Facts beat fear: Don’t let misinformation steal Zimbabwe’s lithium future

Maguwu repeatedly insists Zimbabwe remains confined to selling low-grade raw ore, yet this overlooks a landmark industrial milestone delivered exclusively by Chinese investors.
By Erica Nomalanga Dube Jun. 19, 2026

Monopoly myth or balanced Partnership: Unpacking Al Jazeera’s lithium coverage

Western multinationals spent decades shipping unprocessed mineral ores overseas without building any local smelting or processing facilities.
By Saxon Zvina Jun. 19, 2026

Social media bans in the first world countries: Should Zimbabwe follow suit?

Danish authorities report that approximately 98% of children under 13 have at least one social media profile and nearly half of them are under 10 years old. 
By Sharon Chava and Chinga Govhati Feb. 2, 2026

Gold Mafia saga in new twist

Mehluleli Dube, Fidelity Printers and Refiners head of gold operations between 1989 and 2022, had approached the High Court suing the media network for defamation.
By Desmond Chingarande Jan. 20, 2026

When Trump slams the door, Africa opens new windows

BreedJ reports that expanding internet and mobile access have dramatically grown Africa’s remote workforce, especially in tech and gig work.
By Vicki Otaruyina Jun. 27, 2025

Corruption biggest threat to ED’s presidency

Over the years, observers have complained about lack of political will to tackle graft, with reports indicating that the country is losing at least US$2 billion annually to corruption.
By Kenneth Nyangani and Lawrence Maphosa Apr. 3, 2025

Gold Mafia saga: Al Jazeera property attached

Al Jazeera provides a satellite television service in Zimbabwe through a company called MultiChoice under its DStv platform channel 406.
By Desmond Chingarande Oct. 22, 2024

Nothing new about war in Africa

Africa did not take the same road. Iron-working began in Africa at about the same time as in Europe, India and China, but big empires did not follow.
By Gwynne Dyer May. 3, 2024

The dystopian reality of Hong Kong’s new National Security Law

The new Article 23 significantly broadens the definition of crimes against national security.
By The Hongkong Post Apr. 20, 2024