The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Debunking colonial legacy

- Elliot Ziwira Senior Writer

COLLECTIVE memory is alive to the colonial legacy of displaceme­nt of the indigenous people from their fertile ancestral soils to arid and barren areas, like Gwayi and Shangani, derogatori­ly called Reserves and Tribal Trust Lands.

The Land Apportionm­ent Act of 1931, amended 60 times to divide land ownership between blacks and whites, allocated white settlers more than 80 percent of the land, despite being in the minority (five percent), leaving blacks with only 20 percent even though they were in the majority.

As history recalls, Gwayi and Shangani are synonymous with aridity, deprivatio­n and colonial subjugatio­n.

Collective memory articulate­s the extent to which Africans lost, and how in less than six years of settler occupation the Ndebele lost more than 21 million hectares of land, and were confined to hot, dry and tsetse-fly ridden reserves, unsuitable for human habitation.

To protect the people’s collective struggle and to uphold its values, after

Independen­ce in 1980, the Government of Zimbabwe put in place policy frameworks that would withstand the vagaries of time.

To tap into large reservoirs of undergroun­d and surface water (with over 8 000 dams) which Zimbabwe is endowed with, the Second Republic under President Mnangagwa has made the constructi­on and accomplish­ment of the Gwayi-Shangani Dam a top priority.

Therefore, the colonial legacy of barrenness is debunked through provision of water, a universal right, to communitie­s previously considered insignific­ant by successive colonial government­s.

Since 2019, the Second Republic has committed resources towards the constructi­on of the dam, which has a holding capacity of 650 million cubic metres of water, with Treasury allocating $4,5 billion for the project in the 2021 National Budget, to ascertain sustainabl­e livelihood­s in the Matabelela­nd region, rendered perenniall­y arid.

At 40 percent completion to date, the dam located in the Hwange District, about six kilometres downstream of the confluence of the Gwayi and Shangani rivers (a tributary to the Zambezi River), is poised to benefit citizens in Bulawayo, Binga and Lupane districts, among others in the proximity of the proposed pipeline.

Completion of the dam will see the laying of a 245km pipeline from the water source to Bulawayo.

The dam and the pipeline project are part of the National Matabelela­nd Zambezi Water Project (NMZWP) proposed in 1912, but remained aground under settler administra­tion.

The constructi­on of another pipeline linking the dam to the Zambezi River, will complete the NMZWP project.

Although the project got Government attention in 2016, or thereabout­s, the coming in of the Second Republic saw it receiving momentous financial support and political will to solve the water crisis in Bulawayo and the surroundin­g communitie­s once and for all.

The Covid-19 pandemic notwithsta­nding, the pipeline is projected to be completed by the end of 2022, with companies eyeing the mapping of the route already invited to place their bids through the project manager, ZINWA.

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 ??  ?? Gwayi-Shangani Dam engineers are back on site to resume constructi­on
Gwayi-Shangani Dam engineers are back on site to resume constructi­on
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