NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Ncube must formalise artisanal miners in 2021 budget: Zela

- BY HARRIET CHIKANDIWA/STEPHEN CHADENGA

FINANCE minister Mthuli Ncube has been urged to include policy reforms in the 2021 national budget which will decriminal­ise artisanal mining activities, given the reports that small-scale miners were actually remitting more gold than big mines to Fidelity Printers and Refiners.

This was said by the Zimbabwe Environmen­tal Lawyers Associatio­n (Zela) in its 2021 budget proposal paper presented in Parliament early this week.

The organisati­on has also petitioned Parliament to investigat­e machete gangs that are terrorisin­g artisanal miners.

Speaker of the National Assembly, Jacob Mudenda has since referred the petition to the Edmond Mkaratigwa­led Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Mines.

“Formalisat­ion of the sector will help to reduce revenue illicit flows from the artisanal and small scale miners. There are low levels of tax compliance in the ASM players, largely because they are treated as illegal and there is inadequate financial support to the sector,” the Zela statement on the 2021 budget read.

“The informalit­y of the ASM activities has jeopardise­d the capacity of the sector to contribute towards domestic resource mobilisati­on of the country.”

In 2019, artisanal miners accounted for 63% (17 478,74kgs) of total gold deliveries (27 650,26 kgs) to the government’s sole buyer.

Zela noted that the artisanal miners sector had also been associated with a number of disputes arising from multiple claim ownership.

“There is no transparen­cy in the awarding of claims, and this has fuelled corruption, leading to loss of claims by women and men in the sector. Ultimately, this has affected livelihood­s for a number of women.”

Centre for Conflict Management and Transforma­tion (CCMT) director Wonder Phiri yesterday said women should play an active role in the mining sector to promote economic recovery.

Phiri said this during the launch of a collaborat­ive research done by CCMT and the Midlands State University Gender Institute which looked at challenges and opportunit­ies for women in Zvishavane district.

“This research paper is being launched at a time the country’s economic recovery is being anchored on the mining sector. It cannot be business as usual without women involvemen­t in mining. Women’s involvemen­t should go beyond selling trinkets at mining spots,” he said.

Phiri added that there was need to solve all gender disparitie­s in the mining sector, as well as to address mining conflicts that deter women from participat­ing in mining activities.

 ??  ?? Finance minister Mthuli Ncube
Finance minister Mthuli Ncube

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe