News

Pictures by Digital Globe, Inc. (2006) Amnesty International has released images showing the destruction caused in Zimbabwe by the government's policy of house demolitions in 2005. The satellite ...
By MacDonald Dzirutwe HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe turned 91-years-old on Saturday showing no sign of giving up power as the West slowly eases pressure on a man who has ...
The sale briefly opened ivory trade between China and Japan and four African nations (in dash outlines) -- clockwise from left, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe and South Africa.
A picture of a crocodile swimming through the mud at the Mana Pools National Park in Zimbabwe has been selected as the grand prize winner of the 2022 World Nature Photography Awards (WNPA), which ...
For the first time in cricket history, Zimbabwe’s women’s national team has touched down on American soil for a multi-format bilateral series, a milestone moment both for the Lady Chevrons and ...
Object Details Description (Brief) One (1) 100,000,000,000,000 dollar note Zimbabwe, 2008 Obverse Image: The Chiremba Balancing Rocks in Epworth, Harare. The rocks were used as a metaphorical theme to ...
12-10-2009 Blood Diamonds: Images from Zimbabwe’s Violent Marange Fields What is the cost of the illicit sale of untold millions of dollars’ worth of diamonds being smuggled out of Zimbabwe?
Google Maps' Street View offers detailed views of some of the most beautiful landscapes in Zimbabwe -- and it's all thanks to one man.
Hundreds of elephants have died in Zimbabwe in recent weeks due to a lack of food and water, as a severe drought dries up crops and water sources.
Zimbabwe continues to suffer from an image problem which is seriously threatening the ability of companies to secure imported items. Export customers are also generally sceptical about the ability ...
HARARE, Feb. 7 (Xinhua) -- The Zimbabwean government refurbished chanceries and embassy buildings in seven countries last year as part of its program to improve the country's image abroad.
Some watchers fear that Zimbabwe could become like Cote d'Ivoire, where an incumbent president clung to power for many months after his election defeat, plunging his country into civil conflict.