As recently as Monday, the idea of President Robert Mugabe voluntarily giving up power after 28 years was unthinkable for all but the sunniest of optimists. By Tuesday, there were persistent reports — ...
Ann Rothrock Beattie has been following the headlines from Zimbabwe with particular interest. Beattie, a High Point native, lived for seven years in the troubled southeast African nation. Now, despite ...
Harare — The death of Zimbabwe's secretary for agriculture, Renson Gasela, and two other senior officials from the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in a car accident recently has highlighted the ...
Bulawayo, Zimbabwe — On Christmas Day in 2022, 27-year-old Thabani Dlodlo's eight-year-old son drowned in a flooded pit dug up by quarry miners in the vicinity of Pumula North, a high-density suburb ...
Over the past six years, the organization, 2 Seconds Or Less, has established nine large-scale nutrition gardens in Zimbabwe. The gardens include borehole wells and irrigation systems. And the staff ...
In the darkest of all possible timelines, at least from the perspective of Minnesota dentist Dr. Walter Palmer, he will find himself behind bars in a Zimbabwean prison. It seems an unlikely conclusion ...
Life for people in Zimbabwe is an ordeal amid a political crisis. Wages are poor and inflation is soaring. Plans for a national strike collapsed when President Robert Mugabe promised a harsh response.
Street vendors in Zimbabwe are in trouble as local authorities continue to push them off the streets with no solution in sight on how the government intends to turn the fastest growing sector in the ...
Zimbabwe is facing the prospect of a military coup over who will succeed President Robert Mugabe. The last days: hunger stalks Zimbabwe as Mugabe clings on Who was the real Robert Mugabe? Grace Mugabe ...
Savanna Madamombe's life is very different than it was a year ago. Originally from just outside Zimbabwe's capital Harare, Madamombe moved to Manhattan in 2000, where she worked in hotels and ...
BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe (Reuters) - As I drove from the border with South Africa to my home town I recalled the refrain Zimbabweans use when pondering the economic meltdown in their country: "surely things ...
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