Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Implications of President Michael Sata's Irrational Appointments

Barely two months after wrestling power from the corrupt and much discredited Rupiah Banda administration, President Michael Chilufya Sata is already becoming prone to making irrational and unthinking appointments of corrupt people that lack morals and integrity to various government positions. What started as a one-off guff is maturing into a daily ritual. Several appointments made so far, no names mentioned here, have left many Zambians worried, concerned and wondering whether the man at the helm of the Zambian Government is acting in his right frame of mind or not. A couple of days after his election, Sata stated that he is allergic to corruption. The question now is, if he is truly allergic to corruption, "Why has he such affinity for corrupt people, people that stole from the Zambia people, people still on trial or cases pending before the courts of law?" One wonders where Michael Sata was when many of his irregular appointees where found with serious cases to answer? Was he living in a part of the world that was disconnected from the media?

While we all expect the president to make some appointments, we also believe that it is dangerous to let him on the loose and continue making serious mistakes. He is acting with impunity and total disregard and betrayal of the people that voted for him in the first place. One cannot agree more for the urgent need to have a constitution in place that will ensure checks and balances to guarantee the separation of powers. It is becoming all too clear that the PF government is on the path to renegade on most of their campaign promises. It is extremely disconcerting to see the PF leadership that we thought held much promise for a clean and upright governance start making unconscious appoints, and back-pedaling on the promise to re-introduce windfall taxes on mines.

The Zambian people are quick in starting to lose trust and if Sata continues in the manner he has been going about his appointments he will soon find that his support will thin out in no time. It is encouraging to see Dr. Sondashi advise President Sata to revoke the appointment of Emmanuel Mwamba as Permanent Secretary for Northern Province. Dr. Sondashi's courage is applauded. If the president does not consult his cabinet to arrive at rational decisions, this is an opportunity to correct the mess he is getting himself in. If he does consult his ministers but the ministers are just wimps, this is the time for them all to stand up for what is right and stop endorsing unrealistic ideas advanced by the president. 

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Wild Cats and King Cobra

Nov 10, 2011

After just two months in office, President Michael Chilufya Sata has made a complete turnaround in his attitude to China. He once criticised Chinese investors but now wants to use them to develop Zambia’s economy.

The full force of his government is focused on reassuring its partners in Beijing, leaving workers and human rights groups to attack the activities of Chinese mining companies. In opposition, Sata (aka King Cobra) blamed Chinese investors for abuse and corruption; as President, he blames the former government for fraud in handing out working papers.

Every ministry that has any dealings with the Chinese government or Chinese companies has started a charm offensive. At a 28 October State House luncheon given by Sata for the Chinese community in Zambia, he told Ambassador Zhou Yuxiao that he would send Zambia’s founding President Kenneth Kuanda to Beijing to thank the Chinese government for its investment and aid. Rather than blame Chinese companies for unreliable construction projects or for bringing large numbers of Chinese labourers into the country, Sata blames the former government.

After lunch, Minister of Mines and Mineral Development Wylbur Simuusa told Chinese companies the government hopes for a period of unprecedented good relations with Beijing. He echoed the new Patriotic Front government’s message that China’s investments will be protected and that its companies will be able to engage in any economic activity as long as they respect Zambia’s laws. At China’s Lusaka Embassy on 31 October, Simuusa reassured Ambassador Zhou that he would work to reduce misunderstandings between the two governments after the recent labour unrest. Simuusa then left for an official visit to China.

On 2 November, Finance Minister Alexander Chikwanda told Zhou that China is Zambia’s most reliable partner. His ministry will set up a unit to work more closely with the Embassy on the follow-up of Chinese projects.

Since defeating incumbent Rupiah Banda and the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) in the 20 September polls, Sata’s popularity has soared. After campaigning on populist slogans of ‘more jobs, less taxes and more money in your pockets’, he has made huge statements and attempted to reverse the Banda government’s more unpopular decisions. Sata, who says his PF will lead Zambia on the principles of the ten commandments, has pledged zero tolerance for corruption.

Sata’s shake-up

In the first month of his presidency, Sata fired Bank of Zambia Governor Caleb Fundanga and its board, reversed the FirstRand takeover of Finance Bank, briefly halted metal exports and purged elements of the Anti-Corruption Commission, Drug Enforcement Commission, the police and Zambia Defence Force. He also directed that the minimum wage for non-unionised industrial workers be increased from 419,000 kwacha (US$85) to K1 million. Sata’s changes, so far, have focused on pro-poor programmes and combating corruption in the civil service. He promised drastic change within 90 days. His critics argue that some of his pronouncements and decisions on graft are not genuine but perceived. ‘This has come at a cost, promoting a high level of uncertainty,’ says a governance expert.

Workers saw the victory of Sata, a vocal critic of Chinese workplace practices (AAC passim), as a signal for poorly paid Zambian workers at Chinese mines to demand better working conditions. ‘The workers have expressed their views [at the ballot box] and now they feel liberated,’ Labour Minister Fackson Shamenda said on 24 October. Chinese-owned mines and industries have been hit by an unprecedented wave of industrial unrest. Chinese companies, chiefly in the mining sector, have suffered the brunt of the wild-cat strikes in the wake of Sata’s election.

The ‘Chinese have been responsible for the economic growth seen in Zambia in recent times… and therefore it goes without saying that instability at Chinese [mining] operations spells doom for the economy,’ an industry expert told Africa-Asia Confidential, adding that ‘the President needs to take responsibility for these strikes because ultimately the buck stops with him.’

Zambians working in Chinese mines are some of the lowest-paid employees in the hazardous mining sector. Sata won by a huge margin in Copperbelt Province, where he has enjoyed unwavering support since the 2006 polls. Under the MMD government, workers complained that foreign capital took precedence over workers’ welfare. Labourers continue to work under poor conditions and without proper protective equipment (see box).

Chambishi Copper Mines, owned by Non-Ferrous China Africa, was hardest-hit by the strikes that started on 18 October. On news of Sata’s elections, NFCA gave its 2,000-strong workforce a pay rise of 85%. The windfall was not meant to last for ever. The workers resisted the reversal and the mine had been rocked by stoppages, resulting in millions of dollars in losses. Sata has avoided commenting on the matter but both Labour Minister Shamenda and Mines Minister Simuusa backed the miners’ demands as ‘justified’. Sata sent a Simuusa-led delegation to resolve the matters using quiet diplomacy.

Artisans and craftsmen at NFCA are paid between K850,000 and K1.1 mn. Labourers contracted by NFCA’s main underground contractor, JCHX, are paid K450,000. ‘We want equal pay with KCM [India's Vedanta Resources-owned Konkola Copper Mines] and Mopani,’ shouted one of the protesting miners at NFCA. ‘We did the same copper and sell it to the people; we need to be paid the same,’ said other protesting miners.

Union sympathies

Former trades unionists occupy the top jobs at the three ministries that deal most with Chinese mining companies. The Labour Minister, his Deputy and the Mines Minister all share a union background. They engaged the Chinese companies in talks about wages rather than leaving it to the unions. On 11 October, Deputy Labour Minister Rayford Mbulu directed NFCA to award workers a K2 mn. salary increase to align pay standards with other firms. Ambassador Zhou stepped in to defend the interests of the state-owned NFCA on 24 October: ‘The increase is a bit too much and not realistic.’

A source at Chambishi said that NFCA sent representatives to other major mining companies in 2010 to investigate their pay structures but did not change its practices after finding that it paid less. After the sacking and rehiring of more than 1,000 NFCA workers on 23 October – with the threat of sorting out the troublemakers – a new round of talks started. On 1 November, the mining companies and unions started a two-month negotiation period about collective bargaining agreements.

Christopher Silute, the Deputy National Secretary of the National Union of Miners and Allied Workers, told AAC that the unions want the government to let them represent workers. ‘When we go to negotiate for higher salaries, what we are usually told is “your government has told us when we signed these agreements that the minimum wage here is ABC”, so it becomes very difficult because we don’t know what they’ve agreed.’ He said that Chinese miners originally opposed unions but the current government’s intervention means that all workers can join a union.

Meanwhile, a research note at the Chinese Ministry of Commerce suggested that these moves towards better regulation would squeeze profits at a time when global copper demand is flagging, ultimately affecting Zambia’s ability to attract investment./Africa-Asia Confidential

Monday, November 7, 2011

Zambia: Africa On Foot And Unplugged

Richard Bangs
Author, 'The Lost River'

Posted: 11/7/11 10:29 AM ET

"I will make this beautiful land better known to men that it may become one of their haunts. It is impossible to describe its luxuriance." -David Livingstone, in Zambia, 1866


It begins a bit like an Agatha Christie novel. Six of us, each representing a different country --India, Syria, Mexico, Zimbabwe, Spain and the Republic of California -- receive an invitation to join a week-long retreat at a private estate with no access to the outside world. We're given no itinerary and no details. We're just told to meet at the Royal Livingstone Hotel in Livingstone, Zambia at 3 p.m. on the appointed date with a flashlight and our spirit of choice.

We gather at the hotel, a five-star colonial throw-back wrapped in manicured lawns and luxuriant gardens where zebra and giraffe roam, a spa beckons, a golf-course sprawls and the gin and tonics flow along the dark-wood paneled traveler's bar like a Happy Valley creek. This is poignant for me, as I spent some quality time here in the early 80s, when I made the first descent of the Zambezi from below Victoria Falls to Lake Kariba, picking up where David Livingstone left off in 1855. (He'd peered over the great sheeting precipice of water, twice as high as Niagara and a mile wide, and decided, for country and health, to portage several hundred miles downstream.) Back then we stored our gear at The Rainbow Lodge, a series of run-down mud and grass rondevaals, a short walk from the great Falls at a rate of $6 a night. No air-conditioning, no phones or electronics, and you had to lock the windows and doors at night to keep out the vervet monkeys. It seemed the sort of place David Livingstone himself might have slept, relishing the remote and authentic.

The Rainbow is now The Royal Livingstone. What would Dr. Livingstone say if he could knock into his namesake today?



Our orientation is a walk to the Victoria Fall, one of the natural wonders of the world. My memories jog to our first descent, in 1981, just after black-majority ruled Zimbabwe emerged. The river was littered with land mines from the war and we had to take professional sappers with us, who would sweep each beach before we could unload the rafts in the evenings. The most sinking moment for me was when I pushed off from The Boiling Pot at the base of the Falls, leading the historic expedition. Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda, diplomats and reporters from National Geographic and the Guardian watched from the bridge above as I promptly capsized.

"Is that the way they do it?" Dr. Kaunda asked in surprise.

Zambia has never been widely known as a tourist destination. Zambia, in fact, is not widely known for much of anything. What little global recognition it enjoys comes more from the antique cuts of the colonial penknife, the borders it shares with volatile neighbors: Democratic Republic of the Congo to the north, Angola and Mozambique to the west and east, and Zimbabwe to the south. It was once the third largest producer of copper in the world and for a time Zambia's currency was among the most valuable in the world. There was a time when per-capita income equaled 800 US dollars, second to South Africa in the sub-Saharan region.

Zambia is now very small beer in the mining world and it has yet to find a viable replacement for its copper industry. After founding the country, Kenneth Kaunda oversaw its descent into economic ruin over the course of his 27-year socialist rule. He tried all sorts of schemes to bring back its glory, including providing support to an American con-artist named Farley Winston, who sold the head of state on a contraption that ostensibly converted grass to diesel. KK, as the president liked to be called, had visions of an African OPEC and banned the burning of grass until the scam was exposed. The current government has pinned its hopes on eco-tourism. Yet, even though Zambia has 19 national parks and 32 game management areas (30% of the country), and some of the greatest concentrations of wildlife in the world, the gawkers here have always been scarcer than the game.

That first night, we gather at the fancy restaurant -- complete with a hovering violinist connected to Bluetooth speakers -- and begin the competitive game that so palpably plays itself out on the veldt. We jockey for dominance, comparing the length of our camera lenses, power ordering ("I'll have the crocodile...and make it snappy") prating on about our air carrier (I win, having indulged in Emirates, current king of the air) and sparing with arcane trivia (what is the definition of "subtropical?"). The hotel, of course, has high-speed wireless, so we whip out weapons of choice: Blackberries, iPads, iPhones, Androids, even a Windows 7 phone. We conquer the question: "subtropical" describes the climatic region found adjacent to the tropics, usually between 23.5 and 40 degrees of latitude in both hemispheres. It's good to be smart, or at least have a smart phone.



But the following morning we begin the transition to a different world. We board two small planes, and take the 90 minute flight to the edge of the Kafue National Park, the largest reserve in Africa, which may boast the continent's greatest diversity of wildlife. But it is a place little-visited, little known, with no Hemingway, Angelina or Madonna's in its visitor logs.

From the dirt strip we load a couple of Toyota Land Cruisers, and trundle to a pontoon ferry, cross the limpid Kafue River and head upstream for another hour, until there is a fork in the road with a carved wooden sign: "KRC."

"Kentucky Roasted Chicken?" I ask.

"No," our host corrects: "Kafue River Camp, our destination."

We spill from the vehicles into scene that could have been painted by Rousseau, dotted with a few modest structures and dominated by the sweeping curl of the gin-clear Kafue River. There is a thatched dining area, a wooden deck overlooking the river, a kitchen with an earthen pizza oven and four 2-person chalets, replete with showers heated by wood-burning stoves. That's it. Now what? This seems like an adventure without a purpose.

The river looks cool and tempting, ideal for a swim, but our host says no, and introduces us to a staff member who was attacked by a crocodile and almost pulled under. He shows us the scars, a messy matrix of wounds along his thigh that look like third-degree burns. The ancient Greeks called the beast Kroko-drilo, "pebble worm"--a scaly thing that shuffled and lurked in low places. Here it's called "flatdog" or "mobile handbag." The man-eating Nile crocodile has always been on "Man's worst enemies" list. It evolved 170 million years ago from the primordial soup as an efficient killing machine. More people are killed in Africa by crocodiles each year in Africa than by all other animals combined. Their instinct is predation, to kill any meat that floats their way, be it fish, hippo, antelope, or human.

Our host, who was born in Rhodesia, tells us his father once capsized off the coast of Mozambique and hung on to the vessel for his life until he was rescued by Portuguese sailors. When he confessed he was shivering in fear for the legendary great white sharks in the region, a sailor reassured him: "You needn't worry...the crocs have eaten them all."



Rather than swim, we take a game drive. We tool through a wonderland of raintrees, sausage trees, ironwood, and the candelabra-shaped euphorbias. We wind by parades of wildlife: impala pelting around neurotically, vast almond eyes on slim necks; fluffy pukus, the colors of sunrise on their backs; Lichtenstein's hartebeest, bouncing along the savannah as though on a trampoline; waterbuck with the white toilet-seat logos on their rumps; pajama-wearing zebra. Bringing up the rear are Reedbuck, Sable, duiker, Warthog, Bushbuck and Baboons. This is a carnivore's dream and all the browsing bovids live lives of perpetual skittishness, knowing they can never let guards down.

At this point several of us are feeling similar, as we're going cold turkey on connectivity. There is no office here with a cranky computer hidden behind a desk. There is not even a shortwave radio at KRC. By sunset we're back at camp, and begin to unwind with G and Ts, single malt and Kentucky bourbon. After a protracted dinner of kudu stew and meaty conversation, salted with the eerie whoops of hyenas, our host tells us that we will reunite at daybreak. Jetlag is still a sidekick, so the question is how do we arise with no alarm clocks or wake up calls in the rooms.
"Not to worry. It will happen," he pronounces.

The following morning we're all awakened by hippos blowing their tubas just yards from our chalets. About five feet tall, weighing in at about five tons -- about that same as our two 4WD vehicles -- hippos are proportionally the fattest animals on earth, but for short sprints can run as fast as a horse. Though vegetarians they, too, are quite dangerous, and will attack if feel threatened, easily snapping a human body in two with their carrot-sized molars and steam-shovel jaws. The baritone harrumphing hippos make is our host's favorite sound, and he casts he would love to have the river chorus as his ring tone.

Soon after, we're off on a two-hour mountain bike ride before breakfast, through a woodland of brachystegia, down ancient tracks (this was where Joshua Nkomo, founder and leader of the Zimbabwe African People's Union was based for a spell while trying to overthrow Ian Smith's Rhodesia, and we're benefiting from his network or roads), and down game trails. Fat-tired bikes are now the vehicles of choice for poachers, with their speed, light frames and quiet spins. Trailing us is Moses, a game guard, also on two wheels, wearing Bata-slip-ons and an AK-47 slung across his shoulder, with ten rounds. Because of the small caliber the Russian-made automatic will have a hard time dropping a charging elephant or hippo, though it is ideal to nab a band of poachers or take over the Comoros.



Towards the end of the ride Joseph, a former tech exec, competitive runner and boxer, is almost smashed by a scooting Puku, who leaps across the path just inches in front of his front tire. But the real danger here, it seems, is not the ergonomically-designed antelope or even a wild cat. As the sun cranks itself above the horizon, another type of predator makes its appearance -- the blood-hungry tsetse fly. The tsetse looks like a horsefly, stings like a bee and its rapier-like proboscis can penetrate khakis, jeans and even tennis shoes. And, like Michael Myers in a John Carpenter film, every time you think one of these buggers is dead, it just comes back to life. Our host likes to tear off the wings and tell them to walk home.

These tsetses, harmless to humans, carry nagana, bovine trypanosomiasis -- a parasite that kills 3 million cattle, goats and pigs a year in sub-Saharan Africa. For us they are merely a nuisance, and one to be tolerated knowing they serve a larger purpose. The wildlife we see wouldn't exist without them. Without such an effective guardian, wilderness areas such as Kafue would long ago have been tamed; the wild animals cleared for domesticated ones.

The afternoon is a game walk. The primary feeling when traveling on foot here is of some sort of exhilaration, a perverse frisson that comes with walking by the edge. In the Toyota we are gods; walking, we are part of the food chain. This is exercise, but it is also an exercise in humility.

There are few places in Africa where one can walk on safari. It's considered too dangerous for the great national parks of East Africa and elsewhere because animals will be animals. The more touristed parks want the protection of a layer of motorized metal. But one of Zambia's distinctions is not only allowing walking safaris, but encouraging them.

A bit down the road Justin Seymour-Smith, our very own David Attenborough, picks up a clob of dirt and scratches it to reveal an ant lion, one of the Little Big Five, others being the rhino beetle, buffalo weaver, elephant shrew and leopard tortoise. The ant lion waves its mandibles like a miniature Edward Scissorhands and Justin informs that it can only walk backwards, a shame in these parts. But the detail, the slice of nature's exquisiteness, reminds that these are nuances of Africa we would have never seen riding in the back of a well-logoed safari vehicle.



The next several days unfold more of the same, with variations. In the sweet liquid light of the African morning we bike before breakfast; we relax midday; we explore in the late afternoon, sometimes hiking, sometimes bathing in a shallow section of river where we can see, assuming with adequate time, if crocodiles approach. We circumnavigate an island; we fish; we photograph two sated female lions from a mere 30 feet away. We climb a kopje (isolated hill) that overlooks the river and an endless expanse of miombo forest, and in every direction, no matter how far we look, there is no sign of Man or his works. And our host adds "there has never been." So many of the once secret paradises of the world are overrun with resorts and tourist dollars that it is easy to appreciate this uninterrupted view of the wild.

At meals we have the same wide-ranging discussions, story smack-downs and factual disagreements (definition of a desert? Difference between a toad and a frog?), but instead of turning to Wikipedia or Google to solve, we find ourselves pushing deeper into memory, or propelling blood into our heads for cognitive analysis, to find a consensus, or some semblance of truth. We find ourselves thinking.

After several bottles of South African wine one night, someone poses the question: "What would you do to improve this place?" One guest, Pradeep, says he wishes there were a solar-powered ice-maker. I suggest hammocks strung along the chalet porches for the midday siestas. Our host imagines an oversized shark cage positioned off the deck so he could take a dip without fear of crocodiles.

Joseph, who earlier in the day recorded our hippo neighbors in all their Paul Robeson glory, and turned it into a ring tone as a gift to our host, chimes in, enthusiastically:"What this place needs is a two-way broadband internet high-speed satellite system."

There is a beat of silence and then an eruption of disagreement around the table. "No, no, no," is the collective response. And the matter is settled when Justin Seymour-Smith pipes in.
"What this places needs is to be as primeval as possible, a sanctuary from the connectivity of the world, a refuge from civilization."

"Here, here."

We had, in the course of five days, gone from having the high-strung metabolisms of antelopes to lolling about with the untroubled contentedness of sated Kafue cats.

Upright Government A Must for Development in Zambia

The behaviour of the PF lead government is raising serious concerns in view of it's apparent failure to observe and adhere to it election and post-election campaign promises to fight corruption by all means possible. A number of factors have contributed to this development and a negative perception that the people now harbour. One is the continuous reckless appointment, with impunity, of people with highly questionable moral character and also those with seriously tainted backgrounds.

The majority of Zambians that cast their vote for Sata and PF now have serious doubts and misgivings about the lack of seriousness on the part of Michael Sata in the manner he goes about his appointments. Most of us are now wondering where the Government is headed and what options we have to address the situation before it gets outrageously out of control. We need a government that will respect the wishes of the people that gave it the opportunity to be at the reigns of power other than acting superior and making unconscious and uninspiring appointments.

We need to build a nation of upright leaders with unquestionable sense of judgment. The PF government must work toward distinguishing and steering itself away from the 20 year tainted MMD reign of undiluted corruption. This will be key to achieve the country's desire to attract credible investors. A corrupt leadership such as MMD was will only attract corrupt investors that purchase their way and subsequently subject Zambians to inhumane treatment as the case is with the Chinese. Uprightness is a vital ingredient to the economic development of our country.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Is President Sata Taking Us for A Ride?


The appointment of one time Finance Minister in the Kaunda administration, Alexander Chikwanda, may not in itself be considered corruption in the literary sense but corruption in the sense of moral judgment on the part of the President Michael Sata. Bringing a tired old man, after decades of inactivity, to head an important topmost financial institution in Zambia amounts to a travesty of conscious judgment. Alexander Chikwanda went into oblivion after the end of UNIP and president Kaunda but only to be resurrected a couple of decades later. Chikwanda has been inactive for far too long to deserve an appointment as a Finance Minister and, indeed, his appointment defies logic. This, on the part of Sata is a clear lack of tact and unconscious decision-making. This unconscionable behaviour by the president raises questions as to his moral turpitude and capacity to lead a nation of  overly expectant citizenry.

No to long ago, Sata as the opposition PF party leader was the avowed nemesis and thorn in the flesh of Chinese investors. Sata's election rhetoric were directed among others the corrupt Rupiah Banda administration and the Chinese who were widely believed to abuse and exploit Zambian workers and contravention of the Zambian labour laws. We anticipated that the PF government would be more than stern against the Chinese. We were hopeful that the PF government would not fall for the Chinese prowess at corrupting many a leadership in Africa. Turn around the corner, the same man, now adorning a presidential coat, President Sata, is now consorting with the Chinese in the manner reminiscent of the just eclipsed era of Rupiah Banda administration.If, indeed, Sata is the man of his words, we would be enchanted to see him swiftly address the issue of Chinese labourers that were irregularly issued work permits for jobs that are more than abundant in the nation. The PF administration is already alluding to the fact that the Chinese cannot be ignored, they are a factor in the current economic dispensation. However, how long will it be before the Chinese financial muscle begins to break the president's back? This remains to be seen.

The President's attempt to appoint Xavier Chungu as Permanent Secretary is extremely disconcerting and a betrayal of the Zambian electorate who vested so much confidence in Michael Sata in the hope that he would   make every effort to appoint upright men and women in his government. However, several appointments to date have raised more than just eyebrows but serious concerns. Where was Sata when Xavier ran away and went into self-imposed exile to escape from criminal prosecution for his involvement in the embezzlement of public funds? Has Sata forgotten that Xavier was charged along with late Chiluba for the stealing more than US$50 million? As a matter of fact, Xavier Chungu has not been acquitted of the criminal charges. We would like to advise President Sata not to sympathize with corrupt convicts like Xavier and many others that are still roaming the streets as free man. To appoint Xavier Chungu would have been a clear message that Sata is not serious about his crusade against corruption.

We want commitment in the fight against corruption and zero tolerance, as we have always advocated for, must the order of the day. Corruption should not be tolerated and this fight must be as transparent as possible.   We are therefore disgusted that President Sata made an attempt to appoint Xavier Chungu as Permanent Secretary for Luapula Province. This action by the president must be roundly deplored by all the Zambian that are sick and tired of corruption. What a ludicrous and ill-timed manoeuvre! We applaud Whistle-blowers at the Zambian Cabinet Office for their vigilance in stopping Sata in his tracks. We urge Mr. Sata to exhibit seriousness with appoints. They are many upright Zambians more deserving of such positions than deadwood, convicts and thieves. Zambians now understand and appreciate the power they wield and are thus not scared to use it at the ballot. The president must be careful with the manner he conducts his business lest his DON'T KUBEBA be turned against him and such that he winds up a one-term president.