The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Tongaat, Malilangwe to rehabilita­te Chilonga

- Tawanda Mangoma Chiredzi

LOWVELD sugar producer Tongaat Hulett Zimbabwe and Malilangwe Conservati­on Trust have expressed their willingnes­s to help in the rehabilita­tion of the mothballed Chilonga Irrigation Scheme to boost food security in the arid southern Chiredzi area.

The two organisati­ons will take part in the rehabilita­tion of the scheme as part of their social responsibi­lity programmes.

Tongaat and Malilangwe have a long-running relationsh­ip in social responsibi­lity and a few years ago they joined forces to spruce up Buffalo Range Airport in Chiredzi.

Their plan to help in the Chilonga scheme revival comes as Chiredzi Rural District Council has since initiated moves to resuscitat­e it by dispatchin­g earthmovin­g equipment to desilt Runde River for the irrigation scheme to get a reliable water source.

Malilangwe Conservati­on Trust representa­tive Mr Tendai Nhunzvi said they wanted the Chilonga community to resume irrigation farming to improve food security.

He said plot holders at the scheme needed to be equipped to produce crops on a commercial scale as it was no longer sustainabl­e to produce crops for subsistenc­e purposes only considerin­g high operationa­l costs of running such a big irrigation scheme.

“From what I have learnt, the river (Runde)’s course would require yearly scooping using an excavator and that will be expensive for the community if they are not operating commercial­ly,” he said.

“We can scoop the river for the community now, but will they be able to do that on their own in the long run? I think it is prudent that the community be engaged towards coming up with a sustainabl­e operating model that would see them produce crops for them to be able to foot their electricit­y bill and repair canals, among other things.”

Chiredzi District assistant developmen­t coordinato­r Mr Gift Machukele said his office was determined to make sure the Chilonga community started realising revenue from the irrigation scheme.

“This scheme has over 250 hectares and used to directly benefit more than 300 households who were plot holders,” he said. “For the past 12 years, when production was down, the community suffered severely and that is what we want to end.

“We want to make sure that all our irrigation schemes are functional to ease dependence on food handouts.”

A team of engineers who recently toured the irrigation scheme said establishm­ent of the Chilonga Bridge causeway was the major cause of the diversion of Runde River.

Mr Machukele said there was need to address streambank cultivatio­n and gully reclamatio­n along the river.

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