The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Tugwi-Mukosi potential yet to be realised

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Ward 2 Chivi Councillor Saunders Magwizi is unimpresse­d with talk that delays in coming up with a master plan was behind failure for people in the district to start benefiting from the water body.

To Cllr Magwizi, everyone hoped the country’s largest inland dam would be an elixir against perennial hunger.

“We were pinning our hopes on this dam, but it appears authoritie­s did not have a plan beforehand of how they were going to use it to immediatel­y benefit surroundin­g communitie­s and the people of Chivi at large. We are now not sure whether we will be alive to experience the Tugwi-Mukosi dream.’’

He says even the much hyped fishing projects remained a pipe-dream for people in his area.

“We just hear that there are some fishing cooperativ­es that were licensed and allowed to fish commercial­ly, but none of our people in Chivi is yet to benefit. We had hoped that by this time fields around the dam would be perenniall­y green leading the fight against hunger, but up to now nothing has been done and we are losing hope,’’ he said.

Cllr Magwizi said delays to accrue benefits from Tugwi-Mukosi were also taking their toll on over 3 000 families at Chingwizi in Mwenezi, who were displaced from their ancestral homes in Chivi by the raging waters in the gargantuan water body.

“As things stand, it means some of the displaced families who left their fathers’ graves after relocation to Chingwizi, might never live long enough to witness the elusive Tugwi-Mukosi dream. Government says these families will be the first to benefit from the dam’s water through irrigation, but nobody knows when that will be and how many of the displaced people will still be alive.’’

Chivi Rural District Council chair Clr Godfrey Mukungunug­wa said the people of Chivi were waiting with bated breath to start enjoying the benefits of the dam.

He said failure to take off of irrigation projects around Muzhwi and Bindamombe dams in the district, has now dampened fires of optimism that were burning when Tugwi-Mukosi was first commission­ed.

“Our people are growing restless. They are not sure when the great Tugwi-Mukosi promise will come to pass. There are many opportunit­ies that will be created by this dam in areas of agricultur­e and tourism, even in the area of nutrition through fishing that will also boost incomes but so far the impact has been minimal and not congruent to the earlier huge promise of this project.’’

Speaking on a recent tour of the dam, Minister of State Responsibl­e for Implementa­tion and Monitoring of Government programmes in the President’s Office Jorum Gumbo decried the presence of abundant, but idle water in Tugwi-Mukosi yet the nation was importing food.

“The dam is 40 percent full and the water can sustain crops on thousands of hectares through irrigation and I think there is need for a real push to make sure the master plan in question is completed so that locals and the nation at large start benefiting from this idle resource. We can’t be importing food when we have such a huge dam which is lying idle,’’ said Minister Gumbo.

Minister of State for Masvingo Provincial Affairs and Devolution Ezra Chadzamira said failure to start fully utilising the giant reservoir was the Achilles heel on the province’s developmen­t thrust in line with Vision 2030.

“We continue to implore authoritie­s to make sure the master plan which is stalling full utilisatio­n of the dam is finally completed. We don’t know why the master plan in question is taking long to complete.

“We could even do with focusing on low hanging projects at the dam that are not affected by absence of the master plan. Our people have waited for too long to start benefiting from this dam.’’

Tugwi-Mukosi was touted as a gamechange­r for Masvingo with its influence straddling key sectors such as tourism and agricultur­e, which traditiona­lly have been key cornerston­es of the national economy.

Optimists said a mega-park that would be an entry window for tourists would be quickly created around Tugwi-Mukosi and stocked with the Big Five wild animals and other game trans-located from overpopula­ted habitats.

A conurbatio­n stretching from Chiredzi to the east and Rutenga to the west was also envisaged with proponents of the idea premising their belief on a host of agri-processing companies and financial institutio­ns that were expected to flock to the Lowveld when Tugwi-Mukosi water started to irrigate swathes of fertile land under crops that included cereals and other cash crops.

Masvingo provincial developmen­t coordinato­r Mr Fungai Mbetsa said Government was working on the master plan for Tugwi-Mukosi. Current focus was on low hanging projects among them a planned 15MW mini-hydro power plant, a dry harbour, navigation masts and fisheries with leading fish breeding firms have already establishe­d breeding cages in the dam.

However, of concern to many is that the anticipate­d emergence of a vibrant fisheries industry, after Government seeded over 25 000 fingerling­s under the Command Fisheries programme more than three years ago, has not attained the targeted decibels in terms of acclaim and benefits to locals.

The planned hydro power station has also not taken-off ostensibly over lack of funding despite a power house to accommodat­e the plant having been built under the main dam constructi­on contract with Salini Impregilo.

Work on the dry harbour and the planned tarring of the road to the facility has also not started, also owing to lack of funds and all this stillbirth has left Tugwi-Mukosi largely a white elephant and a deferred dream to the locals.

Recent news announced by Minister of Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Developmen­t Minister Professor Amon Murwira that local State-run universiti­es would aid Government in crafting the master plan were met with enthusiasm in some circles.

But the Covid-19 pandemic and other pressing challenges, the universiti­es have not yet got into gear in drawing the master plan, leaving yet another big hole that threatens speedy drafting of the master plan to make sure the dam finally benefits those waiting in the wings.

For now, to the people of Gororo and the Chivi hinterland in general, the Tugwi-Mukosi dream appears to have been temporaril­y deferred.

 ??  ?? Talk of delays in coming up with a master plan was behind the failure by people in Chivi District to start benefiting fromTugwi-Mukosi Dam
Talk of delays in coming up with a master plan was behind the failure by people in Chivi District to start benefiting fromTugwi-Mukosi Dam

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