
Zimbabwe's tobacco sales have reached US$74 million, driven by a significant increase in deliveries. This surge in sales comes amidst various other economic and social developments in the country, including the government granting lithium export quotas to Chinese firms after a ban, and Japan pledging US$2 million for food security and health systems. Meanwhile, the Harare mayor defends the rollout of prepaid water meters, and a healthcare shake-up threatens 10,000 jobs. Afreximbank has chosen St Kitts and Nevis for ACTIF2026, which aims to identify priority projects and accelerate shared economic development. The police force in Zimbabwe is reportedly stretched, and political tensions at grasslands plots have led to violent attacks and forced evictions. Additionally, a suspected Singaporean fraudster's assets have been frozen in Zimbabwe, and Afreximbank's US$11 billion investment in South Africa signals a new trade order.
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This summary was AI-generated from a story originally published by NewsDay Zimbabwe.

The Karo Platinum Project is progressing as planned, with the group actively clearing the open-pit area and advancing crucial infrastructure works. These efforts are aimed at mitigating execution and operational risks, thereby ensuring the project remains on schedule for its anticipated production start in 2027.
Must ReadThe 2026 conflict involving the United States, Israel, and Iran has revealed that hosting American military bases in Gulf nations like Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait no longer guarantees national security. Instead, these bases have made host countries prime targets for retaliatory strikes, challenging the long-held belief that a US military presence deters regional threats. During the conflict, Iran targeted infrastructure within Gulf states housing US troops, including radar installations, personnel sites, data centers, energy facilities, and desalination plants, rather than directly attacking the US homeland. This created an asymmetric security dilemma where Gulf populations bore the consequences of US policies. The conflict also led to significant economic disruption, with multinational corporations withdrawing from the Middle East, projected GDP losses of $120 billion to $194 billion for Gulf states, and a 27% drop in international tourist arrivals. The redeployment of US THAAD and Patriot anti-missile systems from Gulf states to Israel further exposed the conditional nature of US alliance commitments, leaving Gulf airspace vulnerable. The article suggests that Israel's asymmetric influence on US Middle East policy prioritizes Israeli security interests, often at the expense of Gulf states. A comparison of security strategies shows that Kuwait, with full alignment to the US, suffered extensive damage, while the UAE, balancing it