Zimbabwe players bury the hatchet to aid resurrection

The Observer By Andy Bull Sunday 2 May 2010 No team in the World Twenty20 have more to prove than Zimbabwe. They missed the 2009 edition in England after being denied visas and have been blackballed by most of the top nations in international cricket. Now they are powered by two potent forces: anger and pride. Anger for

A letter from the diaspora

SW Radio Africa By Pauline Henson 1 May 2010 Dear Friends, The UK is in the throes of an election campaign. For perhaps the first time in years the Brits actually seem to have woken up to politics and one of the reasons has undoubtedly been the television debates between the leaders of the three

Still unclear if North Korea team will stay in Zimbabwe

Eyewitnessnews.co.za 1 May 2010 By Ryan Truscott Officials in Zimbabwe on Saturday said it was not clear whether the North Korean football team will train in the country ahead of the 2010 Fifa World Cup. Rights groups had promised to protest against the team’s presence in Zimbabwe because of North Korea’s military involvement in the

MDC’s violent streak must be nipped in the bud

Zimbabwe Independent 30 April 2010 Editor’s Memo by Constantine Chimakure THE failure by the Morgan Tsvangirai-led MDC to curb growing violence in the party is disturbing and gives credence to reports that its leaders are fanning the brutality – negating the founding principles of the party that placed so much emphasis on a non-violent democratic

Education – We All Must Play a Part

The Herald Editorial 30 April 2010 Harare — Zimbabwe is in great danger, looking at the Grade 7 results for last year, of producing a generation where the majority of school-leavers will be functionally illiterate, a tragedy when it is realised that their parents were probably the first fully literate generation. The results show that

North Koreans not welcome, say pressure groups

Zimbabwe Independent 30 April 2010 By Tangai Chipangura and Fortune Dhlamini-Moyo CIVIC groups, human rights activists and political parties based in Matabeleland are mobilising to resist the proposed camping of the North Korean football team in Bulawayo ahead of the Fifa World Cup to be held in South Africa in June. Leaders of the pressure

North Korea trip ‘not finalised’

BBC Sport 30 April 2010 Zimbabwe on Friday appeared to back away from an announcement that North Korea’s national team would train in the country ahead of the World Cup. This follows protests over the Asian country’s role in training an army unit accused of killing thousands of people. Tourism Minister Walter Mzembi last month

Zimbabweans to protest N. Korean soccer team visit

Associated Press By Chengetai Zvauya 30 April 2010 HARARE, Zimbabwe — A Zimbabwean opposition group said Thursday it will protest against North Korean soccer players when they come to train here ahead of the World Cup because of North Korea’s role in the massacres of tens of thousands of Zimbabweans in the 1980s. Up to

Zimbabwean offer to host North Korean World Cup squad backfires

Guardian.co.uk By David Smith Friday 30 April 2010 Zimbabwe‘s attempt to bask in the reflected glory of next month’s World Cup has backfired by reviving memories of one of the country’s bloodiest massacres. Plans to host the North Korean football squad have been condemned as a symbolic insult by opposition politicians and activists because of

O, A-Level Results Rebound

The Herald By Felex Share 29 April 2010 Harare — The November 2009 national percentage pass rate for Ordinary and Advanced Level examinations was 19 and 70 percent respectively, a slight improvement from previous years. Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart yesterday also revealed that the Grade Seven performance was the worst in a