South African President Thabo Mbeki said on Saturday there was "no crisis" in Zimbabwe after holding his first face-to-face talks with Robert Mugabe since the country's disputed March 29 elections. Mbeki had stopped in Harare on his way to join
South African President Thabo Mbeki was to hold talks on Saturday with Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe in Harare before heading on to Lusaka for a summit on Zimbabwe's post-election crisis, an official said. Mugabe has chosen not to attend the
President Levy Mwanawasa of Zambia opened Saturday's extraordinary summit of Southern African heads of state by saying its purpose was not to put President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe in the dock.
Two South African media workers had their second day in court today in Zimbabwe facing charges of "obstructing the course of justice," local journalists and the Media Institute of Southern Africa told CPJ. The trial for New York Times reporter
Angolan head of State, José Eduardo dos Santos, left Luanda on Saturday for Lusaka, Zambia, to attend the summit of heads of State and Government of the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC).
THE Chimanimani Arts Festival 2008 scheduled over the Independence long weekend, Friday April 18 to Sunday April 20, promises to be a rare FREE treat for music and art-lovers of Zimababwe.
As regional Southern Africa leaders were gathering in Zambia on Saturday for an emergency summit to discuss the election crisis in Zimbabwe, South African President Thabo Mbeki flew in to Harare to meet Robert Mugabe.
SO this is supposed to be the day Southern African leaders gather in Lusaka, that historic city host to so many pan-African conferences at the height of decolonisation, only this time whole African leaders are supposed to do the bidding
Zimbabwe will be represented by three Cabinet ministers and the Secretary for Foreign Affairs at today's Sadc summit called by the regional group's chairman, Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa, to discuss the just-ended elections, a senior official said yesterday.
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission makes Kenyan poll chief Samuel Kivuitu look like an angel. It has not released results two weeks after Zimbabweans went to the poll.
THE judgment of the Supreme Court in the case of Elliot Chauke versus Moses Mare (SC 147/04) is very interesting. It is a clear indication of what happened in the case of election petitions filed after the 2000 elections and
ALMOST everyone, other than government itself, has long known that government is insane, but clearly that insanity has intensified exponentially, and by now government is mad in the extreme.
As southern African heads of state gathered in Lusaka to discuss Zimbabwe's political crisis on Saturday, the Harare government and its allies launched an attack on Zamibian President Levy Mwanawasa for convening the summit.
DO you remember just two weeks ago when every policeman, general and politician in the country was telling us to accept the poll outcome? It would be a sign of our maturity, the opposition and civics were lectured, to take