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THE Japanese Government has committed more than US$7.1 million to support Zambia’s refugee-hosting efforts.
Minister of Home Affairs and Internal Security Jack Mwiimbu announced the assistance when Japanese Ambassador to Zambia Akiteru Mikami paid a courtesy call on the ministry.
Mr Mwiimbu said the visit reaffirmed the strong and long-standing relationship between Zambia and Japan, which has existed for more than six decades.
He said Zambia welcomes Japan’s continued support towards its refugee-hosting efforts through grant assistance and supplementary funding amounting to over US$7.1 million.
“The support includes US$5.9 million provided through the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) for infrastructure development at Meheba and Mayukwayukwa refugee settlements, and an additional US$1.2 million channelled through the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to strengthen protection for newly arriving refugees,” Mr Mwiimbu said.
He said Zambia has hosted refugees for many years and continues to uphold its humanitarian obligations.
However, Mr Mwiimbu said increased refugee inflows, particularly due to the conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo, require continued support from cooperating partners.
“Japan has remained an all-weather friend whose support has not only improved the welfare of refugees but has also benefited host communities,” he said.
Mr Mwiimbu said Government remains committed to strengthening collaboration in promoting peace, security and human dignity for all.
(Mwebantu, Thursday, 12th Februray, 2026)
Dr Musokotwane endorses President Hichilema’s mining indaba address as reforms drive investment and jobs
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MINISTER of Finance and National Planning Situmbeko Musokotwane has endorsed President Hakainde Hichilema’s address at the Mining Indaba, saying Government remains committed to safeguarding macroeconomic stability while leveraging strategic partnerships to translate mineral wealth into jobs, enterprise development and resilient economic growth.
In his review of the President’s message delivered at the Indaba, Dr Musokotwane said the balanced approach—anchored on stability first, partnerships second and value addition throughout—will ensure Zambia’s reform gains are consolidated and that the benefits of growth are broadly shared.
Dr Musokotwane said the estimated US$12 billion in mining investments recorded since 2021 reflects the combined impact of debt restructuring under the Group of Twenty (G20) Common Framework for Debt Treatment, improved fiscal governance and a predictable mining policy environment.
He said the reforms have reduced sovereign risk and unlocked private capital, validating the President’s assertion that natural resources can create prosperity when unlocked through strategic partnerships.
“The sequential increases in copper output—approximately 12 percent in 2024 and a further eight percent in 2025—demonstrate how reform, partnership and investment translate into real sector performance. While operational challenges, including limited power supply, prevented the attainment of the interim one-million-tonne target in 2025, the upward trajectory strengthens mineral royalty flows and corporate income tax receipts, reinforcing fiscal sustainability,” Dr Musokotwane said.
He said power stability anticipated throughout 2026 is expected to support the attainment of the year’s approximate production target of one million metric tonnes, as Zambia progresses towards the three-million-metric-tonnes-per-annum target by 2031.
Dr Musokotwane further said the President’s call for value addition as a shared responsibility between Government and mining companies has significant fiscal implications.
“Moving up the value chain will enhance the resilience of export earnings, broaden the tax base and deepen domestic linkages to manufacturing, services and logistics, thereby amplifying mining’s multiplier effects across the economy. I am optimistic about the fruits of this policy direction,” he said.
The Minister said the Presidential address also situated Zambia’s reform journey within Africa’s broader development challenge, adding that by framing partnerships as instruments of organisation rather than exclusion, President Hichilema articulated a pragmatic vision of Zambia as a credible and organised partner in the global economy.
Dr Musokotwane said Zambia’s completion of the International Monetary Fund (IMF)-supported Extended Credit Facility (ECF) programme—marked by restored debt sustainability, inflation on a declining path, foreign reserves exceeding four months of import cover and sustained real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth of over five percent—has laid the groundwork for durable partnerships.
He said the prevailing stability is expected to lower the cost of capital and enable longer-term investment horizons essential for the mining, energy and infrastructure sectors.
Dr Musokotwane further said the President’s emphasis on jobs and business opportunities reflects the fiscal dividend of reform.
He added that the President’s address not only positioned Zambia, but also the African continent, as indispensable to the global green transition agenda.
(Mwebantu, Wednesday, 11th Februray, 2026)
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THE Supreme Court of South Africa will soon start hearing the burial impasse case for Zambia’s late former sixth President Edgar Lungu.
This follows the Lungu family’s successful filing of an appeal against the Pretoria High Court’s Gauteng decision which directed that Mr Lungu’s body be repatriated back to Zambia for burial.
In the appeal, the family contends that the lower court’s judgement, which ordered them to surrender did not consider their rights as a family.
The family was recently granted permission to appeal the Pretoria High Court’s Gauteng decision, which directed that Mr Lungu’s body be returned to Zambia for burial.
The Lungu family wants the Supreme Court to overturn the lower court’s decision which allowed the Zambian Government to get the late ex-President’s remains in readiness for interment.
Mr Lungu, 68, died on June 5, 2025, in South Africa where he was being treated for throat cancer.
After the death, an impasse arose between his family and the Government as to how his burial would proceed.
The family stated in court documents that before his death, Mr Lungu said his successor, President Hakainde Hichilema should not attend his burial.
But Government plans to have a state funeral for the late lawyer and in line with protocols and precedent, Mr Hichilema is supposed to attend the burial.
(Mwebantu, Wednesday, 11th Februray, 2026)
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ECONOMIC and Financial Crimes Court (EFCC) has dismissed former Ministry of Defence permanent secretary Stardy Mwale’s bid to reclaim ownership of his forfeited farm worth US$2.5million.
In November 2024, the EFCC ordered the forfeiture of Simonga Farm for being acquired through proceeds of crime.
Apart from forfeiture of Simonga Farm 132a, located in Mazabuka, a three-member bench also condemned Mr Mwale and three other interested parties in the case to costs.
The court ruled that based on its detailed analysis, it was of the well-considered view that the applicant, Anti-Corruption Commission, had established on the balance of probabilities that the farm is tainted.
Dissatisfied with the decision, Mr Mwale, through his lawyers, applied for extended leave to appeal against the court’s decision to forfeit the farm to the State.
He submitted that the delay in filing the application for leave to appeal, in the Court of Appeal, was not deliberate.
But a three-member bench dismissed the plea to for extended leave to appeal on grounds that Mr Mwale failed to demonstrate that the delay was not excessive.
Judges Susan Wanjelani, Vincent Siloka and Ian Mabbolobbobo found that the over one year delay in filing the appeal was unjustified.
“Having determined that a period of over a year delay without a strong reason to convince us that the delay is inexcusable and not inordinate, the interested parties’ application for leave to extent the time within which to file an application for leave to appeal is declined,” the court ruled in a decision rendered on Monday.
(Mwebantu, Wednesday, 11th Februray, 2026)
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