Mr Marara also said cloths and lace material that cover tombstones just before families do the unveiling of tombstones are also often stolen.

“People have lost respect for the dead. People also steal bricks that will be on other graves, quarry stones decorating the graves, all that is often stolen,” he said.

Mr Marara said maintaining graves was very important in the African culture.

Historian Mr Pathisa Nyathi, however, said the physical appearance of cemeteries and graves was not too important to send people into panic.

“The truth is, the idea of maintenance was not there before and you should understand the nature of a human being, comprising two components, spirit and flesh. When I die what remains on the ground is the body, material component. But in Africa what is of interest to the deceased future generations is that which does not die and it is the spirit. It is the spirit that is looked after carefully, rather than the bones,” said Mr Nyathi.

He echoed one traditional leader who said, “We do not go to the graveside, the people who visit graves are witches”.

“He was right in a way, in that between the two (spirit and flesh), the one that we give upper consideration is the spirit and non-tangible, it is therefore remembered and recognised differently. This is through rituals like umbuyiso, after one year you are brought back into the home, this is taking care of the spirit. There is benefit in that, the other one (flesh) is no longer that relevant, as they cannot take care of you but the ancestral spirit will take care of me,” said Mr Nyathi.

He said the ancestral spirits are the ones that must be taken care of and appeased from time to time, by informing them of what the living were doing and also seeking direction from them.

“Generally, in our context, we do not visit the graveside that often but we go emsamo and speak to our ancestors. Their care is more practical and yet intangible. But today things are all mixed up, the European way of life does not involve ancestral spirits, to them what is emphasised are the physical and material things. But because we have abandoned our African indigenous spirituality we now follow their (European) ways by emphasising material things,” said Mr Nyathi. –@NyembeziMu

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Another new school for Beitbridge

Thupeyo Muleya, Beitbridge Bureau A new primary school that was built in Beitbridge Town’s Ward 4, in the Khwalu 2 suburb is set to open doors for classes next term, an official has said. Beitbridge Town Clerk, Mr Loud Ramakgapola said the school — Alfred Beit Primary whose construction was made possible through devolution funds was […]

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Thupeyo Muleya, Beitbridge Bureau

A new primary school that was built in Beitbridge Town’s Ward 4, in the Khwalu 2 suburb is set to open doors for classes next term, an official has said.

Beitbridge Town Clerk, Mr Loud Ramakgapola said the school — Alfred Beit Primary whose construction was made possible through devolution funds was almost complete.

The school, so far, has two classroom blocks and authorities are working on toilets and related facilities.

So far, the local authority has spent at least $18 million to build the two classroom blocks at the new primary school from their 2022 allocation.

“We are in the process of finishing ablution facilities. We now plan to open in Term 2 this year,” said Mr Ramakgapola.

The new primary school was named after the trust which built the first bridge that links Zimbabwe and South Africa in 1935.

Since the 1980s, the Beitbridge council only had two schools under its ambit which include Dulivhadzimu Primary School and Vhembe High School.

It is expected that the building of the Alfred Beit Primary School will help decongest most schools in the town.

Beitbridge Mayor, Councillor Peter Pirato Mafuta said recently that the local authority also plans to use more funds to build more schools to accommodate the town’s ever-growing population.

“Two classroom blocks have already been completed at the new school and the construction of ablution facilities has commenced so that will see this school opening doors soon,” said the mayor.

Sunday News is reliably informed that the town has a shortage of four primary and two secondary schools.

Ideally the council needs to have a primary school for every 5 000 people and one secondary school with three feeder primary schools.

The town has an estimated population of 100 000 with three secondary and six official primary schools.

Among other things the municipality has also deployed their devolution allocations to buy the yellow machines (earth                                                                                          moving equipment) which are critical in                                                                                              stands servicing, road maintenance and construction.

With their 2023 funds, the council managed to digitise services, buy solar power back up systems to ensure they offer continuous services and to upgrade the Local Authorities Digital Systems (LADS) for budget formulation and to construct a new clinic to improve primary health care facilities.

According to the latest municipality budget proposal, the local authority says it intends to build a poly clinic, construct 25 by two-roomed houses, procure a 20 000 litres bowser to augment the firefighting services, a tipper, a 12 tonne roller compactor, an ambulance install public lights, buy tow service vehicles and drill two boreholes at strategic points.

Service delivery has gradually been improving at the cash-strapped municipality as the Government continues pouring in funds for capital projects under the devolution initiative.

In the last four years the council managed to procure a refuse compactor truck and earth moving equipment, upgraded its ICT facilities and procured two service vehicles.

They also built five two-roomed houses to address the colonial problem of crowding in the Dulivhadzimu suburb. The council is targeting to build a set of 28 new two-roomed houses. –@tupeyo 

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800 fined for selling counterfeit products

Lisa Matasi THE Consumer Protection Commission (CPC) last month fined more than 870 retailers for selling substandard and counterfeit products during a crackdown meant to protect Zimbabwean consumers from potentially harmful goods. The counterfeit products recovered during the blitz include toothpaste, beverages and chemicals. Counterfeit toothpaste — a product crucial for maintaining oral hygiene — […]

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Lisa Matasi

THE Consumer Protection Commission (CPC) last month fined more than 870 retailers for selling substandard and counterfeit products during a crackdown meant to protect Zimbabwean consumers from potentially harmful goods.

The counterfeit products recovered during the blitz include toothpaste, beverages and chemicals.

Counterfeit toothpaste — a product crucial for maintaining oral hygiene — poses a threat to consumer health as it may contain harmful chemicals or ineffective ingredients.

The presence of fake beverages in retail outlets raises concerns about contamination and adulteration, jeopardising food safety.

Some of the retailers were slapped with fines of up to US$5 000.

CPC research and public affairs manager Mr Kudakwashe Mudereri said: “The Consumer Protection Commission has noted with concern the proliferation of backyard production and sale of illicit and counterfeit products such as beverages, toothpaste and chemicals, among others, in clear violation of the law.

“This has resulted in increased exposure of our consumers to harmful, defective and substandard products, consequently prejudicing the unsuspecting buyers of goods and services and compromising the health of the country’s general citizenry.”

The Consumer Protection Act, Mr Mudereri said, prohibits suppliers from selling goods that do not conform to mandatory safety and quality standards and those that pose “any risk of an unusual nature”.

“In this regard, the Consumer Protection Commission, working with other law-enforcement agents and other key stakeholders, is carrying out an enforcement blitz throughout the country to weed out any suppliers or distributors of counterfeit and illicit alcoholic beverages on the market,” he continued.

“A team of inspectors from the commission has so far netted over 876 unscrupulous businesses across the country found selling unsafe, substandard and counterfeit products.”

The operation, he added, was part of Government’s ongoing drive to contain drug and substance abuse.

“Those found to be non-compliant have been prosecuted, in line with provisions of the Consumer Protection Act, which requires perpetrators to pay for their misdemeanours through fines of up to Level 14 or imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years, or to both such fine and such imprisonment.”

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Nkayi schools re-enrol adolescent mothers

Robin Muchetu, Senior Reporter NKAYI District is recording a reduction in early and unintended pregnancies while it has recorded positives in its drive to reintegrate girls back into school after having fallen pregnant during the Covid-19 era. The district is one of the areas in Matabeleland North Province and the country that was hard hit by […]

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Robin Muchetu, Senior Reporter

NKAYI District is recording a reduction in early and unintended pregnancies while it has recorded positives in its drive to reintegrate girls back into school after having fallen pregnant during the Covid-19 era.

The district is one of the areas in Matabeleland North Province and the country that was hard hit by teenage pregnancies when the country was under lockdown.

The district has eight schools that are undergoing the Adolescent Mothers Education Initiative Project (AMEI) under World Vision which seeks to empower affected girls and reintegrate them into the school system to continue with their education. 

The district’s remedial tutor in the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education Mr Amos Sibanda said the affected learners have started returning to school.

“So far all the eight secondary schools are now reintegrating the girls into the schools. Earlier on, some were shunning them and did not want to take back the girls. Even parents were resisting bringing back their children to school for fear of the stigma. Some were saying there is no benefit of sending someone’s wife to school but through campaigns and sensitisation, slowly, the girls are now coming back to school. Almost all the eight schools have adolescent mothers,” said Mr Sibanda.

The groups that were sensitised included the traditional leadership, heads of schools, community health workers, teachers and adolescent mothers too.

“We sensitised the girls because most of them also did not want to go back to school too. They were scared of what other learners and teachers would say about them being pregnant or being mothers. However, we managed to talk to them. Child Protection Committees were also resuscitated so that they could assist in sensitising the girls and the information also cascades to other community members,” he added.

During the campaigns, the ministry said they were using education policies to re-enrol learners and to also avail them to the target populations so that they see that their actions were guided by policies.

“We used the Constitution of Zimbabwe and the Education Act No15 of 2020 Chapter 25, and in whatever we do, we do it in the best interest of the child. We also used the Secretaries Circular No 35 of 2023 on discipline, it talks about handling such cases and it guides parents, teachers and school administrators on how to handle issues about children in schools. We unpacked that circular to them so that these girls know that they still had a right to go back to school,” said Mr Sibanda.

He highlighted that learners, even after falling pregnant, need continuous guidance and counselling together with their peers to safeguard them from harassment and bullying from others.

He said information on the reintegration of the adolescent mothers was cascading to all schools and they were all in compliance with the policy. 

“We also urge teachers to ensure that they offer catch-up lessons to learners who will have missed school after falling pregnant for them to be at the same level as their peers in terms of the school curriculum,” he said. @NyembeziMu

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