Connect with us

National

Lupane school girl wins national essay competition

Published

on

BY AWAKHIWE KHUMALO

A Lower Six pupil from Lupane has won a national essay competition about ending the scourge of child marriages  in a Zimbabwe.

Advertisement

Natalie Ndlovu a student at Zwangendaba High School saw her essay being ranked the best out of 1 900 national entries competing for the first prize at an event held at Goromonzi High School in Mashonaland East Province on Friday.

For her effort Natalie received a certificate,  prize money of US$150 and was also honoured as the regional winner for Matabeleland North province where she got an additional certificate and US$100 prize money.

According to the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), which organised the competition in collaboration with the Primary and Secondary Education ministry, a total of 1 908 essay entries were received from Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland East, Mashonaland West, Matabeleland North, Matabeleland South and Midlands provinces.

Advertisement

Matabeleland South had the highest entries of 800 while Mashonaland West and Mashonaland Central had 483 each, Mashonaland West had 227 while Matabeleland North had 54 entries, being the lowest.

The essay writing competition aimed at exposing and curbing the scourge of child marriages in Zimbabwe.

A team of eight adjudicators, who formed the judging panel, concluded that the question of ending child marriages was extremely relevant as child marriages are prevalent.

Advertisement

They also said child marriages  affect Zimbabwe and the wider world. Pupils, who submitted essay entries had vast knowledge on how child marriages affect children, the judges said.

Speaking at the national schools essay writing competition award ceremony, Olivia Kaira, chief director for primary and secondary formal and non-formal education, bemoaned child marriages saying they stifled economic development as children won’t develop to reach their potential.

She said child marriages were a form of forced unions with under-aged children and are a violation of laid down regulations that safeguard the interests of children.

Advertisement

In her speech at the prize giving ceremony, ZLHR member Precious Chakasikwa highlighted the harmful effects of child marriages in Zimbabwe and outlined some commitments and legal cases as well as other interventions, which the country’s leading legal defense group has done in a bid to stop the prevalent scourge.

The competition, whose topic was “Child marriages, causes and effects ran under the theme “Towards ending child marriages by 2030”

 

Advertisement

 

 

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

National

Zimbabwe export surge, diaspora inflows mask funding gaps in foreign affairs sector

Published

on

BY STAFF REPORTER 

Zimbabwe is seeing strong gains in export earnings and diaspora remittances, but lawmakers warn chronic underfunding is undermining the country’s diplomatic and economic ambitions.

Advertisement

Parliament heard that remittances reached about $1.8 billion by the third quarter of 2025, while exports rose sharply, helping cut the trade deficit. Lawmakers said the diaspora remains “a vital source of foreign exchange, directly contributing to the enhancement of the nation’s foreign reserves and overall economic stability.”  

However, MPs said financial constraints are weakening the institutions meant to sustain that growth. The Zimbabwe Foreign Services Institute received only a fraction of its budget, limiting recruitment and training.

“The staffing shortfall has inevitably affected operational efficiency and the institute’s ability to discharge its core mandate,” the committee report noted.  

Advertisement

Lawmakers warned that without consistent funding, gains in exports and diaspora engagement could stall, particularly as Zimbabwe pushes toward an export-led economy.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

National

Government pushes vaccines drive as MPs warn of rural access gaps, misinformation

Published

on

BY NOKUTHABA DLAMINI 

Zimbabwean lawmakers have called for urgent action to close immunisation gaps, warning that rural communities remain vulnerable due to weak access and persistent misinformation.

Advertisement

Speaking during Africa Vaccination Week, MPs said vaccines remain “among the most effective, equitable and transformative public health interventions,” but coverage remains uneven.  

“Persistent gaps endure, particularly in rural and underserved areas where barriers of access, awareness and trust continue to impede full immunisation coverage,” one legislator told Parliament.  

Lawmakers urged stronger investment in cold-chain systems and public engagement campaigns, stressing that immunisation is not just a health issue but “a strategic development imperative” tied to productivity and national growth.  

Advertisement

Continue Reading

National

EcoCash bill splitting signals rise of social commerce in Zimbabwe

Published

on

BY STAFF REPORTER

EcoCash’s latest bill-splitting feature on its Super App is not just a product upgrade, it is part of a broader shift towards “social commerce,” where financial transactions are embedded directly into everyday conversations.

Advertisement

Traditionally, sending money has been a deliberate, separate action: open the app, enter details, confirm payment. But with EcoCash’s integrated chat environment, that process is being redefined. Payments now happen in the same space where decisions are made — within conversations among friends, families and colleagues.

This development, which is being driven by Sasai Fintech, a subsidiary of Cassava Technologies, result is a more natural flow between communication and commerce.

This model, often referred to as chat-first payments, is gaining traction globally. Platforms such as Venmo in the United States and Revolut in Europe have popularised the idea of embedding payments into social interactions, allowing users to split bills, request funds and settle expenses within a messaging context.

Advertisement

EcoCash’s move signals that Zimbabwe is aligning with — and in some ways accelerating — this global trend.

Unlike many mature markets where card-based payments dominated before social features were layered on, Zimbabwe’s mobile-first ecosystem provides a different foundation. Mobile money is already deeply embedded in daily life, making it easier to integrate financial services into conversational platforms without requiring a behavioural overhaul.

By placing bill-splitting within its chat interface, EcoCash is effectively turning conversations into transaction points. A group discussing dinner plans can now split the bill instantly. Colleagues organising transport can settle contributions in real time. Families coordinating school fees or groceries can move from agreement to payment without leaving the chat thread.

Advertisement

This convergence of messaging and money is at the heart of social commerce.

From a strategic standpoint, the implications are significant. Each conversation has the potential to generate multiple transactions, increasing activity on the platform while strengthening user engagement. Payments become less of a task and more of a seamless extension of communication.

Industry analysts note that this model tends to drive higher transaction frequency and user retention, as financial interactions become habitual rather than occasional. For EcoCash, the bill-splitting feature is a practical entry point into this space, simple enough to encourage adoption, yet powerful enough to shift behaviour.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2022 VicFallsLive. All rights reserved, powered by Advantage