NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Byo firm commercial­ises zumbani herb

- BY SILAS NKALA lFollow Silas on Twitter @silasnkala

A BULAWAYO company, Green Afrique Technologi­es, has ventured into processing green tea using zumbani/umsuzwane to promote local herbal remedies for various respirator­y ailments.

Zumbani recently emerged as one of the most sought-after remedies in the fight against coronaviru­s.

Green Afrique chief executive Anglistone Sibanda said women in Matobo district, Matabelela­nd South province, his home area, were harvesting the leaves which the company processes into herbal tea.

“We are promoting our own local herbal remedies and nutritiona­l boosters,” Sibanda said.

“We are working with local communitie­s, doing research and getting local women in Matobo to gather umsuzwane that has become a hit due to its nutritiona­l and medicinal properties.

“As a company, we seek to create incomes for local women who are collecting the leaves and drying them, we package, brand and promote them. We are currently working on supplying orders in the United Kingdom and South Africa where people are using it as a home remedy in the fight against COVID-19.”

Sibanda, who is a pastor with the Everlastin­g Gospel of Christ Church, said the herb was abundant in Matobo Hills.

The area is also rich in other herbal remedies still under research to establish their medicinal and nutritiona­l properties.

“Plants like sourplum (umthundulu­ka), ukhalimela (Sicoma Anomala), among many others will soon be profession­ally processed and promoted to compete with the Chinese herbals, the Swiss and the American products,” Sibanda said.

“We believe that Africa is endowed with natural resources and vast indigenous knowledge systems that have been untapped and it is high time we promoted them at a global stage for the benefit of local communitie­s.”

Sibanda said people had been stampeding for Chinese herbals, ginseng tea, and now the Swiss Apple seeds STC30 and there is no reason why they could not market umsuzwane.

He said people forget that Moringa originated in Binga and became a global discovery, with foreign companies now making a killing through products from the tree.

“Our education system trained us for servitude. We do not have entreprene­urship skills to see opportunit­ies and create employment. We are all looking for employment opportunit­ies. It is a common trend in most African countries,” he said.

“That is why we get employed by Chinese convicts and any rogue European who comes to Africa and sees opportunit­ies on our land. They start a business using our resources and all we want is to get employed by the fellow. I am fighting against that brainwashi­ng and trying to liberate the African church from colonial white supremacis­t brainwashi­ng.”

Sibanda said people ignored their own herbal remedies preferring foreign ones to the extent that an American took the African aloe (inhlaba) to the US, planted it and built a factory to process it and create Forever Living Products, but Africans are busy doing chain marketing of those products.

“Now the Chinese have been all over looking for Sourplum tree (Umthundulu­ka) and taking GIS coordinate­s, paying elders US$5 in rural areas. That tree is a powerful antibiotic but locals do not take advantage of its proximity to them,” he said.

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