The Herald (Zimbabwe)

A brighter future beckons

- Stephen Mpofu Correspond­ent

President Mnangagwa’s campaign for Zimbabwe’s re-engagement with the rest of the world is yielding handsome dividends with prospectiv­e investors making beelines to the country to join Zimbabwean­s in revamping the economy with benefits accruing to both themselves as well as to the host country.

ZIMBABWE’S new beginning — call it new dispensati­on after the fall of former president Robert Mugabe’s government last November — continues to posit a brighter future so that uninterrup­ted peace and stability are a must for the consummati­on of the exciting new prospects for our motherland.

[Which suggests that anyone sabotaging national tranquilli­ty must be visited with the wrath of the law on behalf of enraged publics (repeat publics) eager to continue to move on a new path created by the new Government and into a brave new future.]

The recent reopening of Eureka Gold Mine in Guruve, Mashonalan­d Central Province, and before that the resumption of work at Masvingo’s Cold Storage Commission along with news that asbestos mines at Shabanie and Mashava will soon be reopened should make job-seekers in particular execute a Sinjonjo dance as a brighter future beckons for their families.

The closure of the two mines as well as shutdowns of factories and companies in other towns and cities, particular­ly in Bulawayo, once upon a time Zimbabwe’s industrial hub, brought about by illegal western financial and economic sanctions to protest land reform, saw thousands of jobless Zimbabwean­s trooping out to neighbouri­ng countries and elsewhere further abroad where they remain holed up — with some of them treated like slaves and unable to return home to exercise their right to vote in next month’s harmonised elections.

President Mnangagwa’s campaign for Zimbabwe’s re-engagement with the rest of the world is yielding handsome dividends with prospectiv­e investors making beelines to the country to join Zimbabwean­s in revamping the economy with benefits accruing to both themselves as well as to the host country.

It is therefore incumbent upon our people, as the President has said, to give the foreign direct investors such a warm reception as will make others climb down from their fences and join us as partners in the economic and social developmen­t of our countries.

Zimbabwe is rich in different kinds of minerals with gold, diamonds and platinum among the most popular ones with foreign investors.

Now the Government has announced that it will roll out Command Mining in order for our people to benefit from their natural resources instead of doing spade work for foreign companies exploiting Zimbabwe’s mineral endowments for the enrichment of their native countries.

Not only will Command Mining directly benefit our people; it is also bound to bring sanity to gold panning along rivers in various parts of the country where the use of chemicals such as cyanide poses a threat to water bodies while mounds of earth dug up along riverbeds pause the risk of silting the water bodies, not to mention violent clashes, some fatal, which have repeatedly occurred in various areas where the makorokoza do their thing.

Command Mining will obviously ensure that no minerals are blued out of the country for sale with the money not being remitted to benefit the source, Zimbabwe, as is believed by many to have been the case where foreigners are in total control of the exploitati­on of some of Zimbabwe’s precious minerals.

It would be interestin­g to know, for instance, what happened to emeralds which made Mberengwa District popular during the war of liberation.

Were they all taken out and sold outside the country since villagers in areas where the emeralds are, still wallow in poverty to this very day.

Or do the minerals remain buried undergroun­d to be exploited for the benefit of our national economy?

This writer knows of some politician­s and teachers who acquired the emeralds from freedom fighters for a song and probably sit pretty even after retiring from politics and from Government service.

Command Agricultur­e, it has been said by those in power, has the potential even in times of drought to restore Zimbabwe’s breadbaske­t status as enjoyed in the early years of independen­ce, thanks to the indefatiga­ble work of peasants.

The constructi­ons of more dams in various parts of the country will ensure that when rainy seasons are lean, irrigation will guarantee uninterrup­ted food production for the country.

Add Command livestock to uninterrup­ted food production and this country’s economy will remain buoyant.

Burgeoning appetites for Zimbabwean beef have been reported in Britain and elsewhere in the European Union and so, like Command livestock if pursued with vigour, especially in cattle rearing areas in Matabelela­nd, will help firmly anchor our economy.

Finally , because the economy and future of this country rest in our hands, Zimbabwean­s should regard the above discourse as a clarion call on everyone to know more (repeat know more) of corruption and nepotism and instead fiercely love themselves and their country and walk tall in unity as an example to others in the global village.

 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa
President Mnangagwa
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe