Showing posts with label Tete. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tete. Show all posts

Tete: More boreholes and Water systems construction gains momentum

Published from Blogger Prime Android AppThe ongoing construction and rehabilitation of more boreholes and other water supply systems will see at least one hundred and eight thousand people have access to clean drinking water this year in Tete province's communities in almost all districts of Tete province.Concurrently, the rehabilitation of one hundred and thirty-five damaged water holes in the various communities is underway.

The govt and partners are investing just over one hundred and nine million meticais, according to Carlos Cabo ,the head of the Water and Sanitation department at the provincial Directorate of Public Works in Tete 

Cabo also asserted that construction work on seven water supply systems is being completed in six districts of this part of the nation.

This new addition the number of water sources sees the coverage rate in Tete province go from 52, 96 percent, to 56 percent. 

Lake Cahora -Bassa:Fishermen denounce smuggling of kapenta

The Cahora-Bassa reservoir is the location of a network of theft and smuggling, according to kapenta fish producers in Tete's Mágoé area.

The accusation was made during the meeting with Henrique Bongece, Deputy Minister of the Sea, Inland Waters, and Fisheries.

Ditos Gabriel, president of the Kapenta Fishermen's Association, spoke on behalf of the producers, saying that they are concerned about the situation since it jeopardizes the work they do.

The Deputy Minister of the Sea, Inland Waters, and Fisheries urged all parties(Including the fisheries' security guard and the relevant governmental authorities) to conduct more thorough inspections.

"Do you hear me when I say that we would penalize or arrest anyone found stealing kapenta fish? This issue shouldn't be brought up again", he said. (RM)

Tete: Member of Notorious Poaching Gang nabbed.

This Friday, the National Criminal Investigation Service (SERNIC) in Tete detained a national in possession of eight ivory tusks that were the product of the slaughter of four elephants in the Mgoè district.

In the administrative post of Mukumbura, close to the border with the Republic of Zimbabwe, the poacher in question got caught up in the police net while attempting to sell his trophies.

A complaint to the National Administration of Conservation Areas led to the citizen's imprisonment.

The ivory tusks, according to a SERNIC representative in Tete, weighted ninety-four kilograms and were being sold for 3,000 meticais each.

The person detained, according to Celina Roque, is a member of a gang of criminals who were committed to poaching in the Mágoè.

Tete city:72 Teachers lost their lives .

In the province of Tete this year, 72 teachers perished due to various illnesses, including automobile accidents.

The information was provided by the Provincial Secretary of the National Organization of Teachers (ONP) in Tete, who highlighted tuberculosis as the disease that claims the most lives in the area.

Ribelo Gimo lamented the provincial health units' lack of gratitude for the Teacher's Medical and Medication Assistance Card.

Gimo acknowledges the government's efforts to strengthen the education and learning process in the province despite this constraint, which prolongs the procedure for providing funeral assistance. (RM)

Sofala. More than 500 families evacuated from Caia due to threat of flooding

As  a consequence of discharges  of  Lake Cahora Bassa  on the Zambezi river in Tete Province, more than five hundred riverine familes in the district of Caia, in Sofala,  have been evacuated due to the threat of flooding.

 Residents voluntarily left the flood prone areas on advice from the local authorities.

Peasants cultivatin the banks of the Zambezi river's small islands, which are always affected by the waters are
among the evacuees.

According to the administrator of Caia, Nobre dos Santos, the district is on red alert and everything is being done to  prevent the loss of human lives.

Source: Rádio Moçambique 

Tete: Head of operations of the National Inspectorate of Economic Activities arrested for corruption

According to a source from the Anti-Corruption the he accused was involved in the illicit collection of monetary values from an economic agent in Tete.

Forty illegal immigrants held in Tete








Immigration authorities in Tete province hold forty foreigners for illegal immigration.

 Sixteen Bengali and Pakistani nationalities, stopped in a truck transporting coal, at the checkpoint Cruzamento 18, on the outskirts of Tete city,on national road number seven (EN7).

The other group of twenty-four Malawian citizens was neutralized this Friday, at the residence of a national citizen in the Mpaduè neighborhood, in the city of Tete.

The spokeswoman for the provincial Migration Directorate of Tete, Amélia Direito, classifies the situation as worrying.

In connection with the cases, two nationals are detained for the crime of facilitating illegal immigration: a driver  and a citizen, who would have welcomed the group of twenty-four Malawians at her residence.

PRM spokesman Feliciano da Câmara encourages the population to denounce to the authorities, taking into account the situation of terrorism in the country. (RM)

Tete: Road accident claims a dozen lives .

   
  Photo/Miramar

At least 11 people were killed and another 17 injured following a car accident that took place in the Tsangano district, Mozambique’s western province of Tete, Thursday, the country’s national radio station Radio Mozambique reported.

According to the report, the accident involved a cargo truck carrying both goods {potatoes] and passengers, which skidded and rolled over on a downhill road.

“The truck had mechanical difficulties and the driver could not control the truck,” the report quoted the district police commander in Tsangano, Carlos Cabeca, as saying.

The report did not mention whether the driver has survived the accident.

The truck was believed to be heading to an agricultural fair and the injured people were taken to the local hospital, said the report.

COVID: 48 Cases in A Week


Mozambique: Only 48 new Covid-19 cases in a week
File photo: MISAU

The Mozambican health authorities reported on Tuesday a further seven new cases of the Covid-19 respiratory disease.

This brings the number of new cases diagnosed in the past week in the entire country to just 48.

According to a Tuesday press release from the Ministry of Health, that day’s new cases were four men and three women, all Mozambican citizens. They ranged in age from five to 61. There were two cases from Maputo city, two from Gaza, two from Sofala and one from Zambezia.

Since the start of the pandemic, 1,382,966 people have been tested in Mozambique for the coronavirus that causes Covid-19, 597 of them in the previous 24 hours. 590 of these tests yielded negative results, and the seven who tested positive raised the total number of positive cases diagnosed in Mozambique to 230,076.

Two Covid-19 patients were discharged from hospital on Tuesday, one in Maputo city and one in Niassa and four new cases were admitted, three in Niassa and one in Maputo. 

The number of patients undergoing medical care in the Covid-19 wards rose from eight on Monday to ten on Tuesday. Only one of these patients is still in intensive care, receiving supplementary oxygen.

The Ministry reported no deaths from Covid-19 on Tuesday, and so the death toll in Mozambique from the disease remains 2,220.

No recoveries from the disease were reported either, and thus the total number of recoveries remains 227,709, which is 98.97 per cent of all Covid-19 cases ever diagnosed in Mozambique.

The number of active cases of Covid-19 rose from 136 on Monday to 143 on Tuesday. The geographical breakdown of the active cases was as follows: Niassa, 32; Maputo city, 28; Zambezia, 20; Tete, 19; Sofala, 18; Gaza, seven; Nampula, six; Cabo Delgado, five; Manica, four; Maputo province, three; and Inhambane, one.

The Ministry press release also reported that a further 2,265 people were vaccinated against Covid-19 on Tuesday. The total number fully vaccinated against the disease now stands at 14,681, 342, which is 96.5 per cent of all citizens aged 18 and above.

Source: AIM

Mozambique Food Security Outlook Update, August 2022


Mozambique Food Security Outlook Update, August 2022

FEWS NET: Mozambique Food Security Outlook Update August 2022: Food assistance needs remain high and are likely to increase during the upcoming lean season, 2022

Food assistance needs remain high and are likely to increase during the upcoming lean season

Key messages 

Most households across Mozambique are facing Minimal (IPC Phase 1) outcomes supported by adequate access to income and food.

 However, in drought affected areas in southern Mozambique, flood- and tropical storm-impacted areas in Nampula, and conflict-affected areas of Cabo Delgado, Crisis (IPC Phase 3) outcomes persist as poor households have limited access to income for food purchases and are engaging in consumption and livelihood-based coping strategies to minimize food consumption gaps. 
In Cabo Delgado, Stressed! (IPC Phase 2!) outcomes are present in areas where humanitarian partners have access to IDPs and host communities, and where food distribution is consistent.

 From October 2022 to January 2023, an increasing number of households will likely face Crisis (IPC Phase 3) outcomes as the typical lean season sets in.

In June and July 2022, Food Security Cluster partners provided humanitarian food assistance to over 600,600 people in northern Mozambique. 

However, WFP plans to assist 944,480 people with humanitarian food assistance in northern Mozambique in the August/September cycle. 

To ensure the most vulnerable people in northern Mozambique are reached despite limited resources, WFP is conducting a vulnerability-based targeting exercise to prioritize assistance according to vulnerability status instead of displacement. 

To build livelihoods in Cabo Delgado, WFP is planning to provide 160,000 people with livelihood interventions (agricultural kits) for the 2022/2023 main planting season in five districts.

The annual inflation rate increased from 10.8 percent in June 2022 to 11.8 percent In July, the highest inflation rate since August 2017. 

The continual rise in inflation is coming from the increased costs of transportation and food and non-alcoholic beverages, which are around 19 and 17 percent higher than last year, respectively. 

More  specifically, the National Institute of Statistics (INE) highlights price increases in petrol, diesel, bottled butane gas, tomatoes, and wheat as contributing the most to the increase in the monthly inflation rate. The rise in prices is reducing household purchasing power, particularly very poor and poor households.
 
From June to July 2022, maize grain prices increased by 10-22 percent in some monitored markets and doubled in Mutarara market. 

The sharp increase is likely related to low local supply and increased demand by regional traders. Elsewhere, maize grain prices were relatively stable, except for a 17 percent decline in Manica market likely due to local supply dynamics. Compared to last year and the five-year average, there is a lot of price volatility for maize grain prices in July 2022 compared to prices in July 2021, likely driven by local supply and demand dynamics.

 These price variations among the different markets impact households’ access to foods and level of purchasing power, particularly in areas of greater price volatility.

Source: FEWS NET

Cacti plant

                        

CACTI  SOON AFTER THE FIRST RAINS,SONGO,CAHORA BASSA,TETE MOZAMBIQUE.