REPORT WITH US
WhatsApp: +263 7 18636459
Email: editor@thecitizenbulletin.com
Twitter: @TheCB_News
Facebook: The Citizen Bulletin
“More Local, More Inclusive, More Interactive"
Central government's pledges to rehabilitate local hospitals such as Manama (pictured) have remained largely unfulfill...
Continue Reading...
Insuza housing applicants remain landless amid corruption allegations on stand allocations. Graphic by The Citizen Bulletin
BY VUSINDLU MAPHOSA | @The_CBNews | This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. | JUL 9, 2021
It has been seven years since some villagers in Insuza made applications to get land to build their homes with yearly payments to renew the applications. Now, the wait has become unbearable and corruption allegations are being made.
The surviving widows and children gather together with mining players at the mass graves of Kamandama disaster. Image by The Citizen Bulletin
BY LETHOKUHLE NKOMO | @The_CBNews | This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. | JUN 25, 2021
Forty-nine years after the country's worst mine disaster to date, the Hwange community is unsatisfied with the support rendered to surviving spouses and children.
Legally acquiring mining claims is a major challenge for several small-scale miners in Gwanda. Image by Reuters
BY AMANDA NCUBE | @The_CBNews | This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. | JUN 25, 2021
Youths and women in Gwanda say there's too much land under Exclusive Prospecting Orders (EPOs) lying idle hindering them from accessing land, now the government says it is addressing the imbalance.
Various nutrition gardens have become the hope to evade hunger and poverty. Image by The Citizen Bulletin
BY CALVIN MANIKA | @The_CBNews | This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. | JUN 25, 2021
Hwange which falls under the agro-ecological zone 4, characterised by high temperatures and low rainfall has been struggling in socio-economic development for the past few years, now nutritional gardens have come to the rescue.
Returns on an investment gone wrong...Filabusi residents cry foul.
BY VUSINDLU MAPHOSA | @The_CBNews | This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. | JUN 25, 2021
Residents who formed an investment company 26 years ago say they have not heard from the company directors for the past 13 years, now they are demanding the disposal of properties and share of the spoils.
This website uses cookies that are necessary to its functioning and required to achieve the purposes illustrated in the privacy policy. By accepting this OR scrolling this page OR continuing to browse, you agree to our privacy policy.