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Zambian Business Times (ZBT) Zambia Daily Mail (daily, state-owned) [2] Zambian Watchdog (online; in print from 2007 to 2009) [2] News Diggers (daily) [2] The Mast (daily) [2] Daily Nation (daily) [2] Daily Revelation Newspaper; New Vision (daily) [3] The Post (daily, closed in 2016) [2] Kachepa; The Globe Newspaper Zambia; Mwebantu; Zambia ...
Dandy Krazy, one of Zambia's most popular musicians, has died from injuries caused by a road collision on New Year's Eve. The 47-year-old - real name Wesley Chibambo - was travelling in Zambia's ...
President Hakainde Hichilema announces an agreement with China to build Zambia's first manufacturing facility for cholera vaccines. [9] 10 October – The first case of mpox in Zambia is recorded in a 32-year old visitor from Tanzania. [10] 30 October – Eight miners are killed and another is reported missing following a copper mine collapse ...
A member of a rescue team raised hope Monday that there may be survivors at a Zambian mine where more than 30 informal miners have been trapped under debris for days and presumed dead after heavy ...
Mwebantu is a national news agency headquartered in Lusaka and is one of the leading online news website and social media platform in Zambia. [1] Mwebantu.com is their flagship website which is an online based news publication catering for local Zambians and those in the diaspora.
The Zambian Watchdog is an investigative online media platform that focuses on corruption and other major crimes such as drug trafficking in Zambia. It also contains breaking news on politics and major events in Zambia. The Zambian Watchdog was founded as a newspaper with an online edition, but was forced into exile in 2009 and subsequently ...
The Times of Zambia is a national daily newspaper published in Zambia and headquartered in Ndola.. During the colonial period the newspaper was known firstly as The Copperbelt Times and then The Northern News It was a twice-weekly newspaper aimed at a European readership.
It was renamed the Zambian Mail and subsequently the Zambia Daily Mail in 1970. The paper soon became a mouthpiece for the government, publishing official statements and press releases, while being instructed to become an "instrument in nation building". However, this saw a decline in readership and advertising. [1]