Section 328(7): The nation’s hope against 2030 madness

For a leadership born out of that extraordinary political moment, bending legal and institutional boundaries has often appeared less daunting than respecting them. 
By Newsday 37m ago

Zim has already tainted its constitutional amendments

The law is clear that there must be a 90-day window for parliamentary public consultations to allow the views of Zimbabweans to be heard and recorded.  

Silenced for reporting: Zimbabwe’s war on the press 

As a journalist of 25 years, I have reported on Zimbabwe’s democratic regression into a sophisticated authoritarian state. 
By Blessed Mhlanga Feb. 21, 2026

When the EU, US look aside

For the greater part of the last two decades, the US and EU unilaterally imposed sanctions on Zimbabwe.  
By Paidamoyo Muzulu Feb. 21, 2026

The amendment that changes everything — and solves nothing

In a democracy, the people decide regularly and predictably. Term limits exist precisely to prevent power from redesigning the rules under which it competes. 
By Jameson Timba Feb. 16, 2026

Protest, violence and sovereignty: Iran draws its red lines

These early gatherings were peaceful, organised and free of confrontation — an exercise of rights Iran says it both recognises and protects.
By Amir Hossein Hosseini Jan. 16, 2026

The theatre of democracy in Africa

Democracy will not return through slogans or summits. It will be rebuilt by citizens who refuse to be props in political theatre.

Envoys warn of rising global threats to press freedom

“Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression... through any media and regardless of frontiers,” he said.
By Faith Zaba Oct. 17, 2025

You deserve the truth, not AI’s interpretation of it

WE all want to understand the world around us. Perhaps we want more clarity about the war in Gaza, or what our government is doing about the healthcare our family relies on