Daily Nation Newspaper

KAMBWILI’S FAMILY WEEPS

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The stunned relatives were galvanised into action after they realised that their relative was now a convict and tried to go and console him but police officers stopped them in their tracks. The horde of family members, party cadres and well wishers who included some church men and women, then trooped outside.

In what turned out to be a full scale mourning, family members both and women wept openly outside as Kambwili awaited transporta­tion to Lusaka Correction­al Facility, just opposite the Magistrate courts.

One female was seen crying and praying in tongues and asking Jesus to come down and show his power. “Ilangeni mwelesa, come down and show your mighty…..”.

Shocked cadres with tears rolling down their cheeks were subdued without their leader but vowed to stand by him.

Kambwili’s relatives could not hold back their grief as Mr Simusamba sent the former Roan member of Parliament to prison after finding him guilty on the two accounts of forgery and uttering false documents but acquitted him on the charge of giving false informatio­n to a public officer.

Mr. Simusamba sentenced Kambwili to 12 months imprisonme­nt with hard labour in the first count of forgery and another 12 months in the second count of uttering false documents. The sentences will run concurrent­ly meaning that Kambwili will only serve one year.

This was after the court was satisfied with the evidence that the national registrati­on card (NRC) assigned to Kambwili’s son Mwamba at the registrati­on of the convict’s company Mwamona Engineerin­g Technical Services (METS) belonged to Kambwili’s sister Sampa.

Mr. Simusamba agreed with evidence of complainan­t Chilufya Tayali, who is Economic Equity Party (EEP) president, and arresting officer Stanley Mumbula that the person Mwamba Chishimba, whose name appeared as one of the directors in

METS at its registrati­on, was fictitious as Kambwili’s son was a minor aged eight and could not be a director at law in 2001.

In mitigation, defence lawyer Musa Mwenye said Kambwili is a family man with five children and a grandfathe­r responsibl­e for a large extended family. He said Kambwili is diabetic, hypertensi­ve and that he sleeps with a sleeping machine without which he faces the danger of dying.

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