[Nyasa Times] Minister of Transport and Public Works Mohammed Sidik Mia visited the Njakwa-Livingstonia Road in Rumphi construction site and has assured the communities that the administration of President Lazarus Chakwera will ensure the long-neglected road should be completed within a year with October 2021 as a deadline after decades of lies and broken promises by past regimes.
[New Republic] Citizens of Bong and Nimba Counties have all reasons to celebrate when Liberian leader, George M. Weah broke grounds for the construction of housing units for them.
[Cameroon Tribune] The 2021 draft budget of the Ministry of Public Works stands at FCFA 464.842 billion.
[Govt of Liberia] Residents of the town of Weanesue in Lower Bong County will in three months see an emerging beautiful landscape in that locale. This is so because the President of the Republic, Dr. George Manneh Weah, has broken ground for the construction of 100 modern housing units in the County.
[New Zimbabwe] The Zambezi River Authority (ZRA) Tuesday said that it will give equal job opportunities to citizens of Zimbabwe and Zambia when construction of the US$4.5 billion Batoka Gorge Hydro-Electric Scheme (BGHES) begins.
[The Point] National Disaster Management Agency (NDMA) on Thursday donated one hundred bags of cement worth thirty thousand dalasis (D30, 000) to a disabled flood victim at Madiyanna village, Kombo North.
[Daily Trust] Ahead of the commissioning of the newly completed, international terminal at the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport, Kano, the Management of the Federal Airports Authority (FAAN), has inspected the airport.
[Ghana Presidency] The President of the Republic, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has commissioned the Bodukwan Multi-Fruit processing Factory, a project operating under Government's 1-District-1-Factory initiative.
[New Dawn] The Government of Liberia thru the Monrovia City Council has begun erection of modern market tables for marketers at the Waterside general market.
[New Zimbabwe] The new Parliament Building situated in Mt. Hampden is now set to be complete next year in September, six months behind schedule due to Covid-19 induced delays.