The Cotton Company of Zimbabwe Limited (COTTCO) board and management are under intense scrutiny after it emerged that more than US$70 million in funding was allegedly misused within a single year, even as the company failed to meet key financial obligations.
Rising fuel prices and escalating costs of agricultural inputs are threatening the ability of farmers in Zimbabwean to return to the fields to prepare for the winter wheat season, a representative body has said.
HARARE - The Zimbabwean government has made its first compensation payment of US$3.1 million to former white commercial farmers whose land was acquired under the country's land reform program, marking the commencement of fulfilling commitments made under the 2020 Global Compensation Deed (GCD).
HARARE - The Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board (TIMB) has banned the private sale of non-contract tobacco warning that all free-funded tobacco in Zimbabwe will be sold through the auction system this year.
MUTARE - Tanganda Tea Company Limited, a horticulture giant listed on the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange (ZSE), is finalising plans to raise US$8 million through a renounceable rights offer, as part of a broader strategy to enhance its capital structure and diversify shareholder offerings.
HARARE - Tanganda Tea Company Limited has announced plans to raise US$8 million through a renounceable rights offer, as part of a broader strategy to enhance its capital structure and diversify shareholder offerings.
Cotton Company of Zimbabwe (Cottco) transporters contracted for the 2023-2024 farming season are demanding payment in US dollars for their services, citing a breach of contract by the cotton company.
By the Goromonzi class of 1994 WhatsApp group
Covid-19 has disrupted our livelihoods and the systems that support them. While the magnitude of its impacts yet to be fully understood, it is unambiguous that as a country and as Zimbabweans we now need to reflectively re-think, re-imagine and re-build our great nation.
We, the members of the Goromonzi form four class of 1994, undertook a thought experiment in our whatsapp group. We present here thoughts to start a conversation on how we should all work towards building our country starting with our agriculture sector in a post-COVID-19 Zimbabwe.
The negligence of Health and Child Care minister, David Parirenyatwa, in addressing the concerns of the country's striking medical doctors and his recent utterances appear to have worsened the crisis, with doctors insisting they are not ready to return to hospital wards until their grievances are addressed in full.
Some of the thousands of white Zimbabwean farmers evicted from their land in the early 2000s by President Robert Mugabe’s supporters continue to hold out hopes of one day receiving compensation and returning to the country.