Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Lungu will no longer attend traditiona­l ceremonies

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LUSAKA — Zambian President Edgar Lungu will no longer attend traditiona­l ceremonies as they are dividing the country, according to a report in the Lusaka Times.

ZANIS reports that President Lungu explained that some tribal groupings get offended when he fails to attend their ceremonies after being invited.

He cited the Kalumba traditiona­l ceremony of the Chewa-speaking people as one such ceremony which he had given a miss.

President Lungu revealed that some people were accusing him of siding with the Ngoni-speaking people after he attended this year’s Ncwala traditiona­l ceremony. The president disclosed that his failure to attend the 2017 Kalumba ceremony has caused so much resentment that some people are threatenin­g not vote for his Patriotic Front.

Lungu said the division being caused by traditiona­l ceremonies is worrying, especially as traditiona­l ceremonies are supposed to unite all groupings.

The president told traditiona­l leaders that he would only attend ceremonies once the ministry of Chiefs and Traditiona­l Affairs had resolved the issue.—News24 A MALAYSIAN government chemist testified that he found a byproduct of VX nerve agent on the shirt of the Indonesian woman on trial for the murder of the half brother of North Korea’s leader.

The testimony yesterday was the first evidence linking VX to either of the two suspects accused of smearing the nerve agent on Kim Jong-nam’s face in a crowded Kuala Lumpur airport terminal in February.

Government chemist Raja Subramania­m told the court he found VX acid, a byproduct of the chemical weapon, on Siti Aisyah’s sleeveless shirt.

Raja said VX will degrade when it reacts with water, leaving the detectable byproducts, and a person can fully decontamin­ate their hands by washing and scrubbing within 15 minutes.

Witnesses who testified earlier in the trial that started on Monday said VX was found on Kim’s body and belongings and acute VX poisoning caused his death.

Aisyah and the Vietnamese suspect Doan Thi Huong have pleaded not guilty to murder charges that could bring the death penalty if they are convicted.

They have not testified but their defence has said the women believed they were playing a harmless prank for a hidden-camera TV show and were tricked by men suspected of being North Korean agents.

On Wednesday, the judge and court officials wore face masks and surgical gloves as VX-tainted evidence was presented in court.

A pathologis­t said VX, its precursors and its byproducts were detected in Kim’s eyes, on his face, in his blood and urine, and on his clothing.

Mohamad Shah Mahmood testified that the fastest absorption would have been through the eye mucus and that once VX entered the bloodstrea­m, “there is a very slim chance of survival”.

Prosecutor­s and defence lawyers examined the VX-tainted samples, which were sealed in transparen­t plastic bags, during a court break. Most of them wore gloves and masks as a safety precaution, and later, Judge Azmi Ariffin also covered himself as the samples were officially admitted as evidence.

Prosecutor­s also Wednesday sought to show VX was the sole cause of death. Mohamad Shah testified that drugs used to treat diabetes, hypertensi­on and gout were in Kim’s blood, but those drugs and those conditions would not have caused his swift death.

Earlier testimony showed Kim died within two hours of being attacked, not within 20 minutes as earlier stated by Malaysia’s health ministry.

Gooi Soon Seng, defence lawyer for Aisyah, had disputed the VX findings on Wednesday, before the chemist testified a byproduct was found on his client’s shirt. — AP

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