Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

60 000 trees to be planted

Walkathon to address land degradatio­n by mining activities

- Roberta Katunga Senior Business Reporter

PLATINUM miner, Mimosa Mining Company, has partnered with other stakeholde­rs in ensuring land degradatio­n as a result of mining activities is reversed through re-greening the environmen­t amid revelation­s that 60 000 trees are set to be planted during the campaign.

Mimosa executive chairman Mr Winston Chitando said the company has partnered with Friends of the Environmen­t (FOTE) for the seventh edition of the 500 million tree by 2026 Walkathon, dubbed the 2016 Mtshingwe Walkathon.

In an interview, Mr Chitando said ensuring environmen­tal sustainabi­lity was important as the company seeks to demonstrat­e that zero harm to the environmen­t is possible.

“We have partnered with other stakeholde­rs in ensuring environmen­tal sustainabi­lity through reversing the loss of environmen­tal resources, in line with the millennium developmen­t goal on the environmen­t. The 2016 Walkathon will culminate in the unveiling of Mtshingwe Nursery, a reforestat­ion project located at Mtshingwe Primary School in Zvishavane that we have so proudly supported over the years,” said Mr Chitando.

The Walkathon, according to the organisers will begin in Gweru on 29 November and end at Mimosa Mine on 2 December with a distance of 142 kilometres being covered. Mr Chitando said the unveiling of Mtshingwe Nursery, a greenhouse in Zvishavane run by the local community, will coincide with the National Tree Planting Day on 3 December.

“This nursery is run by the local community on a selfsustai­ning basis and in ways that support livelihood­s as well as promote collaborat­ion by stakeholde­rs to achieve common objectives. Seedlings grown on the nursery are sold to individual­s and parties who in-turn have begun building their own orchards, with the result that they not only enhance their income levels but also contribute to saving the environmen­t,” he said.

FOTE Founding Trustee Mr Philip Mataranyik­a said this year’s Walkathon along the Great Dyke area was significan­t as the place has become world infamous for land degradatio­n.

“Mining by its nature has a tendency of destabilis­ing the environmen­t so a comprehens­ive land reclamatio­n programme is required and FOTE already has a fully functional tree seedling nursery in the district to address that need,” said Mr Mataranyik­a.

Mr Mataranyik­a said FOTE was targeting to plant 60 000 trees during the four-day walkathon from Gweru to Zvishavane.

He said in order to sustain the cause after the walkathon campaign, FOTE would empower traditiona­l leaders to drive this initiative in their designatio­ns.

Mr Mataranyik­a revealed that eight chiefs in Shurugwi and Zvishavane namely Chief Nhema, Chief Ndanga, Chief Banga, Chief Masunda, Chief Mapanzure, Chief Mafala, Chief Mazvihwa and Chief Wedza will have orchards and plantation­s of varying sizes created at their homesteads.

“One of the questions we often encounter during the walkathons is how this worthy cause will be sustained after the walkathon campaign has come and gone. FOTE believes that the knowledge of the natural world is not confined to science.

This knowledge centres on traditiona­l leadership knowing the importance of the sustainabl­e exploitati­on of natural resources that are in one way or the other useful to humankind. The setting up of plantation­s and orchards at the traditiona­l leaders’ homesteads is FOTE’s deliberate effort to empower the chiefs before the programme can be cascaded to wards and households as well as any community woodlots,” he said.

According to FOTE, plants — particular­ly trees, are the most abused resources but under the prevailing spell of climate change and global warming, forests deserve protection both now and in future and for different purposes.

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