NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Uzumba villagers block Chinese miner

- BY TAFADZWA KACHIKO Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

VillagerS in ward 14 (Nhakiwa), Uzumba constituen­cy are against the proposed granite mining project by a Chinese company Heijin and have since written to the Mines and Mining Developmen­t ministry through their leaders raising their objections.

Heijin wants to mine in Nenzou village, Kaseke 1256BM and Chibvi Me1253BM, blocks covering more than 300 hectares.

Councillor Zvondai Marowa, Nenzou village head Sailors Kaseke and Chief Nyajina have all appealed to the Mines ministry for its interventi­on.

in an august 23 letter to the ministry, Marowa said 39 families would be displaced contrary to Heijin director emmanuel Ndemera’s claims that only five households would be affected.

He accused the company of pegging the area without consulting villagers.

Marowa said villagers were objecting to displaceme­nt from their ancestral land.

The area, he said, was grazing land for the whole community and the mining activities would also result in desecratio­n of graves of freedom fighters buried in the sacred Chemadende Mountain.

“We believe that tampering with these traditiona­l and cultural sites will have a negative impact on our society,” Marowa said.

“The negative externalit­ies arising from the mining activities such as dust, chemical emissions and pollution of water sources and air will have a negative impact on the environmen­t in general.”

On august 24, Kaseke also wrote to the ministry with other signatorie­s, lovemore Kaseke and Tozivepi Nyamuridzo, identified as committee members, citing the same reasons.

“We (villagers) and others from surroundin­g villages are against the mining of granite in our area by Ndemera’s company which came and put pegs without the residents’ approval,” he said.

in his letter, Chief Nyajina said: “i am objecting to proposed mining plans for Kaseke and Chibvi 2 by Heijin Mining Company

because i was not consulted. There are at least 39 families who will be affected. We don’t have any place to resettle these people. There are sacred shrines in the hills for our ancestors.

“Villages that will also be affected by the project are Chimina,

Mukonzi, Manyani, Machanzi and gotora.”

efforts to contact Ndemera were futile, but he is on record as having apologised for not following due process.

 ?? Pic: Aaron Ufumeli ?? Lovemore Tauro, a teacher at Oceanwaves Junior School, checks the temperatur­e of Grade 7 pupils at the school premises in Granary near Whitecliff­e, Harare, on Monday when examinatio­n classes resumed classes
Pic: Aaron Ufumeli Lovemore Tauro, a teacher at Oceanwaves Junior School, checks the temperatur­e of Grade 7 pupils at the school premises in Granary near Whitecliff­e, Harare, on Monday when examinatio­n classes resumed classes

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