Trump’s ‘Great Healthcare Plan’ Aims to Cut Costs, but Details Are Sparse, Execs Say – MedCity News

President
Donald
Trump
released
a

plan

on
Thursday
to
lower
drug
costs
and
insurance
premiums,
though
some
healthcare
leaders
say
it
remains
unclear
how
it
would
achieve
those
goals.

The
plan,
titled
the
Great
Healthcare
Plan,
calls
for
codifying
the
Most-Favored-Nation
deals,
which
aim
to
bring
American
drug
prices
in
line
with
similar
nations.

Trump
also
proposed
to
stop
“sending
big
insurance
companies
billions
in
extra
taxpayer-funded
subsidy
payments”
and
instead
send
the
money
directly
to
eligible
Americans
through
their
health
savings
account
so
they
can
purchase
their
own
health
insurance,
according
to
a
fact
sheet.
The
plan
would
fund
a
cost-sharing
reduction
program
for
health
plans
and
end
kickbacks
from
pharmacy
benefit
managers
to
brokerage
middlemen
as
well.

In
addition,
health
insurers
would
be
required
to
publish
rate
and
coverage
comparisons
on
their
websites
in
“plain
English”
and
not
jargon
to
make
it
easier
for
consumers
to
make
coverage
decisions.
The
Great
Healthcare
Plan
would
also
require
health
insurers
to
publicly
disclose
how
much
of
their
revenue
goes
to
claims
versus
overhead
and
profits,
as
well
as
their
claims
denial
rates
and
average
wait
times
for
routine
care. 

“I’m
calling
on
Congress
to
pass
this
framework
into
law
without
delay—we
have
to
do
it
right
now
so
that
we
can
get
immediate
relief
to
the
American
people,
the
people
I
love,”
Trump
said.
The
plan
comes
as
Congress
is
torn
over
the
extension
of
the
Affordable
Care
Act
enhanced
premium
tax
credits,
which
lowered
premiums
for
those
purchasing
healthcare
on
the
marketplace
and
expired
at
the
end
of
2025.

According
to
at
least
one
healthcare
executive,
the
plan
lacks
substantial
details.

“Everyone
wants
to
see
drug
prices
and
premiums
come
down,”
said
Ari
Hoffman,
SVP
and
chief
clinical
officer
at
Collective
Health.
“The
challenge
is
how
you
get
there,
and
the
plan
released
by
the
White
House
has
almost
no
details
on
how.
Of
what
policy
content
is
present
in
the
plan,
addressing
PBM
kickbacks,
enhancing
transparency,
and
avoiding
jargon
are
welcome
changes.
But
without
a
clear
and
certain
plan,
I
don’t
see
this
bringing
down
the
rise
in
insurance
premiums.
Insurance
pricing
is
too
sensitive
to
uncertainty,
and
when
policies
change
in
ways
the
market
can’t
predict,
that
risk
ends
up
getting
baked
into
premiums.”

Collective
Health
is
a
health
benefits
platform
for
self-funded
employers.

An
executive
at
KFF,
a
nonprofit
health
policy
organization,
echoed
the
need
for
more
details.

“We
have
been
trying
to
analyze
the
Trump
health
‘plan’
but
I
worry
that
unless
Congress
puts
something
real
together
we
are
analyzing
air.
Big
Q’s
such
as
are
[pre-existing
conditions]
protected
are
impossible
to
answer
from
their
Fact
Sheet.
What
we
do
know:
it
partly
captured
a
news
cycle,”
said
Dr.
Drew
Altman,
KFF’s
president
and
CEO. 

Another
healthcare
executive

Ahmed
Elsayyad,
president
at
Ostro

said
the
plan
could
make
some
improvements,
but
likely
nothing
significant.
Ostro
is
an
agentic
AI
company
for
life
sciences.

“In
the
best
case,
it
increases
price
sensitivity
in
the
parts
of
healthcare
that
are
actually
shop-able
and
creates
some
premium
relief
via
[cost-sharing
reduction]
mechanics,”
he
said.
“In
the
typical
case,
the
impact
is
likely
to
be
uneven
because
much
of
healthcare
spending
is
urgent,
complex,
and
locally
concentrated,
which
limits
consumer
shopping.

Net:
potential
marginal
improvements,
but
unlikely
to
be
a
structural
cost
reset
without
detailed
funding,
enforcement,
and
guardrails
for
lower-income
and
high-risk
patients.”

AHIP,
meanwhile,
appears
open
to
the
plan.

“Health
plans
welcome
ideas
to
bring
down
the
unaffordable
prices
drugmakers
charge
Americans
and
to
empower
consumers
to
make
the
best
health
care
decisions
for
themselves
and
their
families,”
said
Chris
Bond,
AHIP
spokesperson.


Photo:
Philip
Rozenski,
Getty
Images

Morning Docket: 01.20.26 – Above the Law

*
ICE
refusing
to
grant
detainees
access
to
legal
counsel.
“Imagine
the
chaos,”
one
agent
said,
describing
the
bare
minimum
of
a
constitutional
society.
[ABC
News
]

*
DOJ
Civil
Rights
chief
threatens
to
charge
Don
Lemon
under
the
KKK
Act.
[NBC
News
]

*
After

state
defections
,
ABA’s
law
school
accreditation
council
reminds
everyone
that
it’s
independent
of
the
ABA.
[ABA
Journal
]

*
“What
Happened
To
Pam
Bondi?”
asks
this
deep
dive
about
a
woman
who

fought
hurricane
victims
because
she
wanted
to
take
away
their
dog
for
herself
.
[The
Atlantic
]

*
Former
judges
announce
new
initiative
to
save
the
leal
profession’s
dignity.
Looking
through
this
roundup,
it’s
possible
the
damage
is
already
done.
[NY
Times
]

*
In-house
counsel
expect
cybersecurity
suits.
[Corporate
Counsel
]

*
Supreme
Court
will
take
up
Roundup
verdict.
[Law360]

Partnerships, Legal Education, Marriages… Lawyers Were Destroying Everything Last Week – See Generally – Above the Law

Another
Biglaw
Single-Tier
Partnership
Falls:
The
path
to
upward
mobility
got
a
little
narrower.
Florida
And
Texas
Take
Over
Legal
Education
From
The
ABA:
Both
states
have
made
abundantly
clear
that
their
schools
are
headed
for
a
dumpster
fire.
Supreme
Court
Hacked,
Which
Tracks:
America’s
highest
court
might
want
to
consider
changing
its
password
to
something
harder
than
“12345.”
Former
Senator
Turned
Biglaw
Lawyer
Sued
For
Ruining
A
Marriage:
The
complaint
reads
less
like
a
legal
dispute
and
more
like
a
prestige
HBO
drama.
Well…
STARZ
drama
anyway..
Former
Biglaw
Associate
Who
Refused
To
Bend
The
Knee
Earns
Top
Honor:
Above
the
Law
readers
select
lawyer
who
chose
principle
over
prestige
as
2025
Lawyer
of
the
Year.
Lindsey
Halligan
Responds
To
Illegal
Appointment
Allegations
By
Doubling
Down:
Trump’s
most
loyal
lawyer
insists
the
problem
isn’t
the
law

it’s
everyone
insisting
on
following
it.
New
Law
School
Rises
From
The
Ashes
Of
A
Prior
Disaster:
Hopefully
this
time
is
different.
Former
Biglaw
Partner
Charged
With
Murder:
The
profession
confronts
a
grim
reminder
that
elite
credentials
are
not
character
references.
Law
School
Arms
Students
With
Anti-ICE
Hotline:
As
federal
enforcement
escalates,
one
institution
decides
protecting
students
matters
more
than
staying
quiet.

From Zambezi Depths: An Outsider’s Vacation in Zimbabwe’s Heights, South Africa’s Urban Pulse and Falls

Pretoria:
Learning
in
Future
Africa

My
wife
and
I
spent
five
days
in
Pretoria
as
one
of
six
facilitators
for
a
leadership
development
forum
for
university
administrators
from
across
the
continent,
organized
by
the
International
Association
of
Universities
(IAU)
and
UNESCO.
The
sessions
were
held
at
the
Future
Africa
Campus
of
the
sprawling
University
of
Pretoria.
I
presented
twice,
first
on
“Rethinking
Revenue:
Diversification
and
Fundraising
in
Universities,”
and
then
on
“Steering
Higher
Education
in
the
Digital
Era.”
The
discussions
were
robust,
textured
with
both
urgency
and
imagination.
It
was
a
pleasure
working
alongside
fellow
facilitators:
current
and
former
vice
chancellors
(presidents)
from
Egypt,
Ghana,
Britain,
South
Africa,
and
Australia,
and
a
provost
from
the
United
States,
as
well
as
participants
from
universities
across
the
continent.
I
learned
as
much
as
I
taught,
not
only
in
formal
sessions
but
in
unplanned
conversations
over
meals
and
coffee
breaks,
including
sumptuous
dinners
in
the
city
and
on
campus.

Outside
the
program,
Pretoria
revealed
itself
in
quieter
ways.
I
strolled,
sometimes
accompanied
by
my
wife,
through
the
neighborhoods
around
the
campus,
soaking
in
the
rhythms
of
this
bureaucratic
capital,
watching
people
move
through
their
day,
including
government
employees,
office
workers,
youths,
and
students.
I
paused
often,
letting
the
city
pass
before
me
like
a
gently
unfolding
film,
its
pace
measured
and
unhurried.
Shops
and
cafés
exuded
the
intimate
rituals
of
daily
life:
parents
shopping
for
the
holidays;
friends
meeting
after
work
and
leaning
in
to
exchange
the
latest
news;
young
couples
holding
hands
across
a
table,
whispering
with
the
seriousness
of
first
love;
older
men
reading
newspapers
slowly,
pausing
now
and
then
to
glance
up
at
the
street
as
if
measuring
the
world
outside
against
the
headlines.
A
low
hum
of
cups,
footsteps,
and
conversation
became
its
own
form
of
welcome.

At
small
shops
and
bakeries,
people
queued
patiently,
exchanging
greetings
in
English,
Afrikaans,
and
Setswana,
the
languages
layering
into
a
soft,
melodic
hum.
There
was
something
grounding
about
watching
ordinary
suburban
life
happen,
including
gardeners
tending
to
hedges
with
quiet
pride,
parents
coming
from
work,
and
students
returning
from
school.
These
simple
moments
offered
a
reminder
that
dignity
lives
in
routine,
and
belonging
is
built
in
fragments
of
everyday
gesture.
It
reminded
me
that
cities,
even
those
where
power
is
concentrated
in
offices
and
ministries,
are
also
held
together
by
the
small,
steady
acts
of
people
who
belong
to
them.
In
those
moments,
Pretoria
felt
less
like
a
capital
and
more
like
a
living
neighborhood,
textured,
human,
and
quietly
compelling.

Cape
Town:
Where
Oceans
and
Histories
Meet

From
there,
the
world
opened
wider
in
Cape
Town,
where
we
spent
a
week.
My
wife
and
I
stayed
at
a
boutique
hotel
at
the
Waterfront,
a
place
where
ocean,
commerce,
and
culture
meet,
creating
an
atmosphere
that
feels
both
worldly
and
deeply
rooted.
Each
evening
we
sampled
different
restaurants,
feasting
on
seafood
and
conversation.
One
night,
joined
by
friends,
we
dined
in
downtown
Cape
Town
to
the
sounds
of
a
legendary
South
African
jazz
musician,
with
music
rising
like
memory
and
lingering
in
the
cool
evening
air.

We
spent
a
day
with
a
friend,
a
senior
administrator
at
the
University
of
Cape
Town,
together
with
his
wife,
driving
the
winding
coastal
road
toward
Cape
Point.
As
we
ascended
the
escarpment,
we
stopped
at
lookouts
to
take
in
the
city
behind
us
and
the
shimmering
ocean
below,
the
water
shifting
from
slate
to
turquoise
as
the
sun
rose
higher.
The
road
curled
along
the
mountainside
like
a
ribbon
laid
between
rock
and
sea,
each
turn
revealing
new
vistas:
vineyards
tucked
into
valleys
and
hillsides,
clusters
of
pastel
houses
clinging
to
the
slopes,
and
fishing
boats
scattered
across
the
bay
like
flecks
of
paint
on
a
canvas.
At
each
stop
the
wind
carried
the
smell
of
seawater
and
fynbos,
and
our
interlocutors
narrated
the
landscape
with
the
ease
of
people
who
know
it
well,
speaking
of
its
beauty,
its
tensions,
and
the
histories
laid
into
the
shoreline.

Further
along,
we
stopped
at
the
penguin
reserve
at
Boulders
Beach,
where
the
charismatic,
tuxedoed
birds
waddled
along
the
sand
and
into
the
surf
with
disarming
dignity.
Watching
them
slip
into
and
out
of
the
water
felt
like
witnessing
a
quiet
miracle
of
nature.
We
continued
the
drive,
passing
through
Simon’s
Town,
home
to
South
Africa’s
principal
naval
base,
with
its
whitewashed
buildings,
stately
harbor,
and
the
faint
scent
of
salt
and
engine
oil
mingling
in
the
wind.
Eventually,
we
reached
Cape
Point,
the
southernmost
tip
of
the
continent,
where
the
land
drops
off
into
wind
and
endless
sea,
a
place
that
feels
like
both
an
ending
and
a
beginning.

Another
day,
an
old
family
friend,
a
renowned
academic
born,
bred,
and
intellectually
formed
by
Cape
Town,
guided
us
through
neighborhoods
layered
with
history,
pain,
and
extraordinary
beauty.
With
her,
the
city
became
a
text,
one
written
in
memory,
resilience,
and
a
fierce
sense
of
place,
as
alive
in
its
vistas
as
in
its
silences,
complexities,
contradictions,
immense
wealth
and
deep
inequalities,
cosmopolitanism
and
provincialism.

Between
outings,
we
explored
the
Waterfront’s
bustling
shopping
malls,
watching
the
holiday
season
unfold
in
hurried
purchases
and
joyful
reunions.
We
walked
the
expansive
boardwalk
along
Beach
Road
all
the
way
to
Sea
Point,
pausing
at
neighborhood
eateries
for
refreshments.
One
memorable
morning
I
visited
the
Zeitz
Museum
of
Contemporary
African
Art,
reportedly
the
world’s
largest
museum
dedicated
to
contemporary
African
and
diasporic
art.
The
building
itself,
an
architectural
marvel,
seemed
to
breathe
creativity.

Cape
Town
lingered
with
us
long
after.
Table
Mountain
rose
like
an
ancient
god,
the
harbor
shimmered
with
possibility,
and
the
promenade
at
sunset
left
me
speechless
as
I
witnessed
beauty
made
effortless.
No
wonder
Cape
Town,
combining
the
unparalleled
natural
splendor
of
majestic
mountains
and
hills
with
the
dramatic
meeting
point
of
two
oceans,
the
Indian
and
the
Atlantic,
and
the
energy
of
a
vibrant
urban
life,
is
a
global
tourist
mecca.
It
draws
international
visitors
and
new
residents
in
numbers
that
have
increasingly
priced
many
locals
out
of
the
seafront
and
the
tony
suburbs,
altering
the
social
geography
of
neighborhood
after
neighborhood.
The
result
is
a
city
of
astounding
wonder
and
complex
tensions,
a
place
where
nature
and
aspiration
coexist
uneasily
in
beauty
and
strain.

Victoria
Falls:
At
the
Mouth
of
Awe

Victoria
Falls
arrived
like
a
revelation.
Nature
there
overwhelms
language:
thunderous
sheets
of
water
collapsing
into
a
gorge
of
mist
and
rainbows,
the
earth
breathing
in
geologic
time.
We
stayed
for
five
days
at
an
old,
elegant
hotel
built
in
1904
that,
despite
its
size,
feels
almost
intimate.
The
service
is
superb
without
being
obsequious,
anchored
in
a
graciousness
that
seems
inherited
from
another
era.
Our
room
was
spacious
and
full
of
old-world
charm
with
polished
wood,
high
ceilings,
and
windows
that
opened
to
a
chorus
of
birdsong.
Its
neatly
made
bed
with
crisp
white
linens
sat
beneath
a
soft,
flowing
mosquito-net
canopy,
creating
a
serene,
elegant,
and
gently
romantic
atmosphere.

There
were
several
dining
spaces,
including
a
beautiful
verandah
where
we
ate
lunch,
a
thatch-roofed
open-air
restaurant,
where
breakfast
was
served
as
the
morning
mist
rolled
in,
fronted
by
a
stone
sculpture
garden
that
showcased
the
artistry
Zimbabwe
is
famous
for,
and
an
ornate
formal
dining
room
where
some
meals
were
prepared
in
front
of
us
with
quiet
theatricality.
The
well-manicured
grounds,
dotted
with
mango
and
other
trees,
overlooked
stunning
greenery
and
the
far-off
plume
of
mist
rising
from
the
falls,
like
smoke
from
a
sacred
fire.

The
national
park
at
Victoria
Falls
is
astonishing
in
scale.
The
cataract
runs
for
more
than
a
mile,
almost
three
times
the
length
of
Niagara
Falls,
bordering
Canada
and
the
United
States,
and
forms
an
immense
sheet
of
water
that
seems
to
break
the
world
open.
The
stone
walking
trail
along
the
cliff
was
busy
with
visitors
from
Zimbabwe,
from
neighboring
countries,
and
from
every
corner
of
the
globe.
Standing
before
the
roar
of
the
falls,
the
air
thick
with
spray,
we
were
drenched
in
seconds.
It
was
a
deeply
moving
experience
that
left
us
suspended
between
awe
and
humility,
reminded
of
how
small
human
ambition
feels
beside
the
overwhelming
beauty
and
power
of
nature.

One
evening,
we
took
a
sunset
boat
cruise
on
the
Zambezi,
the
fourth-longest
river
in
Africa.
It
begins
in
northwestern
Zambia,
winds
through
Angola,
curves
along
the
border
of
Namibia,
Zambia,
and
Zimbabwe,
and
then
slips
through
Mozambique
until
it
reaches
the
Indian
Ocean.
Light
caught
in
reeds,
hippos
bared
their
huge
teeth
from
the
water
while
crocodiles
basked
on
the
shores,
and
the
sun
slipped
toward
the
horizon
like
a
dropped
coin.
The
passengers
formed
a
temporary
community,
a
lively
mix
of
voices,
accents,
nationalities,
races,
and
stories.
The
chatter
felt
animated,
carried
by
the
collective
wonder
of
strangers
sharing
the
same
moment
of
enchantment.

We
also
explored
the
town
beyond
the
hotel.
We
visited
the
nearby
mall,
ate
at
a
restaurant
in
the
town,
and
stopped
at
crafts
shops
displaying
ornaments,
carvings,
fabrics,
and
paintings
rich
with
color
and
history.
As
is
my
habit,
I
bargained
with
the
vendors,
not
only
for
the
joy
of
the
exchange
but
for
the
conversations
that
came
with
it.
I
spoke
with
Uber
drivers
about
national
politics
and
the
state
of
the
economy.
I
asked
about
their
lives
and
their
aspirations.
Their
candor
revealed
a
country
navigating
difficulty
with
creativity
and
endurance.
The
horrid
settler
colonial
past
was
not
gone;
it
negotiated
itself
with
the
harried
postcolonial
present
through
every
conversation.

Johannesburg:
The
Glitter
and
the
Grind

From
Victoria
Falls,
we
went
to
Johannesburg,
where
we
spent
ten
days,
which
felt
like
the
final
movement
of
a
symphony:
restless,
creative,
bruised,
and
triumphant.
It
is
a
city
that
never
sits
still.
It
thinks
aloud.
It
improvises.
It
hopes
in
public.
We
stayed
in
an
apartment
hotel
complex
in
Sandton,
the
financial
heart
of
Johannesburg,
and
often
described
as
the
wealthiest
enclave
on
the
continent.
The
area
is
a
glittering
collage
of
corporate
offices,
glamorous
hotels,
polished
shopping
malls,
fine
restaurants,
and
the
Johannesburg
Stock
Exchange.
Nelson
Mandela
Square,
a
ten-minute
walk
from
our
hotel,
served
as
a
daily
anchor,
a
plaza
where
locals
and
visitors
gathered
beneath
the
statue
of
Madiba.

Our
time
in
the
city
was
framed
by
visits
to
places
where
history
sits
close
to
the
skin.
We
toured
Soweto
and
spent
an
afternoon
at
the
Nelson
Mandela
House
Museum,
which
has
been
impressively
upgraded
since
our
last
visit
in
2008.
The
driver
who
took
us
there
also
guided
us
through
the
city,
pointing
out
landmarks
along
the
way,
and
then
up
to
Northcliff
Hill
for
a
panoramic
view
of
Johannesburg’s
sprawl,
a
horizon
of
suburbs,
townships,
shopping
centers,
and
distant
towers
shimmering
in
the
summer
heat
and
rain.

Another
day,
an
old
family
friend,
one
of
South
Africa’s
leading
writers
whose
family
name
is
woven
into
the
history
of
the
ANC
and
the
anti-apartheid
struggle,
took
us
with
her
two
sons,
daughter-in-law,
and
granddaughter
to
the
world-renowned
Sterkfontein
Caves,
part
of
the
UNESCO-designated
Cradle
of
Humankind
World
Heritage
Site
famed
for
its
extraordinary
paleoanthropological
discoveries.
The
caves,
located
about
an
hour’s
drive
northwest
of
Johannesburg,
are
among
the
richest
early
hominid
fossil
sites
in
the
world
and
have
yielded
more
than
500
hominid
specimens
that
illuminate
human
origins
over
several
million
years.
Excavations
there
produced
the
first
adult
Australopithecus
africanus
fossils,
including
the
iconic
skull
known
as
“Mrs.
Ples,”
and
“Little
Foot,”
one
of
the
oldest
and
most
complete
early
hominids
ever
found,
with
parts
dated
to
around
3.6
million
years
ago.
Tours
of
the
caves
take
visitors
through
chambers
and
passages
where
these
fossils
were
uncovered,
bringing
to
life
the
deep
timelines
of
our
shared
past
and
offering
a
humbling
perspective
on
the
sweep
of
human
history.

On
our
own,
we
took
Ubers
across
the
city
to
see
its
layers:
historic
townships,
where
South
Africa
reckons
with
its
past,
and
new
residential
developments
like
Waterfall,
where
the
country
rehearses
its
future.

What
made
Johannesburg
especially
memorable
was
the
reconnection
with
family
and
friends.
On
several
days,
we
spent
time
with
one
of
my
nieces,
whom
I
had
last
seen
in
2012
when
she
was
thirteen,
and
her
mother.
We
visited
their
home
in
the
northern
suburbs
of
Johannesburg,
which
looked
as
pristine
as
it
did
the
last
time
my
wife,
her
mother,
and
I
were
there
in
2008.
One
of
the
highlights
was
the
Christmas
lunch
they
invited
us
to
at
a
hotel
restaurant
nearby,
a
large,
warm,
and
inviting
space
overlooking
a
beautiful
yard
where
midday
sunlight
filtered
through
the
sky
high
windows.
The
room
felt
bright
yet
relaxed,
the
gentle
clink
of
cutlery
underscoring
the
holiday
mood,
and
the
garden
view
lent
the
setting
an
easy
grace.
The
tables
were
elegantly
dressed,
the
service
attentive
without
intrusion,
and
two
musicians,
a
man
and
a
woman,
performed
festive
music
by
African
American
and
South
African
artists,
their
harmonies
threading
soul,
jazz,
and
township
rhythms
into
the
afternoon
air.
The
meal
was
served
buffet-style,
with
guests
moving
at
an
unhurried
pace
between
stations
offering
an
abundant
spread
of
dishes.
The
restaurant
was
full
of
people
from
across
the
city
and
beyond,
a
diverse
gathering
speaking
the
many
languages
of
the
rainbow
nation,
with
some
visitors
from
neighboring
countries
joining
the
celebration.
It
felt
like
belonging
in
motion.

Among
the
most
memorable
moments
in
Johannesburg
were
our
visits
with
old
friends
the
day
after
Christmas:
first
with
the
former
vice
chancellor
of
the
University
of
Pretoria
in
the
morning,
and
later
with
the
former
vice
chancellor
of
the
University
of
Johannesburg
in
the
afternoon.
The
latter
welcomed
us
into
his
beautiful
home
in
Houghton,
the
leafy
suburb
near
where
Mandela
once
lived,
a
place
that
still
carries
the
echoes
of
history
in
its
quiet
streets.
Over
a
generous
meal,
with
music
playing
softly
in
the
background
like
a
quiet
current
beneath
our
words,
the
conversation
widened
and
deepened
by
the
minute.
We
moved
from
the
state
of
South
African
universities
to
the
shifting
architecture
of
local
and
global
politics,
from
personal
memories
to
national
memory,
from
the
unfinished
work
of
liberation
to
the
fragile
possibilities
struggling
to
be
born.
It
was
the
kind
of
exchange
in
which
time
loosens
its
grip,
hours
passing
like
minutes,
leaving
us
both
more
informed,
more
reflective,
and
quietly
stirred
by
what
the
future
might
yet
hold.

Johannesburg
is
a
city
where
transformation
is
visible,
especially
in
its
expanding
Black
middle
class.
Post-apartheid
South
Africa
has
experienced
a
significant
rise
in
Black
professionals
and
households
with
stable
incomes,
a
demographic
now
larger
than
the
white
middle
class
and
a
crucial
engine
of
economic
growth.
Yet
the
gains
are
uneven.
White
households
continue
to
hold
most
national
wealth,
and
the
divide
within
the
Black
middle
and
working
classes
is
widening,
with
some
advancing
while
others
struggle
to
maintain
mobility.
Compared
with
many
other
African
states,
South
Africa’s
Black
middle
class
is
larger,
more
established,
and
more
economically
grounded,
whereas
in
many
other
countries
the
middle
class
remains
newer,
smaller,
and
vulnerable
to
economic
shocks.
The
United
States
has
a
much
larger
Black
middle
class
in
absolute
size,
but
it
too
suffers
from
entrenched
racial
wealth
disparities.
Despite
advances
in
income
and
education,
Black
household
wealth
remains
a
fraction
of
white
household
wealth.
In
both
countries,
the
question
of
who
rises,
who
stalls,
and
who
is
left
behind
remains
central.

There
were
also
encounters
that
told
quieter
stories.
We
met
several
African
Americans
at
hotels,
restaurants,
and
tourist
sites,
some
visiting
for
the
holidays,
others
planning
to
relocate
or
already
settled
in
Johannesburg
or
Cape
Town.
Many
spoke
of
South
Africa
as
a
place
where
they
could
breathe
more
freely,
where
the
weight
of
racial
hostility
was
absent,
and
where
they
could
enjoy
a
standard
of
living
equal
to
or
higher
than
what
they
had
in
the
United
States.
Their
reflections
carried
the
resonance
of
both
relief
and
reinvention.
At
the
same
time,
we
met
African
migrants
from
other
parts
of
the
continent,
especially
Zimbabwe
my
country
of
birth,
drawn
to
Johannesburg
by
professional
opportunities,
education,
or
simply
the
hope
of
something
better.
Their
journeys
were
shaped
by
resilience
but
also
by
vulnerability,
as
they
balanced
possibility
with
the
risk
of
xenophobia,
which
continues
to
surface
unpredictably
in
the
competitive
social
dynamics
of
everyday
life.

By
the
time
we
left,
Johannesburg
had
imprinted
itself
upon
us.
It
is
a
city
of
staggering
contradictions,
where
triumph
and
sorrow,
brilliance
and
struggle,
live
side
by
side.
Yet
it
is
also
a
place
of
irrepressible
creativity,
of
a
vibrant
art
scene,
film
industry,
theater,
and
music,
including
the
latest
genre
of
Amapiano.

It
felt,
in
the
best
way,
like
standing
backstage
before
the
curtain
rises,
the
conversations
in
restaurants
and
living
rooms
carrying
the
tension
of
an
orchestra
tuning
before
history
begins
its
next
performance.

As
our
days
in
Johannesburg
unfolded,
the
conversations
around
us
widened.
What
began
as
casual
exchanges
about
daily
life
often
opened
into
deeper
reflections
on
politics,
history,
and
the
fragile
scaffolding
of
democracy.
In
living
rooms,
restaurants,
cars,
and
queues,
the
question
kept
arising:
not
only
what
South
Africa
is
becoming,
but
what
the
United
States
has
become.

Questions
We
Could
Not
Escape

Wherever
we
went
in
South
Africa
and
Zimbabwe,
conversations
eventually
circled
back
to
the
United
States.
Almost
everyone
we
met
asked
about
it.
Uber
drivers,
hotel
staff,
vendors
in
markets,
family
and
friends
at
dinner
tables,
strangers
who
overheard
my
wife’s
accent
and
turned
with
curiosity.
They
asked
how
someone
as
crude,
cruel,
and
chaotic
as
Donald
Trump
could
have
been
reelected
president.
They
inquired
about
what
had
happened
to
a
country
once
seen
as
a
global
model
of
democratic
aspiration.
They
wondered
why
American
institutions
that
seemed
powerful
from
a
distance,
from
Congress
to
corporations
to
universities,
appeared
hesitant
and
uncertain,
indeed
craven,
in
the
face
of
democratic
backsliding.
Some
were
aghast
at
how
misinformation
spreads
so
quickly
in
the
United
States,
including
claims
circulating
in
certain
right-wing
media
ecosystems
and
MAGA
circles
about
so-called
genocide
against
Afrikaners
in
South
Africa,
questions
fueled
by
online
narratives
and
public
figures
with
South
African
roots
in
business
and
technology,
often
labeled
locally
as
the
South
African
apartheid
mafia.
They
wanted
to
understand
why
such
claims
are
taken
seriously
by
so
many
Americans.
A
few
of
those
we
encountered
expressed
support
for
Trump’s
America
first
agenda,
but
it
became
clear
that
this
was
rarely
an
endorsement
of
what
the
Trump
administration
was
actually
doing
in
the
United
States.
It
was
more
a
projected
wish
that
African
leaders
might
also
put
their
own
countries
first,
govern
with
urgency,
and
act
with
clarity
of
purpose.

In
response,
we
shared
our
perspectives
that
the
United
States
has
always
been
a
flawed
democracy
rather
than
a
full
democracy,
to
borrow
the
classification
used
by The
Economist
.
Its
weaknesses
are
structural
as
well
as
cultural.
The
Electoral
College
distorts
representation.
Gerrymandering
protects
minority
rule.
The
judiciary,
including
the
Supreme
Court,
is
intensely
politicized.
Voting
rights
remain
uneven
and
vulnerable.
All
of
this
is
rooted
in
the
country’s
original
sin
of
white
supremacy,
a
foundational
contradiction
that
has
never
been
resolved.
Today,
demographic
change
and
the
fear
of
a
coming
majority-minority
nation
have
accelerated
the
crisis,
fueling
a
volatile
blend
of
white
racial
anxiety,
nativism,
and
ethnonationalist
revival.

We
also
noted
that
this
moment
in
the
United
States
does
not
exist
in
isolation.
It
is
part
of
a
wider
global
political
current.
Across
parts
of
Europe,
identitarian
movements
have
re-emerged,
alongside
populist
parties
restricting
immigration
from
the
Global
South.
Asylum
seekers
are
framed
as
threats
rather
than
people.
Anti-immigrant
rhetoric
is
normalized
in
parliamentary
debates.
In
this
context,
some
Americans
sympathetic
to
these
movements
look
to
South
Africa’s
apartheid
past
as
a
cautionary
model,
or
even
a
blueprint,
for
preserving
white
cultural
dominance
and
minority
rule.
The
result
is
a
feedback
loop
where
American
racial
panic
and
European
anti-immigrant
populism
reinforce
one
another,
producing
a
shared
political
vocabulary
of
exclusion.

The
questions
we
heard
were
not
voiced
with
malice
or
triumph.
They
were
asked
with
concern,
confusion,
and
sometimes
sorrow.
If
democracy
can
falter
in
the
United
States,
many
wondered,
what
hope
is
there
for
younger
or
more
fragile
democracies
elsewhere?
It
was
a
reminder
that
America’s
crisis
is
never
only
America’s
affair.
Its
failures
are
witnessed.
Its
struggles
are
studied.
Its
consequences
are
global.

These
encounters
stayed
with
us
as
we
boarded
our
flight
from
Johannesburg
to
Washington
DC
last
night.
They
formed
the
backdrop
to
our
reflections
on
South
Africa
as
we
prepared
to
leave,
a
country
still
in
motion
and
still
negotiating
the
meaning
of
freedom.
We
were
struck
by
how
well
informed
so
many
South
Africans
and
Zimbabweans
are
about
world
affairs,
especially
the
United
States,
often
with
a
depth
and
nuance
that
far
exceeds
what
most
Americans
know
about
Africa,
South
Africa,
or
Zimbabwe,
a
disparity
shaped
by
histories
of
global
hierarchy
and
each
society’s
place
within
it.
It
reminded
us
that
knowledge,
like
mobility,
is
unevenly
distributed
along
the
lines
of
power
and
geography.

We
were
equally
fascinated
to
see
that
the
flights
to
and
from
Washington
DC
and
Johannesburg
were
now
predominantly
Black,
a
marked
contrast
from
years
ago.
In
the
late
2000s,
I
published
an
essay
on
the
“Whiteness
of
Airports”
and
the
way
white
bodies
dominated
the
global
circuits
of
travel,
even
to
and
from
Africa.
That
is
clearly
no
longer
the
case.
Even
with
Trump’s
travel
bans,
visa
restrictions,
and
the
frictions
that
still
govern
mobility
from
the
continent,
something
has
shifted.
The
skies
themselves
seem
to
be
changing.

Conclusion:
A
Country
Still
in
Motion

While
our
visit
to
South
Africa
was
largely
a
vacation,
save
for
the
first
five
days
in
Pretoria,
as
an
academic
who
once
taught
the
history
of
South
Africa,
and
having
engaged
with
South
African
scholars
and
even
a
few
politicians
for
decades,
I
cannot
help
putting
on
my
analytical
hat.
Travel
sharpens
perception,
and
the
beauty
of
the
present
coexists
with
the
shadows
of
the
past.
Since
1994,
the
country
has
made
undeniable
gains.
It
has
built
and
sustained
democratic
institutions,
expanded
civil
liberties,
unified
a
previously
fragmented
education
system,
and
increased
access
to
housing,
water,
electricity,
and
healthcare.
Millions
who
once
lived
at
the
margins
were
drawn
closer
to
the
center
of
national
life.
For
a
time,
economic
growth
was
strong,
with
GDP
expanding
significantly
and
public
finance
management,
inflation
control,
and
macroeconomic
governance
improving
compared
to
the
uncertainty
of
the
twilight
years
of
apartheid
following
the
Soweto
uprising
of
1976.

Yet,
the
structural
legacies
of
apartheid
remain
formidable.
South
Africa
still
carries
the
burden
of
being
the
most
unequal
society
in
the
world,
with
wealth
concentrated
in
the
hands
of
a
few
and
poverty
deepening
again
in
recent
years.
Unemployment
is
staggering,
especially
among
young
people,
with
joblessness
exceeding
sixty
percent
in
some
cohorts.
Infrastructure
has
faced
strains:
until
recently,
loadshedding
was
commonplace,
water
systems
challenges
persist,
and
service
delivery
gaps
weigh
heavily
on
the
poor.
Corruption
and
governance
failures
continue
to
corrode
public
trust.
The
energy
transition
remains
fraught,
anchored
in
an
overwhelming
dependence
on
coal
and
complicated
by
regional
gas
supply
vulnerabilities,
although
green
energy
is
apparently
expanding,
facilitated
by
the
liberalization
of
energy
markets.
Education,
while
more
accessible,
struggles
with
quality,
uneven
resources,
and
exhausted
institutions.
Land
and
housing
inequalities
persist,
shaping
who
belongs
where
and
on
what
terms.

And
yet,
South
Africa
is
not
a
simple
story
of
decline
or
progress
beloved
by
the
country’s
foes
and
friends.
It
is
a
story
of
contestation,
of
what
we
used
to
call
in
radical
African
political
economy,
uneven
development,
the
persistent
mismatch
between
growth
and
development.

It
is
a
country
where
the
future
is
negotiated
in
real
time.
It
remains
one
of
the
few
postcolonial
states
where
democratic
accountability,
constitutionalism,
and
civic
voice
still
hold
meaningful
power.
Its
Black
middle
class,
now
larger
in
absolute
size
than
the
white
middle
class,
has
become
an
engine
of
economic
dynamism,
even
as
racial
wealth
gaps
stubbornly
endure.
Cultural
and
intellectual
life
is
vibrant,
universities
remain
laboratories
of
critique
and
innovation,
and
new
forms
of
organizing
and
imagining
are
emerging
from
the
ground
up.
The
problems
are
immense,
but
so
is
the
civic
imagination
that
confronts
them.

Leaving
Johannesburg,
I
carried
two
truths
that
sit
side
by
side
without
canceling
each
other
out.
South
Africa
is
a
place
of
astonishing
beauty,
creativity,
and
resilience.
It
is
also
a
place
wrestling
with
inequality,
broken
systems,
and
the
unfinished
work
of
liberation.
But
perhaps
that
is
the
point:
freedom
is
not
an
arrival;
it
is
a
process.
And
in
South
Africa,
that
process
continues,
noisy,
brilliant,
wounded,
determined,
and
alive.


Source:



PAUL
TIYAMBE
ZELEZA

From
Zambezi
Depths:
An
Outsider’s
Vacation
in
Zimbabwe’s
Heights,
South
Africa’s
Urban
Pulse
and
Falls


The
Elephant

Bulawayo teen dies after ingesting poison over ZIMSEC results

BULAWAYO-
A
16-year-old
teenage
girl
has
died
after
allegedly
ingesting
poison
shortly
after
checking
her
November
2025
Ordinary
Level
results,
Bulawayo
police
said.

Police
said
the
juvenile,
a
resident
of
Nguboyenja
suburb,
consumed
a
cockroach
insecticide
after
discovering
that
she
had
passed
only
two
subjects
out
of
seven.

The
incident
occurred
on
January
16
at
around
9.30PM
when
the
teenager
accessed
her
results
through
the
ZIMSEC
website.

“Upon
discovering
that
she
only
passed
two
subjects,
she
became
devastated
and
started
crying,”
said
Inspector
Nomalanga
Msebele.

Authorities
said
the
girl
later
rushed
to
the
kitchen,
where
she
took
Dichlorvos
insecticide
from
a
cupboard
and
drank
it.

“She
was
seen
by
one
of
her
cousins
who
screamed
and
quickly
snatched
the
insecticide
while
advising
others
of
what
had
happened,”
Msebele
said.

Police
said
relatives
attempted
to
administer
first
aid
by
giving
the
teenager
milk
and
charcoal
before
rushing
her
to
Mpilo
Central
Hospital.

“She
passed
on
while
being
admitted,”
police
said.

Police
urged
young
people
facing
emotional
distress
to
seek
help
from
parents,
teachers,
counsellors,
or
trusted
individuals
rather
than
resorting
to
self-harm.

They
also
appealed
to
parents
and
guardians
to
ensure
that
pesticides,
poisons,
and
other
toxic
substances
are
kept
out
of
reach
of
children.

The
tragedy
comes
amid
growing
concern
over
mental
health
challenges
among
learners
following
the
release
of
national
examination
results,
with
education
stakeholders
repeatedly
calling
for
stronger
psychosocial
support
systems
in
schools
and
communities.

Zimbabwe faces heightened floods risk

According
to
Fews
Net’s
latest
outlook,
intense
and
persistent
rainfall
is
expected
in
eastern,
northern,
and
central
parts
of
southern
Africa,
while
western
and
southern
areas
will
likely
receive
light
to
moderate
rainfall.

“Torrential
rainfall
is
likely
in
southern
Mozambique,
eastern
Zimbabwe,
eastern
South
Africa,
and
east-central
Madagascar,
increasing
the
risks
of
flooding
in
several
areas
of
the
region,”
the
report
stated.

The
agency
noted
that
consecutive
weeks
of
rainfall
have
already
worsened
ground
conditions
and
caused
flooding
in
multiple
countries,
including
Zambia,
Madagascar,
Malawi,
and
Mozambique,
and
warned
that
flooding
is
likely
to
continue
in
the
coming
weeks.

Over
the
past
week,
moderate
to
heavy
rainfall
persisted
across
northern
and
eastern
southern
Africa,
including
eastern
Zimbabwe,
southern
Mozambique,
and
parts
of
eastern
South
Africa.
South-central
Africa,
which
includes
Zimbabwe,
has
experienced
120%
to
over
200%
of
normal
rainfall
in
many
areas,
according
to
Fews
Net.

In
contrast,
western
and
southern
regions
such
as
Angola,
western
Namibia,
southwestern
South
Africa,
and
southern
Madagascar
have
recorded
below-average
rainfall,
ranging
from
1%
to
80%
of
normal
levels.

The
Department
of
Civil
Protection
earlier
reported
that
heavy
rains
during
the
2025-26
season
have
already
claimed
70
lives,
injured
51
people,
and
destroyed
more
than
1
000
homesteads
in
Zimbabwe.
Manicaland
has
been
hardest
hit,
with
510
households
affected
and
41
fatalities,
followed
by
Mashonaland
East
(192
households),
Mashonaland
Central
(130),
and
Mashonaland
West
(127),
which
reported
19
deaths.

Authorities
have
urged
communities
in
flood-prone
areas
to
remain
vigilant
and
to
follow
guidance
from
disaster
management
officials
as
the
rainy
season
continues.

ZAPU admits internal turmoil as leadership wrangles expose wider opposition fragility

Nkomo’s
remarks,
contained
in
an
internal
memo
circulated
to
senior
party
structures
on
January
15,
2026,
expose
the
long-standing
internal
cracks
that
have
plagued
ZAPU
in
recent
years.

ZAPU
is
expected
to
hold
an
elective
congress
later
this
year.

The
development
in
ZAPU,
mirrors
a
broader
pattern
of
instability
within
Zimbabwe’s
opposition
landscape,
where
leadership
disputes,
factionalism
and
court
battles
have
repeatedly
weakened
parties
struggling
to
mount
a
strong
challenge
against
the
ruling
Zanu
PF
establishment.

In
the
internal
memo
addressed
to
members
of
ZAPU’s
National
Council
of
Elders
(NCoE),
National
People’s
Council
(NPC)
and
National
Executive
Committee
(NEC),
Nkomo
warned
the
party
was
facing
sustained
attacks
“more
so
from
within
its
own
ranks
than
from
outside
interference.”

“It
is
abundantly
clear,
especially
in
the
tenure
and
life
of
the
current
ZAPU
administration,
that
the
people’s
movement
is
always
under
constant
attack,”
Nkomo
wrote,
adding
that
“ZAPU
must
not
be
allowed
to
grow,
thrive
and
prosper”
in
the
eyes
of
its
enemies
and
“their
collaborators.”

Nkomo’s
memo
comes
amid
growing
discontent
among
some
party
members
and
former
leaders
who
have
questioned
his
leadership
style,
legitimacy
and
political
strategy.

Critics
within
and
outside
the
party
have
long
argued
that
Nkomo’s
leadership
has
failed
to
mobilise
ZAPU
into
a
formidable
political
force,
while
others
have
openly
resisted
his
ascent
to
the
presidency.

Nkomo
himself
acknowledged
resistance
to
his
leadership
began
well
before
he
assumed
office,
recalling efforts
to
block
him
 from
contesting
at
the
party’s
October
2021
People’s
Congress.

He
said
the
urgent
High
Court
application
was
allegedly
left
at
the
party’s
offices
on
the
eve
of
the
congress,
an
attempt
by
disgruntled
members
to
stop
the
gathering
and
prevent
him
from
contesting
for
the
presidency.

According
to
Nkomo,
the
courts
dismissed
the
application,
allowing
congress
to
proceed,
but
legal
challenges
continued
even
after
his
election.

“The
comrades
not
having
been
satisfied
with
the
Congress
outcome
went
on
to
open
another
court
case
to
try
and
dethrone
the
newly
elected
and
sitting
President,”
he
wrote.

Nkomo
said
many
of
those
who
took
ZAPU
to
court
and
lost
later
broke
away
to form
a
rival
formation
known
as
Original
ZAPU
 (O-ZAPU),
while
warning
of
what
he
described
as
“yet
another
impending
effort”
to
chip
away
at
the
party.

At
the
centre
of
the
internal
contestation
is
a
long-standing
narrative
that
Nkomo
“inherited”
ZAPU
from
his
father,
the
late
Dr
Joshua
Mqabuko
Nkomo,
the
party’s
founding
president
and
one
of
Zimbabwe’s
foremost
liberation
icons.

That
perception,
Nkomo
conceded,
has
been
weaponised
by
his
detractors
to
question
his
legitimacy.

“Others
protested
that
I
could
not
lead
ZAPU
because
it
was
not
an
inheritance
property
bequeathed
to
me
by
my
father,”
Nkomo
wrote.

“My
short
answer
was
that
ZAPU
is
an
inheritance
for
all
of
us,
including
myself,
provided
one
is
a
true
member
in
good
standing.”

While
he
sought
to
frame
his
leadership
as
rooted
in
collective
ownership
rather
than
lineage,
the
reference
underscores
the
complex
legacy
politics
that
continue
to
shape
ZAPU’s
internal
dynamics.

ZAPU’s
identity
remains
deeply
tied
to
its
liberation
history,
often
making
leadership
transitions
emotionally
and
politically
charged.

Nkomo
also
painted
a
picture
of
a
presidency
constrained
not
by
external
repression
alone,
but
by
resistance
from
within
party
leadership.

He
said
his
efforts
had
been
“marred
and
kept
in
check
by
some
leaders,”
accusing
them
of
blocking
grassroots
mobilisation
and
even
restricting
the
use
of
his
official
portrait
on
party
materials,
allegedly
citing
an
old
NEC
resolution.

“I
stayed
in
my
lane
and
avoided
anything
that
may
be
misconstrued
as
dictatorial,
only
to
be
labelled
clueless,
docile
and
weak,”
he
wrote.

Despite
this,
Nkomo
insisted
he
retained
a
strong
mandate
from
the
party’s
membership,
saying
he
was
elected
through
a
“landslide
victory”
and
warning
that
“no
amount
of
chicanery
and
backhanded
vote-of-no-confidence
putsch
attempts”
would
change
that
reality.

Nkomo’s
remarks
reflect
a
leadership
under
pressure
to
assert
authority
while
simultaneously
appealing
for
unity,
a
factor
opposition
leaders
in
Zimbabwe
have
struggled
to
maintain.

In
recent
years,
opposition
parties
including
the
MDC
formations
and
newer
political
movements
such
as
the
Citizens
Coalition
for
Change
(CCC)
have
been
consumed
by
splits,
recalls
and
court
battles,
which
have
left
voters
confused,
angry
and
fragmented.

Nkomo
explicitly
drew
parallels
with
historical
opposition
implosions,
warning
that
failure
to
address
internal
sabotage
could
repeat
past
mistakes.

“If
we
haven’t
learnt
from
the
Zanu
split
of
1963
and
the
systematic
destruction
of
the
MDC
project,
then
we
have
learned
absolutely
nothing,”
he
cautioned.

In
the
memo,
Nkomo
concluded
he
is
“not
going
anywhere”
and
described
his
leadership
as
a
“God-given,
people-driven
and
ancestor-approved
mission”
to
bring
about
what
he
called
“final
and
total
freedom”
for
Zimbabweans.

In
an
interview
with
critical
studies
scholar,
Dr
Khanyile
Mlotshwa,
warned
that
while
Nkomo’s
rhetoric
may
resonate
with
his
loyal
supporters,
his
language
also
risks
deepening
divisions
in
a
party
already
grappling
with
trust
and
organisational
fatigue.

“The
party
faces
a
critical
test,
whether
it
can
translate
these
calls
for
unity
into
concrete
organisational
renewal,
or
whether
internal
fractures
will
continue
harming
its
political
agenda,”
he
said.

Dr
Mlotshwa
said 
ZAPU’s
struggles
underscore
a
recurring
dilemma
within
Zimbabwe’s
opposition,
which
is
“the
inability
to
manage
internal
democracy
and
succession
without
descending
into
self-destructive
conflict.”

“Zanu
PF’s
dominance
remains
entrenched
because
opposition
parties’
fail
to
get
their
act
together
and
that
weakens
meaningful
political
competition
and
participation,”
he
said.

No suburb is immune’: BCC issues urgent flood warning

In
a
detailed
advisory
released
on
Friday,
council
warned
that
floods
remain
one
of
Zimbabwe’s
most
common
and
destructive
natural
hazards,
capable
of
striking
suddenly
and
with
little
warning.

Officials
cautioned
that
even
areas
that
appear
safe
during
dry
weather,
such
as
small
streams,
gullies,
culverts,
dry
streambeds
and
low-lying
open
ground,
can
quickly
turn
deadly
once
rains
intensify.

“Be
aware
of
flood
hazards
no
matter
where
you
live,
but
especially
if
you
live
in
a
low-lying
area,
near
water
or
downstream
from
a
dam.
Even
small
streams,
gullies,
creeks,
culverts,
dry
streambeds
or
low-lying
ground
that
appear
harmless
in
dry
weather
can
flood.
Every
area
is
at
risk,”
the
council
said.

The
local
authority
urged
homeowners
and
landlords
to
rethink
how
they
prepare
their
properties
for
the
rainy
season.

“To
prepare
for
flooding,
residents
should
avoid
building
in
floodplains
unless
homes
are
properly
elevated
and
reinforced.
Furnaces,
water
heaters
and
electrical
panels
should
also
be
elevated
if
they
are
susceptible
to
flooding,”
the
council
said.

Council
also
encouraged
the
installation
of
sewer
check
valves
to
prevent
floodwater
from
backing
up
into
homes,
the
construction
of
protective
barriers
such
as
levees
or
floodwalls,
and
sealing
basement
walls
with
waterproofing
compounds
to
prevent
seepage.

In
a
practical
measure
aimed
at
reducing
structural
damage,
residents
were
advised
to
create
weepholes
around
perimeter
walls
to
allow
rainwater
to
flow
freely,
preventing
pooling
that
can
cause
durawalls
to
collapse,
a
problem
reported
in
several
suburbs
during
previous
rainy
seasons.

Flood
impacts,
council
said,
can
be
localised,
affecting
a
single
neighbourhood,
or
widespread,
impacting
entire
river
basins.

Beyond
infrastructure,
BCC
stressed
the
importance
of
preparedness.
Residents
were
urged
to
save
emergency
contact
numbers
on
their
phones,
familiarise
themselves
with
evacuation
centres
in
their
areas
and
stay
informed
through
radio
and
television
updates,
especially
during
periods
of
persistent
rainfall.

“Be
aware
that
flash
flooding
can
occur.
If
there
is
any
possibility
of
a
flash
flood,
move
immediately
to
higher
ground.
Do
not
wait
for
instructions.
Be
mindful
of
streams,
drainage
channels,
canyons
and
other
areas
known
to
flood
suddenly,”
the
council
warned.

Motorists
were
also
cautioned
against
underestimating
floodwaters.
According
to
council
guidelines,
just
150
millimetres
of
moving
water
can
knock
a
person
off
their
feet,
while
the
same
depth
can
cause
vehicles
to
lose
control
or
stall.
At
305
millimetres,
many
cars
begin
to
float,
and
610
millimetres
of
fast-moving
water
can
sweep
away
even
SUVs
and
pick-up
trucks.

“Do
not
drive
into
flooded
areas.
If
floodwaters
rise
around
your
vehicle,
abandon
it
and
move
to
higher
ground
if
it
is
safe
to
do
so.
Both
you
and
the
car
can
be
quickly
swept
away,”
BCC
said.

For
households
that
may
need
to
evacuate,
residents
were
advised
to
secure
their
homes,
move
essential
items
to
upper
floors,
bring
in
outdoor
furniture
and
switch
off
utilities
if
instructed.
Electrical
appliances
should
never
be
touched
when
wet
or
when
standing
in
water.

“If
advised
to
evacuate,
do
so
immediately.
Close
all
windows,
lock
doors
and
proceed
to
designated
safe
areas
where
Fire
and
Emergency
Services
and
other
support
agencies
will
provide
assistance,”
the
council
said.

The
warning
did
not
end
when
floodwaters
recede.
Residents
were
urged
to
remain
cautious,
as
receding
water
can
conceal
weakened
roads,
unstable
foundations
and
serious
health
risks.
Floodwater
may
also
be
contaminated
with
sewage,
fuel
or
chemicals,
or
be
electrically
charged
due
to
damaged
power
lines.

“Avoid
floodwaters
as
they
may
be
contaminated
by
oil,
fuel
or
raw
sewage.
Stay
away
from
downed
power
lines
and
report
them
to
authorities.
Return
home
only
when
officials
confirm
it
is
safe,”
council
said.

Special
attention
was
also
drawn
to
children’s
safety
during
the
rainy
season.
Parents
and
guardians
were
urged
to
escort
children
to
and
from
school
and
discourage
them
from
playing
or
swimming
in
stagnant
or
fast-moving
water.

“Children
should
be
warned
against
swimming
in
pools
of
water,
as
muddy
conditions
increase
the
risk
of
drowning,”
the
council
said.

From
a
public
health
perspective,
residents
were
advised
to
wash
hands
frequently
with
soap
and
clean
water,
discard
food
contaminated
by
floodwater,
drink
safe
water,
eat
well
and
get
enough
rest.
They
were
also
urged
to
stay
tuned
to
official
updates
on
whether
community
water
supplies
are
safe
for
consumption.

Mine guard shoots two over alleged trespassing

Abedinico
Dube,
a
resident
of
Village
1
under
Chief
Sigola
in
the
Godlwayo
resettlement
area,
was
on
duty
at
McLaren
Mine
when
the
incident
occurred
on
January
11,
2026.

According
to
reports,
Dube
discovered
Thabani
Nyoni,
36,
and
Alvin
Ncube,
33,
near
a
mine
shaft
at
approximately
5:00
PM.
While
Dube
reportedly
suspected
the
duo
of
trespassing,
sources
close
to
the
victims
claim
the
encounter
was
accidental.

Nyoni
and
Ncube,
who
are
colleagues
at
the
nearby
Noma
B
Mine,
were
reportedly
walking
together
when
Ncube
stopped
to
relieve
himself
in
the
bushes
near
the
McLaren
Mine
entrance.
Dube
allegedly
opened
fire
on
the
two
men
during
this
encounter.

The
victims
sustained
multiple
gunshot
wounds.
Nyoni
was
struck
in
the
chest,
hands,
and
stomach,
while
Ncube
suffered
extensive
injuries
to
his
head,
thighs,
hands,
chest,
and
calf.
Both
men
were
transported
to
the
hospital
by
the
owner
of
the
mine
and
remain
in
serious
condition
at
Filabusi
District
Hospital.

Police
have
since
recovered
the
shotgun
used
in
the
shooting
and
are
currently
holding
Dube
in
custody.

Matabeleland
South
Police
deputy
spokesperson,
Assistant
Inspector
Stanford
Mguni,
confirmed
the
incident
and
the
subsequent
arrest.

“Investigations
are
ongoing
and
the
two
victims
are
in
serious
condition.
The
accused
is
currently
assisting
police
with
investigations,”
Assistant
Inspector
Mguni
said.