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US$30m Lost to Mobile Fraud as Zimbabwe Fights Back with AI

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CT Minister Hon. T. Mavetera addresses the 2026 Cyber Fraud and AI Summit at Montclair Resort in Nyanga on Wednesday , declaring a new digital battlefield as Zimbabwe launches the AI Cyber Shield to combat rising mobile money fraud.

The government has declared a new digital battlefield on Zimbabwean soil, warning that the nation is losing more than thirty million United States dollars annually to artificial intelligence-powered mobile money fraud as criminals arm themselves with deepfake voices, cloned identities, and adaptive malware against the country’s rapidly expanding digital economy.

 

Addressing the 2026 Cyber Fraud and AI Summit at Montclair Resort in Nyanga on Wednesday, the Minister of Information Communication Technology, Postal and Courier Services, Honourable Tatenda Mavetera, told an audience of senior government officials, banking executives, mobile network operators, and technology leaders that traditional fraud defences had become obsolete.

POTRAZ Director General Dr G. K. Machengete confers with ICT Minister Hon. T. Mavetera during the 2026 Cyber Fraud and AI Summit at Montclair Resort in Nyanga on Tuesday.

“You cannot fight an intelligent machine with a manual rulebook,” the Minister said. “You must fight AI with AI.”

 

The summit, held under the theme “AI vs AI – The New Battlefield for Cyber Fraud,” heard that mobile money fraud alone now exceeds thirty million United States dollars per year, with phishing and social engineering attacks surging by more than forty percent in recent years.

 

According to ministry figures presented to the gathering, cyber fraud nationally now costs millions of dollars annually, figures that the Minister described as representing not abstract statistics but real threats to livelihoods, national confidence, and economic stability.

 

Globally, cybercrime is projected to cost over ten trillion United States dollars annually, with Africa losing more than four billion dollars each year.

 

Minister Mavetera declared that within the next twelve months, the government would launch the Zimbabwe AI Cyber Shield, a national programme that will deploy a centralised artificial intelligence-driven fraud detection platform for the financial services and telecommunications sectors.

 

The programme will also train ten thousand Zimbabwean cybersecurity professionals in artificial intelligence defence techniques and establish a legal framework for the ethical use of artificial intelligence in cyber defence.

 

The Minister revealed that the National Cybersecurity Strategy had been finalised and was awaiting Cabinet approval, while the National Security Operations Centre was now eighty-five percent complete and would serve as the nation’s nerve centre for real-time threat detection, leveraging artificial intelligence to counter artificial intelligence-driven attacks.

 

Turning to legislative action, Minister Mavetera instructed his ministry to propose amendments to the Cyber and Data Protection Act, Chapter twelve of seven, to specifically criminalise the creation or distribution of artificial intelligence tools designed for fraud, including deepfake generators, voice cloning software for impersonation, and artificial intelligence-powered password crackers.

 

The amendments would also criminalise the use of artificial intelligence to generate synthetic identities for financial crime.

 

“We will not allow Zimbabwe to become a safe haven for AI cybercriminals,” the Minister warned.

The Minister announced the establishment of a Joint Artificial Intelligence Cyber Defence Unit under a public-private partnership, which would co-locate the national Computer Emergency Response Team with artificial intelligence laboratories from industry and academia.

 

He said the unit would operate twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, sharing real-time threat intelligence on artificial intelligence-generated fraud patterns.

 

“In the war of AI vs AI, speed is the ultimate weapon,” Mavetera said.

 

“The first AI to detect a threat wins. The second AI – the defender – must be faster.”

Addressing financial institutions and telecommunications companies directly, Minister Mavetera ordered banks, mobile network operators including Econet, NetOne, and Telecel, and payment platforms such as EcoCash and OneMoney to invest in adversarial artificial intelligence systems capable of anticipating and countering fraudster artificial intelligence in real time.

 

She directed them to deploy behavioural biometrics, including analysis of how a user types, swipes, or holds their phone, as an additional layer of artificial intelligence-powered authentication.

 

Minister Mavetera,  also ordered them to share anonymised fraud data with a national cyber observatory.

 

“A bank that guards its fraud data like a state secret is helping the criminal, not the customer,” the Minister said.

For ordinary citizens and small businesses, the government will launch a national campaign entitled “Verify Before You Trust,” which will teach Zimbabweans simple techniques including reverse image search, voice confirmation through a second channel, and suspicious link checking using free artificial intelligence tools.

 

The government will also provide subsidised artificial intelligence-powered fraud alert applications for small to medium enterprises and rural mobile money agents serving platforms such as EcoCash and OneMoney.

 

On the regional front, Minister Mavetera said he would table a proposal at the next Southern African Development Community ICT Ministers’ meeting for a SADC Artificial Intelligence Cyber Fraud Protocol, which would enable mutual legal assistance in tracing cross-border artificial intelligence-generated fraud.

 

She also called for partnership with INTERPOL and the African Union to create an early warning system for artificial intelligence-driven phishing campaigns targeting African nations.

 

The Minister called on academia and researchers to establish an artificial intelligence Red Teaming initiative to ethically hack the nation’s own digital infrastructure to find weaknesses before criminals could exploit them.

 

She also urged them to develop local datasets of Zimbabwe-specific fraud patterns, including mobile money scams, fake SIM swaps, and voice note impersonations, to train defensive artificial intelligence on Zimbabwean data rather than relying solely on global datasets.

 

Minister Mavetera also announced that a national certification programme on artificial intelligence-enabled fraud investigation, digital forensics, and handling of artificial intelligence-generated evidence would be launched for police officers, prosecutors, and magistrates.

 

“You cannot arrest what you do not understand,” the Minister said.

 

“You cannot convict what you cannot prove.”

 

The announcements follow President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s official launch of Zimbabwe’s National Artificial Intelligence Strategy for the years twenty-twenty-six to twenty-thirty on the thirteenth of March twenty-twenty-six, a milestone that the Minister said had accelerated the adoption and integration of artificial intelligence across sectors while simultaneously expanding the attack surface for cyber fraud.

 

Minister Mavetera quoted the late scientist and futurist Stephen Hawking, who once said that success in creating artificial intelligence would be the biggest event in human history but might also be the last unless humanity learned to avoid the risks. “We are not afraid of AI,” the Minister said.

 

“We will use it. We will regulate it. We will defend with it. Let this summit mark the moment Zimbabwe decided to fight AI with AI – and win. Let it be said of this generation of Zimbabweans: we did not wait for disaster. We built the shield before the spear struck.”

 

 

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ZLGCA Drives Girl Child Empowerment as Zimbabwe Celebrates 46 Years of Freedom

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As Zimbabwe tomorrow celebrates its 46th Independence Anniversary under the theme “Zim@46-Unity and Development Towards Vision 2030,” the Zimbabwe Liberated Girl Child in Action (ZLGCA) has reaffirmed its commitment to empowering the girl child as a cornerstone of the nation’s development agenda.

Speaking ahead of the historic commemorations set to take place at Maphisa Stadium in Matobo District, ZLGCA executive director Mrs Anna Mabhena outlined the organisation’s ambitious vision for 2026, declaring that no nation can develop if half its population is left behind.

“Our target is crystal clear, to reach 10 000 beneficiaries with road traffic safety and provisional licence training in 2026.

We believe this will inspire more and more girls to contribute to the national driving skills set,” said Mrs Mabhena, unveiling a nationwide free driving programme for all girls countrywide.

The organisation, which boasts a membership of approximately 2 000 people comprising children of war veterans, has made significant strides in reaching out to vulnerable girls and women across the country.

In a major push to advance gender equality and national development, ZLGCA has launched a free driving programme targeting 10 000 girls nationwide this year, directly tackling unemployment and social challenges while fast-tracking skills development in line with President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s Vision 2030.

Mrs Mabhena drew a direct connection between the organisation’s work and the country’s long-term development blueprint.

“ZLGCA is inspired by Vision 2030 and therefore aims to reach at least 50 000 girls nationwide by 2030,” she said, adding that impact reviews would guide the ongoing strategy.

“No nation can develop if 52 percent of its population is left on the sidelines. Today, we are putting wheels on the President’s vision,” Mrs Mabhena said emphatically.

The national rollout is designed to be inclusive, with all 10 provinces set to benefit. Masvingo Province will be the next stop after Bulawayo.

The driving initiative is part of a broader, holistic empowerment programme for the girl child.

“For the year 2026, ZLGCA will continue to roll out practical livelihood skills training in areas such as agriculture, mining, ICTs and many others. Additionally, life-skills training will be provided in financial literacy, emotional intelligence, first aid, business skills and goal setting,” she said.

Mrs Mabhena linked the skills training directly to combating social ills.

“The two key factors drawing girls into substance abuse and early marriages are idleness and poverty. Provisional licence training provides girls with opportunities for gainful employment, potentially addressing these challenges.

“We plan to expand our projects meant to empower women and girls in order to ensure that no one is left behind. Our goal is to support vulnerable women, including those who are abused and those on drugs,” Mrs Mabhena said, indicating the organisation’s unwavering commitment to the principles of the Second Republic.

The 46th Independence commemorations, being held in Maphisa for the first time, mark a profound homecoming to a region that breathes the history of the liberation struggle.

The choice of venue is a bold statement in the Second Republic’s decentralisation agenda, bringing the flagship national celebration to the heart of Matabeleland South and living true to the philosophy of “leaving no one and no place behind”.

For Mrs Mabhena and the young women of ZLGCA, many of whom are children of war veterans-the link between the liberation struggle and today’s empowerment drive is deeply personal.

She described the commemoration as a tribute to the peace and unity fought for during the liberation struggle.

“The girls felt the need to be responsible citizens, propagating the principles that underline the mandate of the war of liberation which our parents fought for.

“In everything that we are doing, we are trying our best to help our communities. One way we are appreciating the war of liberation and the sacrifices which our parents made is by donating to the less fortunate, visiting those in jails and also assisting patients in hospitals,” she said.

Since gaining Independence in 1980, Zimbabwe has made remarkable strides across multiple sectors.

The country’s education system became one of Africa’s most robust, with literacy rates surging from 45 percent in 1980 to an impressive 92 percent by 1995. Primary school enrolment doubled between 1980 and 1990, while secondary school enrolment increased seven-fold, demonstrating the new nation’s commitment to human capital investment.

In agriculture, Zimbabwe has surpassed its initial agricultural target of USD 8 billion, now set at USD 13.75 billion.

The nation has emerged as the largest tobacco producer on the continent and ranks sixth globally, trailing only agricultural powerhouses like China and India. The fast-track land reform programme, which President Mnangagwa has declared “irreversible,” has empowered local farmers and rectified historical injustices, enabling black farmers, especially smallholders, to boost production and productivity.

The mining sector has emerged as a key economic driver, contributing 13 percent to GDP in 2024, up from 8 percent in 2010. Infrastructure projects completed under NDS1 include the Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport Expansion and the Hwange Units 7 and 8, which added 700 megawatts to the national grid.

The National Development Strategy 2 (NDS2: 2026-2030), the final medium-term plan before Vision 2030, seeks to consolidate achievements recorded under NDS1 and accelerate Zimbabwe’s journey toward becoming an upper-middle-income society.

The strategy prioritises industrialisation, modernisation, value addition and beneficiation, predominantly of agriculture and mineral commodities.

For Mrs Mabhena, the alignment between ZLGCA’s grassroots empowerment work and the national vision is unmistakable.

“Our goal is to support vulnerable women, including those who are abused and those on drugs. We plan to expand our projects meant to empower women and girls in order to ensure that no one is left behind,” she said, directly echoing the Second Republic’s philosophy that underpins both NDS2 and Vision 2030.

As Zimbabweans gather tomorrow in Maphisa to celebrate 46 years of freedom, the work of organisations like ZLGCA serves as a living testament to the enduring promise of independence, that the sacrifices of the liberation struggle must translate into tangible opportunities for every citizen, especially the girl child.

Mrs Mabhena’s message to the nation is clear, empowering girls is not just a charitable endeavour but a strategic imperative for national prosperity.

“We want them to stand alone and be responsible citizens,” she said, capturing the essence of a movement that is defending the gains of liberation by building a generation of skilled, confident, and empowered young women.

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USD 2.18 Billion Rail Deal To Unlock Africa Trade Corridors

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Zimbabwe and Zambia have formalised a USD 2.18 billion agreement to construct the 311 kilometre (km) Lion’s Den-Kafue railway line, a strategic project officials say will dramatically cut transport costs and transit times while unlocking landlocked Zambia to Indian Ocean ports and boosting critical mineral exports.

The Memorandum of Understanding was signed by Zimbabwe’s Minister of Transport and Infrastructural Development Felix Mhona and his Zambian counterpart Frank Tayali during the meeting of the Emerging Railways Properties Council of Ministers in Victoria Falls.

“This landmark agreement will boost mineral exports, especially copper and drive investment, job creation and rural development.

“The railway offers a significant reduction in transport costs and transit time,” the joint statement read.

The Cape Gauge line runs 217 km through Zimbabwe and 94 km through Zambia, from Lion’s Den via Chirundu, Makuti and Chakuti to Kafue.

It will feature 16 stations and two marshalling yards, with upgrade-readiness to Standard Gauge.

The route is 800 km shorter to Beira, 1 000 km shorter to South African port, and 500 km shorter to Dar es Salaam, directly competing with the Lobito Corridor (Angola) and the TAZARA Railway (Tanzania route).

Officials said the project “secures Southern Africa’s access to critical minerals” while “reducing road congestion and maintenance costs, shifting bulk cargo from road to rail, and improving regional supply chain resilience.”

The line links to the Beira Corridor via Harare and Machipanda but requires rehabilitation of 445 km of existing rail in Zimbabwe. Mozambique’s participation is “critical for full corridor efficiency.

Financing and execution risk remain high, with success depending on mobilising capital from China, regional and global investors.

The project aligns with Zimbabwe’s Vision 2030 and Zambia’s multi-corridor strategy, focusing on “lower logistics costs through diversification.”

Minister Mhona described the deal as a transformative moment for SADC connectivity. “This is not just a railway, it is a corridor of prosperity,” he said. His Zambian counterpart added: “We are cutting distances, not corners.”

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Breaking News: At Least 18 Die in Kombi Inferno on Bulawayo–Beitbridge Road

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At least 18 people perished on Thursday afternoon when a commuter omnibus exploded into flames along the Bulawayo–Beitbridge Road, the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) has confirmed.

The horrific incident occurred between Chipangali and the Gwanda tollgate sometime between 1300 hours pm and 1400 hours, according to a statement issued by ZRP National Police Spokesperson Commissioner Paul Nyathi.

Commissioner Nyathi said the kombi burst into flames and exploded, leaving little chance for those on board to escape.

“The ZRP reports the death of plus or minus 18 people when a kombi exploded into fire between Chipangali and Gwanda tollgate along the Bulawayo-Beitbridge Road between 1300 hours and 1400 hours today he said “More details to be released in due course.”

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