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The Sunday Mail: Harare: Government Weekly English uMthunywa: Bulawayo: Government Weekly Ndebele: DailyTimes Zimbabwe: Harare Private Online daily English Zimbabwe Daily News: 2004 Private Online daily English Zimbabwe Independent: Harare: Private Weekly English The Zimbabwe Mail: 2003 Harare: Private Daily English Zimbabwe Metro: 2007 ...
By the 1990s, The Herald and The Sunday Mail consistently supported President Mugabe, though they would occasionally criticize his cabinet ministers. [8] On 14 December 2000, the board of the Zimbabwe Mass Media Trust was disbanded, allowing the Zimbabwean government to exercise a more direct role in Zimpapers operations.
The Mail is a private daily newspaper in Zimbabwe. It is claimed [ citation needed ] that the newspaper is the only balanced newspaper in Zimbabwe, with its between the line editorial. The daily newspaper became Zimbabwe's first daily newspaper to be registered after the closure of the Daily News in 2003.
The Sunday Mail, Sunday tabloid in Queensland, Australia; The Mail on Sunday, British conservative tabloid; Sunday Mail, Sunday tabloid in Adelaide, South Australia; Sunday Mail, Sunday edition of The Malay Mail; now replaced by Weekend Mail; The Sunday Mail, Sunday paper in Harare, Zimbabwe, sister paper to The Herald
Applicant: MDC Alliance Leader, Nelson Chamisa Political experts said that the appeal faces difficulties because of Zimbabwe's political scene and Judicial idiosyncrasies citing that the Judges' own values, perspectives, and secret personal and monetary interests plays a considerably more decisive role with regards to managing the argumentative issues [7] Some political examiners anticipated ...
The newspaper's origins date back to the 19th century. Its forerunner was launched on 27 June 1891 by William Fairbridge [1] for the Argus group of South Africa. Named the Mashonaland Herald and Zambesian Times, it was a weekly, hand-written news sheet produced using the cyclostyle duplicating process.
He writes a weekly column in the Sunday Mail, which he regularly uses to support government policies on one hand and to attack perceived enemies of the state on the other. [7] He has attacked Gideon Gono on the cash shortages in Zimbabwe in the same column.
Chidzambwa was on Clemens Westerhof's coaching staff when he was manager of the Zimbabwe national team. [1] He succeeded Westerhof as manager in 2000, winning the Cosafa Cup. [1] He also managed club sides Tanganda, Chapungu United, Sporting Lions and Blue Ribbon. [1] [2] With Tanganda he won the Castle Cup in 1993. [1]