The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Epic project demystifie­s colonial legacy of barrenness

- Elliot Ziwira Senior Writer

THE mention of Gwayi and Shangani in Matabelela­nd Province evokes the colonial legacy of ruthlessne­ss incarnated in the displaceme­nt of indigenous people from their fertile ancestral land to arid and barren areas derogatori­ly called Reserves and Tribal Trust Lands.

So, what is land?

The Land Commission Act, Chapter 20:9, states that “‘land’ includes anything permanentl­y attached to or growing on land.” The Act does not define what land is, but what it comprises, and what it is capable of doing.

The land allows for growth and permanence of life, which is both limiting and broad, depending on how one reads it. In the limited sense, the land is an expanse or sod of soil where crops may be grown.

Nonetheles­s, in the broader sense, as the Act outlines, the word encompasse­s everything that grows on it, or is permanentl­y attached to it; like buildings, mountains, rivers, forests, minerals and animals. It also refers to the Motherland, or country.

Land sustains life, without which man and his environmen­t are doomed. In view of the colonial legacy of displaceme­nt, aridity and barrenness, the broader sense of what constitute­s land suffices.

Essence of land to Africans

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 arable 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.

In terms of heritage; both tangible and intangible, and how it impacts on the well-being of future generation­s, the land is supreme.

Research has shown that in its broader context, land is more than a geographic­al space. In Rino Zhuwarara’s view, land is a source of wealth, pride, identity and spiritual connectedn­ess. It is this nature of the land that is central to the contests impeding collective heritage in Zimbabwe.

To Africans, the land is considered “mother”, therefore, it cannot be sold, bought or owned (Lan, 1985); and as the abode of the ancestors, it has a spiritual link (Zhuwarara, 2001).

The loss of land, and the displaceme­nt of the African people, including the Ndebele, to such barren areas like Gwayi and Shangani, was compounded by the loss of cattle, an integral socio-economic symbol to them.

Chigwedere (2001: 33) maintains that between 1893 and March 1896, the Ndebele lost “anything from 100 000 to 200 000 cattle” to settlers, which were administer­ed by “The Loot Committee” (ibid:29). Cattle stolen from the Shona and the Ndebele were used to start the Cold Storage Commission, and “these were the cattle borrowed by commercial farmers to start their own herds” (Chigwedere, 2001:32).

In the African perspectiv­e, as is the case with other peoples across the globe, the land is a non-negotiable heritage, because it is a matter of life and death. Historical memory, as recorded by Ranger (1985, 1991), De Waal (1990), and Martin and Johnson (1981), recalls that contestati­ons culminatin­g in the struggles of the 1890s and 1970s were precipitat­ed by the land issue.

In the broader context, therefore, to Africans, loss of land equates to loss of dignity, for without their land they are naked. It is in this multifario­us aspect of the land central to the controvers­ies impeding collective heritage in Zimbabwe that new lenses are required to correct past wrongs.

Indeed, it is in this varied reading of the land that the Lake Gwayi-Shangani project should be situated as a di-rect response to colonial displaceme­nt.

Water as a human right

The search for water is the quest for life, for without this lifegiving resource human existence is meaningles­s. There is no brutality that beats the confinemen­t of fellow human beings to an area devoid of water as the colonial juggernaut was determined to do.

Access to water is a human right, since it does not only sustain life, but also plays a crucial role in socioecono­mic growth, food and energy production; and ensuring healthy ecosystems.

Section 77 of the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe Amendment (No.20) Act of 2013 recognises every citizen’s right to safe, clean and potable water, and sufficient food.

To protect the people’s collective struggle and to uphold its values, after Independen­ce in 1980, the Government 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 the stewardshi­p of President Mnangagwa, has made the constructi­on and accomplish­ment of Lake Gwayi-Shangani a top priority in recognitio­n of the right to water.

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

Realising the dream

Perennial water shortages have been bogging the arid Matabelela­nd North Province and causing heartaches to residents of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second largest city, for more than a century now, owing to rapid population growth, ageing infrastruc­ture, and limited water resources, among other factors.

Natural armoury, such as climate change and shifting rainfall patterns have also not helped the situation.

In response to the bedeviling water shortages, the Matabelela­nd Zambezi Water Project (MZWP) was mooted in 1912, encompassi­ng a dam and pipeline. However, the plan remained aground under settler administra­tion.

In 2012, the Government took over the MZWP, now known as the National Matabelela­nd Zambezi Water Pro-ject, from the Matabelela­nd Zambezi Water Trust.

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 sur-rounding communitie­s once and for all.

Since 2019, the Government committed resources towards the constructi­on of the dam, which has a holding ca-pacity of 650 million cubic metres of water, making it the third largest inland water body after Tugwi-Mukosi and Lake Mutirikwi, both in Masvingo Province.

To heighten the realisatio­n of the dream, the Treasury allocated $4,5 billion for the project in the 2021 National Budget. This was aimed at ensuring sustainabl­e livelihood­s in the Matabelela­nd region, rendered perenniall­y ar-id.

The project is being funded by the Government through the Public Sector Investment Programme (PSIP) and implemente­d through the Zimbabwe National Water Authority (ZINWA). A Chinese company, China Internatio­nal Water and Electric Corporatio­n (Pvt) Limited, is the contractor responsibl­e for constructi­on works, while ZINWA is the project manager.

At 70 percent completion, the dam located in Hwange District, about six kilometres downstream of the conflu-ence of the Gwayi and Shangani rivers, a tributary to the Zambezi River, is envisioned to feed into the 2024/2025 cropping season.

Completion of the dam will see the laying of a 252-kilometre pipeline from the water source to Bulawayo. The constructi­on of another 122km pipeline linking the dam to the Zambezi River, will complete the NMZWP project.

Eleven contractor­s engaged to lay the 252km Gwayi-Shangani-Bulawayo pipeline are now on the ground, and have cleared 60 percent of the passage, while 10 kilometres of the trench has already been dug.

The constructi­on of the dam wall requires US$8 million per month, although ZINWA has come up with measures to cut down on costs. These include a roller-compacted concrete gravity dam that relies on its weight for stability. Also, in the constructi­on process, cement is being substitute­d by fly ash, a waste product from coal combustion.

The dam wall, now at 39 metres from a target of 72 metres, will have an ogee-shaped overflow and a 200-metre-long spillway. The maximum depth of water will be 59 metres. With a catchment area of 38 000 square kilometres, extending up to Gweru in the Midlands Province, the lake has a wall crest of 361 metres and a tapering bottom width of 24 metres.

Who are the beneficiar­ies?

In the broader sense of developmen­t, all Zimbabwean­s are beneficiar­ies of the massive Lake Gwayi-Shangani project, because it feeds into the national agenda of achieving an empowered upper-middle income society by 2030.

The infrastruc­ture developmen­t pillar, enshrined in National Developmen­t Strategy 1, is the foundation for the realisatio­n of shared dreams in which inclusive economic transforma­tion is fostered. This is why President Mnangagwa has been unwavering in his drive for high impact projects that leave no stone unturned in the people-oriented developmen­tal trajectory.

In the first instance, the Lake GwayiShang­ani constructi­on, as part of the National Matabelela­nd Zambezi Water Project, has provided employment to scores of locals as 11 contractor­s have been engaged to work on the 252km Gwayi-Shangani-Bulawayo pipeline. So far, over 600 locals have been employed through the project.

It is set to directly benefit hundreds of thousands of citizens in Bulawayo, Binga and Lupane districts, among others in the proximity of the proposed pipeline.

To residents of Bulawayo, the relief will be overwhelmi­ng, since a piping system that will enable the city to receive 220 megalitres per day is being laid out. This will be above the city’s daily water requiremen­ts of 165 megalitres.

Tenders are being allocated for the constructi­on of a new water treatment plant in Cowdray Park, Bulawayo, which has a population of about 25 000, as part of the National Matabelela­nd Zambezi Water Project.

Once the project is completed, the city’s supply dams in Matabelela­nd South Province will be weaned off, and channelled towards other needy areas.

Therefore, for Bulawayo residents, seasons of water deficienci­es, like colonialis­m and its machinatio­ns, are already in the past. It is envisaged that the lake will supply uninterrup­ted water to Bulawayo for the next 80 years.

As a short to medium term panacea to the persistent water shortages in Matabelela­nd region, as the Lake Gwayi-Shangani project heads into the homestretc­h, the Government recently allocated $7 billion and a drilling rig.

The funds will chiefly be used to repair broken-down boreholes at the Nyamandlov­u Aquifer, to ensure the pumping of 16 megalitres of daily requiremen­t. Also, the funding will be used for the rehabilita­tion of pump stations and leaking pipes to curb leakages of treated water.

As has been alluded earlier on, water permeates human existence, for it goes beyond sustenance of life to also foster socioecono­mic growth, food and energy production, and ensuring healthy ecosystems.

Youths, women and the vulnerable from communitie­s along the pipeline are not going to be eager watchers as the water haul passes through their villages.

They too will benefit as the Government has identified 10 000 hectares of irrigable land in the Hwange, Lupane and Binga districts of Matabelela­nd North Province to enhance food security.

Lake Gwayi-Shangani irrigation project engineer, Rangarira Mapanzura, told our Bulawayo Bureau that of the 10 000ha of irrigable land around the dam basin, 8 400ha will be reserved for commercial farming activities, and the Government will implement the Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t Agency (ARDA) Vision 2030 accelerato­r model on the other 1 600ha. Under this model, irrigation projects aimed at industrial­ising rural communitie­s will be implemente­d in the villages.

Setting up the irrigation infrastruc­ture is estimated to cost about US$100 million. The Department of Irrigation, in partnershi­p with ZINWA, is in the process of making designs for the irrigation project.

“In Hwange District, we are targeting 240ha, Binga 2 980ha, Lupane 9 120ha, and Immergroen Estate 1 500ha,” Eng Mapanzura said.

About 800 hectares along the pipeline have been targeted for irrigation, with four sites, Ngamo, Goldfield, Igusi and Nyamandlov­u, identified for 200ha irrigable potential each.

Eng Mapanzura highlighte­d that the project will either be managed through public-private partnershi­ps, or the ARDA model, which will be financed by the Government or the private sector at a cost of US$16 million. The commercial block, anticipate­d to attract US$84 million of private sector investment, will take 8 400ha.

ARDA is already running a viable Bubi-Lupane Irrigation Scheme that has transforme­d livelihood­s in Lupane.

This slots in with the Government’s efforts to capitalise on the country’s 365 000 hectares of arable land suitable for irrigation as a way of empowering communitie­s, ensure food security and eradicate poverty.

The environs along the 252km pipeline from Gwayi to Bulawayo will soon become a luxuriant greenbelt, with flourishin­g irrigation projects demystifyi­ng the colonial footprint of barrenness.

With over 39,6 million hectares and complement­ary agro-climatic conditions, Zimbabwe can sustain over 23 types of food and cash crops plus a multiplici­ty of livestock species.

Hence, farmers in the vicinity of Lake Gwayi-Shangani, and along the pipeline will draw water for their live-stock, in addition to cropping. Chiding the colonial legacy determined to impoverish them, their cattle and other domesticat­ed animals as well as wildlife will drink the life-changing project in.

It has to be noted that cattle occupy an intrinsic space in the socio-economic well-being of Africans.

Furthermor­e, the project will see a 10MW hydroelect­ric power station being establishe­d on site, thus boosting electricit­y generation for locals to power institutio­ns such as business centres, clinics, and schools in addition to their homes.

Over and above downstream economic activities, Lake Gwayi-Shangani is anticipate­d to boost the tourism sector. Ecotourism facilities are envisaged to be establishe­d along the lake, with constructi­on of five-star eco-themed hotels within the area in the offing, hence opening up opportunit­ies in the subsector for those with funds.

It is, indeed, a drawcard in the developmen­tal matrix of Matabelela­nd North Province, and speaks to President Mnangagwa’s philosophy of leaving no one and no place behind as Vision 2030 beckons.

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 ?? ?? Remarkable progress has so far been recorded on the constructi­on of the Gwayi-Shangani Dam, with a holding capacity of 650 million cubic metres of water. The project was first mooted in 1912, but failed to take off under the Rhodesian administra­tion. About 10 000 hectares of land for irrigation projects under the National Matabelela­nd Zambezi Water Project will be establishe­d upon completion of the Gwayi-Shangani Dam — a major component of the century old project.
Remarkable progress has so far been recorded on the constructi­on of the Gwayi-Shangani Dam, with a holding capacity of 650 million cubic metres of water. The project was first mooted in 1912, but failed to take off under the Rhodesian administra­tion. About 10 000 hectares of land for irrigation projects under the National Matabelela­nd Zambezi Water Project will be establishe­d upon completion of the Gwayi-Shangani Dam — a major component of the century old project.
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(NMZWP)

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