Zimbabwean Authorities Remove 7 Foreign Universities From Accredited List

Source: Zimbabwean Authorities Remove 7 Foreign Universities From Accredited List The Zimbabwe Council for Higher Education (ZIMCHE) named seven (7) mainly Cypriot institutions which it says are no longer recognised as degree awarding institutions. In a statement on Monday, 11 March, ZIMCHE stated that after a review of the accreditation status of various foreign higher […]

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Source: Zimbabwean Authorities Remove 7 Foreign Universities From Accredited List

The Zimbabwe Council for Higher Education (ZIMCHE) named seven (7) mainly Cypriot institutions which it says are no longer recognised as degree awarding institutions.

In a statement on Monday, 11 March, ZIMCHE stated that after a review of the accreditation status of various foreign higher education institutions, seven universities were delisted without providing specific reasons. Reads the statement:

This notice is to inform the public that the following institutions are no longer accredited by ZIMCHE: Girne American University (Northern Cyprus), Sharda University of India, Parul University (India), Near East University (Northern Cyprus), University of Kyrenia (Northern Cyprus), The European University of Lefke (Northern Cyprus), and University of Nicosia (Northern Cyprus).

In light of this development, we strongly urge the public to verify the accreditation status of foreign universities before considering enrollment for themselves or their children. Studying at an unaccredited institution may result in financial loss and have serious implications for one’s academic qualifications and career prospects.

In an earlier statement last week, ZIMCHE said it did not recognise all degrees offered in Zimbabwe by International Institute of Philanthropy (IIP), which it said had not complied with local regulations.

ZIMCHE is responsible for the accreditation and registration of all higher education institutions and programmes in Zimbabwe and also ensures that these institutions and programs meet national standards for quality assurance and education.

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Toyota Aqua driver who stole a 2-year-old baby in Gweru ARRESTED!

A FORMER senior police officer and his wife appeared in court yesterday after a two-month-old baby girl was allegedly kidnapped in Southview suburb in Gweru on Friday. Mekia Tanyanyiwa, who headed the ZRP Support Unit, and his wife, Sakhile Tshuma (34)…

A FORMER senior police officer and his wife appeared in court yesterday after a two-month-old baby girl was allegedly kidnapped in Southview suburb in Gweru on Friday. Mekia Tanyanyiwa, who headed the ZRP Support Unit, and his wife, Sakhile Tshuma (34) appeared before Gweru provincial magistrate Ms Beauty Dube facing kidnapping charges. Tanyanyiwa had his […]

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Devex Newswire: ‘Grave’ accusations fly between USAID and Zimbabwe

Source: Devex Newswire: ‘Grave’ accusations fly between USAID and Zimbabwe | Devex The ambassador of Zimbabwe to the U.S. accused USAID’s work of interfering in the country’s democratic processes, while the agency accused Zimbabwe of harassing its staff and contractors. Plus, starvation as a tactic of war. By Anna Gawel  A war of words — including […]

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Source: Devex Newswire: ‘Grave’ accusations fly between USAID and Zimbabwe | Devex

A war of words — including charges of forced deportations and election interference — has erupted between USAID and Zimbabwe.

Kicked out

On Friday, USAID Administrator Samantha Power issued a scathing statement blasting Zimbabwe for allegedly intimidating, harassing, and expelling USAID staffers and contractors, calling it a “grave” development. She accused Zimbabwean authorities of “subjecting some of them to overnight detention, transportation in unsafe conditions, prolonged interrogation, seizure of and intrusion into personal electronic equipment, and forced deportation.”

But Zimbabwe’s ambassador lobbed plenty of his own accusations, claiming the agency was interfering in his country’s democracy and calling USAID’s human rights and governance work a “gross violation” of Zimbabwe’s sovereignty.

“Clearly, they want to influence our election process, and that is unacceptable,” Zimbabwe’s ambassador to the U.S., Tadeous Tafirenyika Chifamba, tells my colleague Elissa Miolene. “If USAID wants to send more people on missions like this without working directly with the government, they will face a similar fate.”

Last week, the U.S. sanctioned Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa and other senior government officials for alleged corruption and human rights abuses. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken claimed Zimbabwean government officials have been involved in looting national coffers and participating in abductions, abuse, and killings that have “left citizens living in fear.”

Chifamba didn’t hold back in refuting the charges, telling Elissa that the allegations were “a lot of nonsense” — not to mention hypocritical.

“When it comes to human rights abuses, they abound [in the U.S.],” Chifamba says. “Has the U.S. imposed any sanctions against itself? If not, why impose them against Zimbabwe?”

Is anything off the table?

When we hear about weapons of war, we often think about military hardware, but food is also used as a method of control — and the U.S. apparently isn’t averse to wielding it.

For several months, the Biden administration has stored some 60,000 metric tons of wheat in warehouses in the United Arab Emirates, my colleague Colum Lynch writes. The food — originally destined for millions of hungry Yemeni civilians in territory controlled by Iranian-backed Houthi rebels — is a bargaining chip in a high-stakes U.N. negotiation over who gets to decide how aid is distributed.

But the U.S. is far from alone in effectively weaponizing starvation. From Afghanistan and Gaza to Syria, Sudan, and Ukraine, hunger and starvation have become mainstays in the arsenals of governments and armed groups.

“The Golden Age of humanitarianism was from 1990, with the collapse of the Soviet Union, until a few years ago,” Andrew Natsios, a former USAID administrator and an advocate of decoupling food assistance from diplomacy, tells Colum. “The norm is eroding and I think great power politics is playing a role in that, and it’s going to be increasingly difficult for us to enforce these rules.”

But others say the rules have always had loopholes that leave civilians at the mercy of combatants.

“In the laws of war, you’re allowed to starve your adversary, but you’re not allowed to starve civilians in an international conflict,” says Michael Fakhri, an Oregon University law professor who serves as the U.N. special rapporteur on the right to food. But he points out: “If you’re going to starve your adversary, you’re inevitably going to starve civilians.”

“I’ve heard some diplomats say off the record ‘Look, we all use food as a weapon,’” he adds.

Digital divide

The World Bank wants the rest of the world to become wired and connected.

Last week the anti-poverty lender hosted its first Global Digital Summit to spur digital access, alongside affordability and usability, in low-income countries, writes Devex contributor Sophie Edwards. And there are plenty of people still offline — 2.6 billion, in fact, with the majority of them in lower-income countries. The advent of artificial intelligence means that many of these countries will only fall further behind as the world embarks on a digital revolution.

“Without access to the internet and the skills to use digital technologies effectively, you are essentially locked out of the modern world,” Axel van Trotsenburg, the bank’s senior managing director, said in a press release. “The critical services that support development — like hospitals, schools, energy infrastructure, and agriculture — all run on connectivity and data.”

To that end, World Bank President Ajay Banga has vowed to prioritize the issue by creating a new operational unit dedicated to accelerating countries’ digital transformation.

As the former head of Mastercard, the second-largest payment technology corporation in the world, Banga understands the importance of digital inclusion. As such, he doesn’t see any conflict between boosting digital access and focusing on more traditional basic services, such as providing electricity to the 600 million people in Africa who currently lack it.

There is no tradeoff,” he said at the summit. “The reality is we have to get those 600 million people connected to electricity. … Meanwhile, there’s the other billion and a half of people who have access to electricity but don’t have digital. We have work to do with them too. And then there’s the others who do have access to the internet, but it’s not being fully used and exploited for the capabilities that it is possible to do. So there’s different shades of work to be done with different target audiences.”

A healthy leg up

One area where going digital could fundamentally alter and improve our lives is health. The adoption of digital health technologies in Africa could be a particular lifesaver — and a boon to investors.

“Today, more than 50% of Africans live more than 5 kilometers from any health center, and in many of those places, there is no electricity, and other types of infrastructure are still lagging behind. The only type of infrastructure that reaches everywhere is mobile,” said Jean Philbert Nsengimana, the chief digital health adviser for the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, at the Mobile World Congress in Spain. He called it “a multibillion-dollar opportunity for investors, for innovators, for policymakers. But it’s also a great challenge that no one can solve on their own.”

Over 40 African countries have developed national digital health strategies and the Africa CDC released its own last year to support its member countries. The biggest gap now is to ensure these strategies are actually being implemented, Nsengimana told Devex contributor Natalie Donback.

But the continent could have a leg up on countries such as India, whose government has created a highly digitized health sector. That’s because the regulatory framework to a certain extent doesn’t exist yet, meaning innovation is quicker and not stifled by legacy and complex regulations, Pavan Ananth, founder and CEO of the consulting firm Pravesh, told Natalie.

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Redcliff council defrauding residents!

Source: Redcliff council defrauding residents! It never rains but pours for residents of the small town of Redcliff. Tendai Ruben Mbofana   We face the dilemma of the proverbial smoking pipe – burnt on one end and bitten on the other. We have not had potable water in our homes for the past three years […]

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Source: Redcliff council defrauding residents!

It never rains but pours for residents of the small town of Redcliff.

Tendai Ruben Mbofana

 

We face the dilemma of the proverbial smoking pipe – burnt on one end and bitten on the other.

We have not had potable water in our homes for the past three years – with our local authority proffering every excuse under the sun for their unmitigated failures in providing the most basic service.

We have been told of outstanding payments from residents, broken down machinery, electricity challenges, turbidity (when it rains), and endless others.

Not only are residents being denied an essential service, but a constitutionally mandated right.

I will not even dwell on this particular issue since I have already written about it on several occasions.

As if living without potable water at the risk of contracting deadly ancient diseases as cholera was not enough, we are led by a council riddled with corruption.

Again, as I have previously highlighted, there have been numerous reports of the misuse of municipal land – which was exchanged for such things as expensive luxury vehicles and high-end mobile phones for top officials.

These fraudulent activities have repeatedly been flagged by the country’s auditor-general.

This was after the municipality of Redcliff scandalously gave away 21 hectares of our land, in a deal estimated to be worth US$850,000, with a Chinese cement making company (Livetouch Investments).

The murky deal not only violated the Public Procurement and Disposal of Assets Act – by not going to tender – but was highly irregular since Livetouch Investments is not a vehicle supplier.

We have watched, in utter shock, as top officials gave themselves Toyota Fortuner GD6s, four Toyota Hilux, five Nissan NP300 trucks, and others.

Further to this, investigations revealed that the town clerk’s Toyota Fortuner as well as a Toyota Quantum vehicle were invoiced different amounts in excess of the agreed values as per the purchase agreement.

The Toyota Fortuner on purchase agreement was invoiced US$61,727, but the council invoiced US$83,500, resulting in a variance of US$21,773.

The Toyota Quantum on the purchase agreement was invoiced US$41,034, which later shot up to US$50,465 on actual payment made, showing a US$9,431 variance.

Further investigations by corruption watchdog, Anti-Corruption Trust of Southern Africa (ACT-SA), exposed even more to the rot.

A whistle-blower claimed that Toyota Fortuner GD6 vehicles were not procured from Toyota Zimbabwe but instead from an individual linked to a top official in the council.

When asked, Toyota Zimbabwe has denied any such transaction with the municipality of Redcliff – contrary to the local authority’s assertions.

A national publication, NewsHawks, also reported that a company called Storey Marketing Hardware, which supplies protective clothing, wrote a letter to the municipality requesting the amounts owed to it to be paid by allocation of stands, and the local authority agreed.

The value of the transaction was ZW$537,113 – and a low-density residential stand number 3929 measuring 1,300 square meters was allocated.

There are more reports of land being awarded to several councilors and officials in rather dubious circumstances.

It is widely believed that quite a number of officials are now owners of stands throughout Redcliff under questionable deals.

The apparent graft by the municipality appears to now have been targeted at residents who are receiving fraudulent bills.

I, as many other residents, keep receiving bills that defy all logic.

My December 2023 invoice had an outrageous amount totaling US$154 – with a ridiculously insane US$87 in water charges, despite the fact that we have gone for three years without the precious liquid.

Only after registering my outrage with the finance director was the bill eventually recalculated and reduced – after which I paid the new amount in full on 8th January 2024.

Yet yesterday, only two months later, I received the February 2024 bill containing more shocks.

This time around, the municipality claims that I owe for the past three months

How can I possibly have outstanding payments stretching three months when I paid every cent in full only two months ago?

I, again, had to lodge my disgruntlement and utter displeasure with the finance director, who promised to look into the issue today.

I await to hear the verdict.

On top of that, I never received my January 2024 invoice, in spite of making several inquiries with the finance department.

I can only just imagine how much the municipality is defrauding Redcliff residents each month.

Let us remember that not all of us are able to quickly figure out these discrepancies and flaws in our bills, and most people will simply pay what is shown.

What more, we are being made to pay for services that are not being provided.

In all this, ordinary residents are living in danger of cholera due to uncollected refuse and lack of potable water.

An unacceptably high number of roads are impassible, whilst numerous areas have no street lights – leading to an increase in burglaries.

In so doing, not only do we have to pay the municipality for nothing in return, but we also have to fork out loads of dollars in buying water from those with private boreholes.

Yet our town fathers and mothers are more concerned about looting our resources for their own aggrandizement and comfort.

This has to be stopped.

It is about time residents showed some teeth by standing up against these deplorable injustices, which are driven by pure greed and cruelty.

Endless talking and meetings held in bad faith will not take us anywhere.

There is own a need for tangible action.

We can not keep folding our arms while somehow expecting the situation to improve on its own.

Enough is enough!

  • Tendai Ruben Mbofana is a social justice advocate and writer. Please feel free to WhatsApp or Call: +263715667700 | +263782283975, or email: mbofana.tendairuben73@gmail.com, or visit website: https://mbofanatendairuben.news.blog/

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Econet to upgrade rural base stations 

Source: Econet to upgrade rural base stations -Newsday Zimbabwe ECONET Wireless is targeting to complete upgrading its network in rural areas to 4G by 2025 as it moves to support the country’s smart cities vision, NewsDay Business can report. Most of Econet’s base stations located in rural areas are operating on the 2G network. According […]

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Source: Econet to upgrade rural base stations -Newsday Zimbabwe

ECONET Wireless is targeting to complete upgrading its network in rural areas to 4G by 2025 as it moves to support the country’s smart cities vision, NewsDay Business can report.

Most of Econet’s base stations located in rural areas are operating on the 2G network. According to delegates at Global Renaissance Investments’ Smart Cities and Devolution Masterclass last week in Nyanga, the 2G scenario does not support Zimbabwe’s ambition for smart cities.

However, Econet Wireless segment business manager for public enterprises Chad Nyakonda said the company seeks to have renovated every base station in rural areas by 2025.

“According to our plan, we should be done by 2025. But as a country, it is subject to the resources that we all know about. So, we will have a challenge like everyone else in the country,” Nyakonda said.

“But we are also doing certain antics so that we will be able to do that. If you look at other countries right now, I remember there were some people who went to Australia on roaming and there was no 3G or 2G.

“So, that is where the world is going. But obviously, in Africa, it will take a long time for us to phase out 2G and 3G because we still have quite a lot of computing assets.  But if everything is equal, we will be done by 2025. But [this is] subject to the obvious issue that is affecting everyone in the country, (foreign currency),” he said.

The smart cities concept is expected to generate the much-needed investments expected to boost economic growth towards the targeted upper middle-income status by 2030.

Econet has started working on base stations in rural areas, including in Luangwe, according to Nyakonda. The company also has several initiatives in the works that are related to the role that technology plays in enabling smart cities.

In 2022, Econet invested more than US$66 million in network modernisation.

“We have data centres and right now we have got three of them, two in Harare, one in Mutare and we are also building some in Gweru and Bulawayo. So, for those who want to do hosting, you do not have to build new infrastructure. We can actually host you there, whether it is for the kids to come, or for your software and so forth, we will be able to do that,” he said.

He indicated that some of the initiatives included know-your-customer systems for banks, synergies and public private partnerships.

“We have two synergies. We don’t have to do a turnkey solution, but we have two synergies, which is something that is of interest to everybody. Even with the financing, we can largely do it,” he said.

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