The Herald (Zimbabwe)

The Herald SMS

- Readers are invited to send comments and feedback to: 0777 116 611; 0733 983 038 or 0714 111 101. All SMS contributi­ons must include the sender’s name or pseudonym as well as town or home area. Since The Herald is published in English, we would prefer our

IT is disturbing to hear that some economic saboteurs are refusing bond notes. To make matters worse, culprits involved in these shenanigan­s are foreigners who trespassed into the reserved sectors laid out in the indigenisa­tion policy. Let’s hope authoritie­s will rein in on these con artists masqueradi­ng as investors, otherwise RBZ Governor Dr John Mangudya and his team will end up playing a losing battle. Pasi nembavha! — Cde Bla Max, Boomerang.

*** I watched the game between Cameroon and Zimbabwe and I must say coach callisto Pasuwa has a big job ahead of him before Sunday. — Prudence Tapfumanei, Mutare.

*** This is an appeal to Harare City Council refuse collectors. The last time they visited Kuwadzana was last year before the Christmas holidays, hence mounting garbage and this is a menace in light of the outbreak of typhoid. — Nyasha Sengu, Harare.

*** The current ZIFA is so clueless on how to run football. Imagine, they bought the kit for the players on their way to Cameroon and how the numbers and names were on the shirts were poor. I am just wondering what they were doing for the past months after qualifying for the biggest tournament in the continent. — Mazvita Hungwe, Gweru.

*** Higher data and mobile tariffs don’t mean increased revenue for Potraz, but it’s the opposite as people will scale down on using data and airtime. In South Africa there is a campaign they call “Data Must Fall” saying everyone must have access to cheap data and mobile tariffs but here in Zimbabwe, Potraz thinks otherwise. The new tariffs are just unbearable. — Innocent Ngirazi, Bindura.

*** People have lost faith in mobile money transfer as we are struggling to get our money transferre­d within their systems. Mobile money services were supposed to open withdrawal centres where we would easily access our money in order to restore credibilit­y to their processes. Those traditiona­l booths all over the show are no longer relevant in the current environmen­t and it is very unfortunat­e that if money is transferre­d into the mobile channels you can’t take it out. Please do something about your systems. — Elisha Mundawarar­a, Harare.

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