NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Hwange seam fires, a time bomb

- BY PRESTIGE MUNTANGA ● Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

GOVERNMENT has described the undergroun­d seam fires in Hwange, Matabelela­nd North province as a ticking ‘atomic’ bomb after a picture of one of the smoulderin­g fires that cracked wide open a tarred road went viral.

The picture showed the danger facing motorists, residents and wild animals.

On Tuesday, a coal fire cut through the road that links Number Two (Madumabisa village) and Number Three (Makwika village) Hwange Colliery Company (HCC) concession areas.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on George Charamba said the incident was worrying and urged the colliery to act.

“Major disaster looming. I am told this is right in the middle of the road linking Number Three in Hwange.

“This is similar to walking over a ticking atomic bomb.

“Hwange Colliery Company must act now,” Charamba tweeted on Wednesday after the picture went viral.

Matabelela­nd North Provincial Affairs and Devolution minister Richard Moyo said: “I will get in touch with the environmen­tal management department and assign it to investigat­e the damage so that we can know how to solve the disaster.”

HCC public relations manager Beauty Mutombe confirmed the incident.

“It is true that an undergroun­d fire broke out and destroyed roads.

“We will soon be releasing a statement for the benefit of the media and citizens,” Mutombe said.

Farai Maguwu, co-ordinator of the Centre for Natural Resource Governance (CNRG), which has been documentin­g several cases of villagers, in particular children, being burnt by undergroun­d coal fires said that was an emergency.

“We have constantly raised alarm about the raging coal fires in Hwange that are destroying lives.

“Government and the mining companies must act before a massive tragedy happens,” Maguwu said.

On November 8 this year, 8-year-old girl Alisha Muzvite suffered serious burns and had to be taken to Bulawayo’s Mpilo Central Hospital for medical attention after she was burnt by the fires.

A coal seam fire is an undergroun­d burning coal fire.

It can burn for decades and can self-ignite through spontaneou­s combustion.

Because of lack of oxygen, it usually smoulders unnoticed until the ground opens.

 ?? ?? Pic: Nizbert Moyo
Luveve-Cowdray Park Member of Parliament Stella Ndlovu (in red dress and white jacket) at the commission­ing of a state-of-the-art borehole in Gwabalanda on Wednesday. The borehole was donated by Ruwa for Life in partnershi­p with Lot Project which is being spearheade­d by a USA-based donor, Innocent Hadebe after realising that the constituen­cy had lost 11 people due to dysentery and left more than 1 000 others affected.
Pic: Nizbert Moyo Luveve-Cowdray Park Member of Parliament Stella Ndlovu (in red dress and white jacket) at the commission­ing of a state-of-the-art borehole in Gwabalanda on Wednesday. The borehole was donated by Ruwa for Life in partnershi­p with Lot Project which is being spearheade­d by a USA-based donor, Innocent Hadebe after realising that the constituen­cy had lost 11 people due to dysentery and left more than 1 000 others affected.

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