The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Mhangura, Alaska to employ 350 workers on reopening

- Conrad Mupesa Mashonalan­d West Bureau

THE re-start of operations at Mhangura Copper Mine and Alaska Smelting plant during this year, in both cases by reprocessi­ng the millions tonnes of waste that accumulate­d at both points to extract the remaining copper, will bring hope to the two small towns that host these operations and revive their fortunes. The two reopenings will be employ over 350 people

Mhangura Copper Mine was the lifeblood of Mhangura Town Board and its closure created a near ghost town. Its planned re-opening and that of Alaska, has given hope to hundreds of people in the two towns.

Makonde Rural District Council (MRDC) chairman, Councillor Misheck Nyarubero said the reopening was going to change the lives of people in Mhangura.

Said Clr Nyarubero: “We are happy that through the able leadership of President

Mnangagwa, the deal inked between ZMDC and Chinese investors has brought smiles to many faces. Mhangura has also been turned into a town board and the opening of the mine will pump blood into it.”

A Mhangura resident, Mr Witness , who runs a butchery, said he sees his fortunes changing with the opening of the mines.

Mhangura has been sustained by farming communitie­s that surround it but, the ever-changing climate conditions have made this difficult. In Alaska, the mining community has been battling drug abuse menace and child pregnancie­s owing to low income and economic hardships.

The resuscitat­ion of the Alaska Smelting Plant has since brought life into the compound located 15 km west of Chinhoyi town.

Speaking to The Herald recently, Mines and Mining Developmen­t Deputy Minister Dr Polite Kambamura said the closure of Mhangura Mine in around 2002 was due to the depletion of reserves at the mine.

ZMDC through a partnershi­p with Eastern Asia, operating as Zhijiu Mining, is now processing 5 million tonnes of the old dump at a production capacity of 150 tonnes of concentrat­es a month. The first phase was commission­ed in July 2022.

“The second phase is expected to be commission­ed in the first quarter of 2024. The processing plant will produce 300 tonnes of concentrat­es a month when phases I and II are all running. Under the partnershi­p, ZMDC has a shareholdi­ng of 35 percent, while Zhijiu has 65 percent . Zhijiu will invest US$10 million for the two phases. The project is expected to employ plus or minus 200 people at full capacity,” he said.

Full story on www.herald.co.zw

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe