Journalist Georgina Godwin speaks on the credibility of Zimbabwe elections
By CNBC Africa
04 August 2018 |
7:21 am
Broadcaster and journalist Georgina Godwin joins CNBC Africa to unpack the results of the just ended Zimbabwe elections. It is a result that was disputed by the opposition MDC Alliance.
In this article
Related
4 Aug 2018
Broadcaster and journalist Georgina Godwin joins CNBC Africa to unpack the results of the just ended Zimbabwe elections. It is a result that was disputed by the opposition MDC Alliance.
Latest
19 mins ago
Guardian Nigeria's Political Editor, Muyiwa Adeyemi speaks to GuardianTV on the aftermath of the Ekiti 2022 guber election.
36 mins ago
Ivorian cashew processors face an uphill battle. Its bid to expand into processing faces competition from Asia. Also Mali's sanctioned but Senegal loses out. The economic interdependence between the nighbours has left Senegalese traders struggling to cope with the knock on effects of penalties imposed on Bamako. And Amidst Months of sometimes deadly protests against an army take over, young Sudanese have been finding respite from the in Khartoum's vibrant cultural scene.
44 mins ago
During Pride Month, the LGBTQ community marches to defend its rights around the world. Our reporters went to meet some members of its older generation in France and Spain. Older gay, lesbian and trangender people often feel invisible within their wider communities and the majority of them suffer from loneliness after family rifts and years of discrimination. But thanks to the work of younger activists and organisations, LGBTQ seniors are gradually emerging from the margins.
45 mins ago
German pharmaceutical company BioNTech has begun construction of an COVID-19 vaccine plant in Rwanda. When completed, it will be the first mRNA vaccine plant in Africa.
1 hour ago
Germany is looking to lower gas demand to ward off long-term shortages as Russia throttles the gas flow. Gas prices for consumers could rise even more as a consequence.
1 hour ago
A traditional mask was recently given by Belgium to DR Congo as part of efforts to advance the return of cultural artefacts taken during the colonial era. False claims have circulated online stating that the returned mask was not the original but a copy. We take a closer look in this edition of Truth or Fake.