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Central government's pledges to rehabilitate local hospitals such as Manama (pictured) have remained largely unfulfill...
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Zimbabwe School Examinations Council (ZIMSEC) sitting candidates opened schools on Monday, 28th of September. Image by Pixabay
by Amanda Ncube
As schools re-open after a COVID-19 induced lockdown, parents say the pandemic has financially crippled them and they may be unable to pay the fee required by educational institutions. On the other hand, the teaching staff is grappling with an unsustainable income. They say they may not be able to make it to schools to teach the learners and some have threatened industrial action.
Loss of jobs due to COVID-19 has resulted in an alarming increase of illegal brick moulders in Hwange district. Image by Hwange Local Board
by Rutendo Mapfumo
For a decade, brick moulding has been popular in Hwange. COVID-19 induced job losses in the hospitality and mining sectors have driven more people to become brick moulders, however they are not regularized and often steal raw material.
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Some of the people that live in the crowded Spanda ward in Victoria Falls. Image by Bokani Mudimba | The Citizen Bulletin
by Bokani Mudimba
Seven years ago, the government promised to build over 300 000 houses nationally. The housing backlog has since doubled. A global pandemic in the form of COVID-19 has laid bare the poor sanitary conditions people are exposed to due to unfulfilled promises.
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St. Lukes hospital is the only isolation and treatment facility for COVID-19 positive patients in Lupane. Image by Dr. Schales | Africa Project
by Lizwe Sebatha
In Matabeleland North, a timber industry believed to be worth millions of dollars is not being utilised for any tangible community development. The extent of the problem has been surfaced by a global health pandemic which has laid bare a dilapidated health system.
People living with disabilities fear being exposed to the Coronavirus as they use common ablutions in Cinderella village, Hwange. Image by Doug Maloney | Unsplash
by Rutendo Mapfumo
In a community where common ablution facilities are the norm and water is scarce, a global pandemic is a scare. When the same community has people with disabilities, existing barriers to access to services are worsened.
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