I knew that my colleagues were as miserable as me. The money was never enough, for some like me, I never looked forward to the day. It was doomsday. At the Amandwandwe gates, on payday there would be hordes of vendors collecting their debts as most of us lived on the twin evils of chikwereti and chimbadzo! Only last month, John a colleague saddled with numerous debts had donned on a Jim Hendricks wig. The surgical mask did the rest as he bacame unrecognisable.
I knew that my colleagues were as miserable as me. The money was never enough, for some like me, I never looked forward to the day. It was doomsday. At the Amandwandwe gates, on payday there would be hordes of vendors collecting their debts as most of us lived on the twin evils of chikwereti and chimbadzo! Only last month, John a colleague saddled with numerous debts had donned on a Jim Hendricks wig. The surgical mask did the rest as he bacame unrecognisable.
Addressing delegates at the World Health Day Symposium in the capital last week, Unicef country representative Tajudeen Oyewale said: “Between 2030 and 2050, climate change is expected to cause approximately 250 000 additional deaths per year, from malnutrition, malaria, diarrhoea and heat stress.”