Connect with us

In the community

Zimbabwe’s mining towns surrounded by mineral riches, but living in poverty

Published

on

BY VIMBAI CHINEMBIRI

In the mining town of Zvishavane, in central Zimbabwe, lies Maglas, an aging, broken-down community burdened with crumbling houses.

Advertisement

The town’s lack of water and ablution facilities leaves a pervasive stench of feces and urine. In the rainy season, potholed roads fill with water.

Nearly 400 kilometers  to the northeast sits Mutare, a city in Zimbabwe’s eastern highlands, where Redwing mine is located.

Along one road, children have just filled their buckets at a burst pipe. Their homes don’t have running water.

Advertisement

These scenes repeat themselves throughout Zimbabwe’s mining towns, as critics of the government say weak laws and policies, combined with a lack of transparency, have left these communities flailing.

The towns are rich in mineral resources. But their people are among the country’s poorest.

“To say they are not benefiting much [from mining] is an understatement,” said Farai Maguwu, director of the Centre for Natural Resource Governance, a Zimbabwe-based research and advocacy organization.

Advertisement

“Reality is they are not benefiting anything. In fact, mining is further impoverishing them by attacking their environment, which they depend on for livelihoods.

Zimbabwe boasts more than 60 types of minerals, and about 40 are already being mined.

At least 4,000 gold deposits dot the country, along with platinum, chrome, lithium, coal, diamonds and more.

Advertisement

Diamonds in Mutare’s Marange fields were worth an estimated $800 billion a decade ago.

 Zvishavane is blessed with gold, chrome and platinum deposits.

A 2015 Zimbabwe Open University study on mineral revenue argues that “governments and mining companies promise communities from which minerals are mined both social and economic benefits, but still there are no tangible benefits that go to these communities.”

Advertisement

Another study, in 2012 by the Institute of Environmental Studies, found that more than 90% of households involved with mineral extraction lived in poverty.

Midlands province, where Zvishavane is one of several mining towns, is one of the country’s most mineral-rich regions, but it’s saddled with the second-lowest access to basic water services, at 51%, according to a 2019 Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment Committee survey.

More than half of children in rural Midlands don’t have access to healthy food.

Advertisement

Onesimo Moyo, permanent secretary in the Ministry of Mines and Mining Development, said it’s unfair to say that mining towns remain undeveloped.

“These towns were built on the back of mining,” Moyo said.

“The schools, clinics and housing were a result of mining companies building infrastructure in the towns they were operating in.

Advertisement

“Zvishavane is a good example of such a town.”

Tinoda Mukutu, Zvishavane’s town secretary, agrees that mining companies have brought schools, clinics and other benefits to the region.

What’s missing, he says, is help from government-backed structures such as community share ownership trusts, which were introduced in 2007 as an offshoot of Zimbabwe’s indigenization law.

Advertisement

Amended in 2018, the law was meant to ensure more economic power for black Zimbabweans.

Mining companies gave the trusts one-time payments for income-generation projects.

And Moyo said the enterprises do share profits via the community trusts. But activists such as Joyce Nyamukunda are dubious.

Advertisement

Since the change in the indigenization law, towns can’t force mining companies to pay into the trusts, said Nyamukunda, coordinator of the Zimbabwe chapter of Publish What You Pay, an initiative that promotes the rights of communities affected by mineral extraction.

“There is no law that specifically provides a system of allocating revenue collected from mining companies between central government, local authorities and communities,” she said.

In Gwanda, a town in Matabeleland South province in southwest Zimbabwe, the trusts improved access to water, electrified rural areas and provided capital for entrepreneurs.

Advertisement

In platinum- and gold-rich Shurugwi, located 88 kilometrrs  from Zvishavane, old buildings and dilapidated roads mar one part of town. But on another section, the town’s biggest mining company –AngloAmerican Platinum – has erected gleaming new apartments for its employees.

“Mining companies [that came before] built infrastructure,” said Walter Nemasasi, general manager at AngloAmerican Platinum, which operates Unki Mine in Shurugwi.

“To the eye they may look dilapidated, to some, but it is not the responsibility of existing mining companies to take up that responsibility…We have our community social responsibility programs that we do and we continue to make our community better the best way we can.”

Advertisement

Residents say the local trust has improved sanitation and educational infrastructure and built more health facilities.

Maguwu, from the Centre for Natural Resource Governance, notes that of Zimbabwe’s 64 registered trusts, only a few can boast of such gains.

“They are not serving any purpose because the government is not compelling companies to contribute,” he said.

Advertisement

His organization and other civil society groups also blame a lack of government transparency for holding back mineral-rich communities.

The government fails to provide data about a range of mining-related areas, according to a 2018 Auditor General’s report.

Those areas include tax incentives, licenses and mining revenue the government receives.

Advertisement

A decade ago, the government promised more transparency for the mining sector, but officials are still mulling whether to join the global Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, which mandates that governments release mining revenue data.

“We cannot go blindly into it,” Moyo said. “It takes a lot of planning and consultation. Many think it’s a delay tactic, but it’s not. We just have to do due diligence.”

Maguwu, however, argued that joining the initiative isn’t the solution.

Advertisement

“Global governance mechanisms must be reproduced at the national and local level instead,” he said.

“The government, industry, civil society and local communities — including traditional leaders — must be involved in transparency issues.

“That is how investment decisions [should be] made.”  – Global Press Journal 

Advertisement

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

In the community

Hwange police seek public’s help in locating missing teen

Published

on

BY STAFF REPORTER 

The Hwange police are urgently seeking the public’s assistance in locating 16-year-old Latoya Lisa Munkuli, who went missing on May 7, this month.

Latoya, a dark-complexioned female juvenile, was last seen leaving her residence in Hwange around 4 pm.

She was wearing a distinctive outfit consisting of green trousers and a white T-shirt, and carried a black satchel. She stands approximately 1.6 meters tall.

Inspector Glory Banda of the Hwange police is leading the investigation and urges anyone with information about Latoya’s whereabouts to come forward.

If you have any information about Latoya’s disappearance, please contact Inspector Banda on 0785961747 or 0771256607.

Continue Reading

In the community

Human-wildlife conflict claims 18 lives in Zimbabwe’s first quarter

Published

on

BY NOKUTHABA DLAMINI 

The Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (ZimParks) has reported a disturbing trend of human-wildlife conflict in the country’s first quarter of 2025. According to the authority, 18 people have lost their lives, and 32 others have been injured in encounters with wildlife.

ZimParks spokesperson Tinashe Farawo revealed that the authority received 579 cases of human-wildlife conflict, which they managed to respond to promptly. The incidents have also resulted in significant livestock losses, with at least 53 cattle and 85 goats killed by wildlife.

The districts most affected by these incidents include Binga, Hwange, Kariba, Chiredzi, Hurungwe, Nyaminyami, and Mbire. ZimParks has been working tirelessly to raise awareness about wildlife behaviors and effective preventive measures in these areas.

In response to the crisis, ZimParks has translocated 129 animals back into protected areas and eliminated 158 animals deemed problematic.

“We encourage communities to continue reporting incidents to ZimParks Problem Animal Control numbers and local leadership, such as Councillors, Traditional Leaders, and Rural District Council Authorities, to ensure that we preserve lives,” Farawo urged.

The significant increase in livestock losses, with cattle deaths rising from 18 to 53 and goat deaths from 21 to 85 compared to the same period in 2024, highlights the growing challenge of human-wildlife conflict in Zimbabwe.

ZimParks’ efforts to mitigate the conflict include community initiatives to educate people on managing wildlife encounters effectively.

 

Continue Reading

In the community

Crocodile attacks claim 9 lives, injure 11

Published

on

BY NOKUTHABA DLAMINI

A surge in crocodile attacks has left a trail of death and destruction in Zimbabwe, with 9 fatalities and 11 injuries reported in the last two months.

According to a statement released by the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (ZimParks), 49 human-crocodile conflict cases were recorded during the same period, resulting in the loss of 44 cattle and 60 goats.

The Mid-Zambezi region, which includes Lake Kariba, Angwa River, and Hunyani River, was the hardest hit, with 19 cases reported. The Central region recorded 14 cases, while 16 cases were reported in other areas, including Matopo, Harare, North-West Matabeleland, and South-East Low-veld.

ZimParks has urged communities to exercise extreme caution, especially around water bodies, during the current rain season. The authority has advised communities to ensure that livestock and children are not left unattended near rivers or lakes, and to take precautions when engaging in water activities such as fishing, swimming, and domestic chores.

To mitigate the situation, ZimParks is working closely with local authorities and conservation partners to raise public awareness and promote safety practices. The authority has emphasized its commitment to finding a balance between ensuring public safety and conserving wildlife.

As the situation continues to unfold, ZimParks has appealed to the public to remain vigilant and to report any crocodile sightings or attacks to the authorities.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2022 VicFallsLive. All rights reserved, powered by Advantage