ZANU PF UK

ZANU PF UK

Share

ZANU PF U.K is the progressive chapter of the Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front headquartered in Zimbabwe.

As the officially sanctioned and therefore sole legitimate representation of the party in the United Kingdom,we hold firm the belief that the establishment of party structures in the United Kingdom will help to ensure that that there will not be a lost generation of Zimbabweans who are lost to both the history of their country as well as the ethos of the armed struggle.

03/06/2026

Zimbabwe has secured a non-permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) following elections held today. The development marks a major diplomatic milestone and reflects the country’s growing engagement on the international stage.

Clip in the comment section.

Photos from ZANU PF UK's post 03/06/2026

ZANU PF yatiiii, zviverengerei...

03/06/2026

Urimo here musero? Huya upinde musero rako reZANU PF

01/06/2026
Celebrating women farmers . . . Empowering dairy communities, nourishing the nation 01/06/2026

> *ZANU PF PATRIOTS NEWS BULLETIN*

*Celebrating women farmers . . . Empowering dairy communities, nourishing the nation – herald*
https://share.google/YfHGT0OLg2gTRGz3W

EACH year, World Milk Day presents an opportunity to recognise the vital role milk plays in nutrition, livelihoods and economic development.

This year’s theme, “Celebrating Women Farmers,” is particularly significant to Dairibord Zimbabwe (Pvt) Limited, as they honour the women whose resilience, dedication and entrepreneurial spirit continue to strengthen Zimbabwe’s dairy sector and contribute meaningfully to national food security.

ADVERTISEMENT
Aritifical Inteligence usesAritifical Inteligence uses
Women are increasingly becoming the backbone of agricultural production in many communities and dairy farming is no exception.

Across Zimbabwe, women dairy farmers, both commercial and small- scale, are playing a transformative role in sustaining household incomes, improving nutrition and strengthening rural economies.

Dairibord recognises that empowering women within the dairy value chain is not only the right thing to do but a strategic imperative for building a more inclusive, resilient and sustainable industry.

As Zimbabwe’s leading dairy processor, Dairibord remains deeply committed to supporting farmers through partnerships that improve productivity, strengthen livelihoods, and expand growth opportunities.

Through their milk procurement ecosystem, they continue to work closely with dairy farmers, many of whom are women, to enhance access to stable markets, technical support, and sustainable farming practices.

Their support extends across both commercial and smallholder dairy farmers, with deliberate efforts to strengthen the participation of women in dairy production.

The company prides itself on being a processor that actively supports small-scale dairy producers, with over 530 farmers in the network, 40 percent of whom are women.

Through partnerships with 13 milk collection centres across the country, Dairibord’s Milk Supply Development Unit offers extension support programmes.

Its key pillars of support include veterinary services, feed formulation, herd growth through artificial insemination and pregnancy diagnosis and sustainable agriculture and alternative energies.

Women farmers are increasingly equipped with knowledge and resources to improve herd management, milk quality, animal nutrition and productivity.

By creating dependable off-take arrangements and consistent market access, Dairibord helps to provide income certainty, an important enabler for women-led households and farming enterprises.

“For many women in rural communities, dairy farming is more than a source of income; it is a pathway to economic empowerment,” said Dairibord group chief executive, Ms Mercy Ndoro. “Income generated through milk production supports children’s education, household nutrition, healthcare and broader community well-being,” she added.

Through their value chain interventions, Dairibord continues to contribute to strengthening livelihoods and creating sustainable economic participation for women.

The milk processor actively engages in strategic value-chain partnerships. A collaborative initiative with Farmfriends Netherlands is aimed at empowering smallholder dairy producers where farmers are capacitated through the distribution ofin-calf heifers.

Furthermore, this partnership has deployed targeted capital infrastructure by installing one-hectare irrigation systems for 10 selected small-scale dairy farmers, directly enhancing fodder security and localised yield productivity.

A partnership with Mobility for Africa to tackle the crucial “last mile” challenge of milk transportation is also in place. This partnership provides battery-operated tricycles, capable of carrying a 400-kilogramme payload.

These electric tricycles are vital for efficiently moving milk to either Dairibord’s processing factory or designated milk collection centres.

What’s more, they are solar-charged, promoting a sustainable and accessible solution for dairy communities. Downstream, the group supports over 800 independent vendors, 40 percent also being female.

By prioritising women and youth- led models and leveraging strategic partnerships, Dairibord has successfully expanded small-scale enterprise opportunities and deepened market pe*******on.

The company’s marketing services executive, Ms Ruyarashe Matambo, outlined how Dairibord’s efforts in dairy farming are closely aligned with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

“We are particularly aligned to SDG 5:Gender Equality, by supporting women’s economic participation and empowerment within agriculture; SDG 2: Zero Hunger, through strengthening milk production and improving nutritional access; SDG 1: No Poverty, by supporting sustainable livelihoods and income generation; and SDG 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth, through inclusive participation in agricultural value chains and rural economic development.

“In addition, Dairibord’s continued investment in local milk production contributes to SDG12: Responsible Consumption and Production, promoting sustainable sourcing and supporting domestic agricultural resilience.”

According to statistics from the Dairy Services Unit, Zimbabwe’s raw milk production surged to a 23-year high in 2025, primarily driven by aggressive recapitalisation and strategic herd management from both the Government and the private sector.

Commercial production reached 121.8 million litres, marking a 6.2 percent increase from 114.7 million litres in 2024.

“As we commemorate World Milk Day, we celebrate the women farmers whose hard work sustains our dairy ecosystem and nourishes communities across Zimbabwe.

Their contribution extends far beyond milk production; they are entrepreneurs, providers, caregivers, and changemakers driving progress within our agricultural sector,” Mrs Ndoro concluded.

Celebrating women farmers . . . Empowering dairy communities, nourishing the nation EACH year, World Milk Day presents an opportunity to recognise the vital role milk plays in nutrition, livelihoods and economic development. This year’s theme, “Celebrating Women Farmers,” is particularly significant to Dairibord Zimbabwe (Pvt) Limited, as they honour the women whose resilienc...

25/05/2026

_*VERBATIM TRANSCRIPT OF SPEECH BY ZANU PF DEPUTY SECRETARY FOR SECURITY IN THE POLITBURO CDE TENDAI CHIRAU*_

Thank you very much.

I want to appreciate the organizers of this esteemed event and I appreciate you.

I want to start by actually celebrating that today is the 25th of May and the 25th of May we celebrate Africa Day.
Africa Day is a day of congrats. When uhmm,uh founded the African Union back in 1963 to celebrate the issues of economic liberation and it also resulted in ensuring that other countries which were yet to be liberated were liberated.

So, allow me to say happy Africa Day, viva Africa, viva.

I come before you today as a son of Africa, a continent that is known for the bitter taste of terrorism and operations for centuries long before these terms became part of global vocabulary.

From the horrors of the transatlantic slave trade to the scars of colonial occupation, Africa has been a battleground for forces that seek to dominate rather than cooperate.

Let us remember that during the slave trade our oldest and most brilliant minds were simply migrated, they were torn from their families, chained and shipped across oceans against their will.
That was the first great wave of international terrorism against our people. That wound is never fully healed.

Take my own homeland Zimbabwe, my country was a victim of colonialism.
Our people's most basic rights to own land, to govern themselves, to speak their own truth were directly taken away. Our land was dispossessed; our dignity was crushed and yet from that crushing weight our people found the courage to rise.
It took the bravery of the sons and daughters of Zimbabwe to launch a liberation struggle that would eventually dismantle colonialism.

But we did not fight alone. We learned from our African brothers, from Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique and others who provided military arsenals and training bases.

And we must never forget the progressive forces beyond our continent. The then USSR, China, Romania, just to name a few who gave us ideological grounding and the material means to fight.

That solidarity was not shared. It was a shared recognition that terrorism in a way threatens justice everywhere.
As Vladimir Lenin rightly taught us, he who is not a revolutionary cannot understand the revolutionary struggle. Our liberation fighters understood that truth in their bones and Lenin also reminded that imperialism is the highest stage of capitalism. A stage that produces aggression and what we now call international terrorism.

After independence our cooperation with these progressive nations continued in all spheres of life, not only political but also economic and social.

However, we soon discovered that defeating classical colonialism did not end our struggle. We now face a new form of terror, neocolonialism and illegal regime change.
And make no mistake, neocolonialism is another face of international terrorism.

How this terrorism showed itself in Zimbabwe? It came in form of unjustified illegal sanctions, illegal regime change and also the issue of unjustified illegal sanctions imposed by the United States and the collective West.

Why? Because Zimbabwe dared to redistribute land to its own people. Land that had been stolen from them during colonial times. That act of injustice was met with collective punishment.
We deeply appreciate the progressive world, especially Russia and China, for repeatedly vetoing those sanctions against the United Nations. That principle still gives us hope, yet the sanctions remain upon us even today.
We have survived sanctions for over two decades.

But here is what I want this esteemed greeting to understand. Despite these sanctions, Zimbabwe is charting its own economic path. And this is being spearheaded by our revolutionary and esteemed and sagacious leader, His Excellency President Emerson Mnangagwa, whose powerful mantra, a nation is built by its own, has become a mobilising force for our people.

This, dear friends and colleagues, is my key recommendation to this gathering.

Instead of crying, victim, endlessly, instead of waiting for others to save us, we must act. We must be our own liberators in the fight against international terrorism and aggression. Victimhood paralyses agency and agency liberates.

Karl Marx wrote in the Communist Manifesto, The workers have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win.
Let us adopt that to our own struggle. The oppressed nations have nothing to lose but their sanctions and their imposed poverty. We have our dignity and our sovereignty to win.

Finally, let us return to a lesson from the colonial era. The pragmatic cooperation among progressive forces, Africans, Russians, Chinese, Romanians and others, make our liberation possible.

Today, we need that same spirit of practical principle and alliance, not empty rhetoric, not symbolic gestures, but real cooperation in military, economic development and diplomatic defence to defeat terrorists and their powers and the aggressors of our time.

Let us build, not build. Let us act, not lament. And let us remember, a nation built by its own people is a nation that can never be colonised again.
Closing

Thank you.
Hail to Africa Day once more.

Thank you.

> Truncated for WhatsApp by ZANU PF PATRIOTS

25/05/2026

Politics
*The Whistle at the Lion’s Den: My Day at the State House of Zimbabwe*

Byzimbaadmin
May 25, 2026 State House of Zimbabwe, Whistle at the Lion’s Den, News,

By Dr. Masimba Mavaza

My heart thundered like war drums in my chest, each beat echoing through the silence of the empty room.

I felt as though life and death stood shoulder to shoulder before me.

It was sickening and exhilarating, terrifying and triumphant all at once.

My hands burned red with suppressed fear, trembling as if they carried the weight of a nation’s betrayal.

My lips, sealed by anxiety, refused to part.

This was no ordinary day.

This was a day at the State House—the citadel of power.

On this day, I was to speak to the President himself about the thieves who masqueraded as lawmakers in Parliament.

It was a day of snitching, yes, but also a day of honor.

I was about to lay bare corruption at its highest peak, right from the holy seat of authority.a0

To blow the whistle in our land is to walk a lonely road.

Many who have dared have tasted exile.

To unmask tax dodgers, sexual predators, and corrupt officials is to stand alone against giants.

It is daunting, unnerving, and often thankless work.

Yet it is the kind of work that changes the world, and can resurrect a nation.

Patriotism is costly.

It demands time, sacrifice, and courage.

It invites legal threats, personal abuse, and the venom of those who will drag your name through the mud so that when truth speaks, no one listens.

They shred your image so that your story bleeds credibility.

As I waited to enter the President’s presence, I reminded myself: I was the last line of defense.

When Parliament falters, when government turns blind, when the justice system cowers, it falls to the citizen to hold the fortress to account.

I knew the President stood apart from the institutions.

He was not bound by their alliances, not caged by their compromises.

He could question them relentlessly, for he belonged to the people, not to the cabal.

My purpose was singular: to expose wrongdoing and to drag those cloaked in power into the light of accountability.

Especially when the police, those sworn to investigate, had grown timid or complicit. The road was lonely.

I walked it alone, aware that the problem was vast, that the rot ran deep. At times I wondered if I was barking at shadows.

But I pressed on.

To stand before Mugabe with an accusation required precision. One wrong date, one misplaced fact, and the truth would be dismissed as gossip.

This was a detective’s work—piecing together fragments of a shattered jigsaw, fitting them without anger, without embellishment, so that the picture stood unassailable.

I dared not write it down.

Paper could fall into the wrong hands, and truth is too precious to be left at the mercy of betrayal.

The process was one of scarcity and uncertainty, of sleepless nights and self-questioning.

It demanded stamina, forensic attention to detail, an open mind, and a healthy scorn for authority when authority became corrupt.

It demanded a bloody-minded refusal to bow, and hours of mind-numbing homework in the archives of wrongdoing.

*As I waited, I knew I was making life difficult for men and institutions drunk on money and power. The adversaries I was about to name had resources, secrecy, and guns. When their veils are lifted, they do not surrender quietly.*

What kept me upright was this truth: sometimes, exposing the powerful shames them into change, or at least forces them to reckon with the cost of their infamy.

Change comes when the people are shocked, when secrets are torn open and the public can no longer pretend not to see.

If the President heard it, action would follow—real, decisive action.

I rehearsed my words again and again, imagining the meeting I had pursued for over a year collapsing in disaster, with history blaming me.

Yet there I was, mere feet from the man who had dominated African politics for decades.

This was Robert Mugabe—the icon, the revolutionary soldier who fought in the bush, who endured years in prison, who broke the chains of white-minority rule.

The man who returned land to its rightful sons and daughters, who looked the West in the eye at the United Nations and declared: Africa will no longer be pushed around.

Black dignity is non-negotiable.

He was revered by black leaders and black people across the globe. A man who spoke plainly, who confronted power regardless of title or office.

I was petrified, yet proud. To stand before such a living legend was both terror and fortune.

When my name was called, my feet dragged as though the floor wished to swallow me. Yet I entered.

The President sat at his desk, immaculate as always, his presence calm yet commanding.

The man in the office was different from the caricature painted in hostile newspapers.

Here was a human being—fatherly, learned, capable of discussing any subject with authority and depth.

As I began, he listened without interruption for a full hour. When I finished, his questions came—sharp, precise, betraying a memory that needed no notes.

That was Mugabe.

When he rose to greet me, I saw the man behind the legend: small in stature, immaculate in dress, his moustache and hair perfect, his skin smooth and shining with dignity.

He cared not for vanity, but for substance.

In that moment, I felt the weight of history and the honor of speaking truth to it.

This story and more can be found in DR Mavaza’s book “The Scars Of Allegiance” drop a message in the comment box for your copy.

Want your business to be the top-listed Government Service in London?

Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Location

Telephone

Website

Address

London

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm