NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Hwange to twin with Namibia, SA towns

- BY SILAS NKALA ● Follow Silas on Twitter @silasnkala

HWANGE Local Board (HLB) plans to twin with Namibian and South African local authoritie­s to improve service delivery in the coal mining town.

The arrangemen­ts will also boost wildlife tourism and fruit farming initiative­s.

A recent report by HLB town secretary Ndumiso Mdlalose stated that the local authority has already begun twinning arrangemen­ts with Gobabis Municipali­ty in the Omaheke region of Namibia, and another twinning arrangemen­t with Ba Phalaborwa Municipali­ty in the Limpopo province of South Africa.

“The twinning processes should commence in earnest. Officials from the local authoritie­s are set to visit each other to engage in the twinning arrangemen­ts, and lookand-learn missions,” Mdlalose said.

“Cities like Victoria Falls, Bulawayo and Mutare have comprehens­ive twinning arrangemen­ts, which we will be referring to from time-to-time,” he said.

Financing of the twinning programmes was included in HLB’s 2022 budget.

“In SA, we also signed a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) in respect of the Trans-Limpopo Spatial Developmen­t Initiative. Part of that MoU states that we are supposed to twin with Ba Phalaborwa Municipali­ty.

The Trans-Limpopo Spatial Developmen­t Initiative was proposed in 1998 with an MoU signed in March 2001 between South Africa’s Limpopo province and the Matabelela­nd region.

The initiative aims to create an economic corridor from Limpopo province through to Victoria Falls to promote trade and economic developmen­t in the Trans-Limpopo corridor as well as facilitati­ng the flow of traffic and other movements between the two countries.

Ba Phalaborwa Municipali­ty is situated in the north-eastern part of SA and is one of the five local authoritie­s in the Mopani district of the Limpopo province.

Known as the Marula wilderness and wildlife tourism, it is said to have a strong resemblanc­e to Hwange, which is also well known for the baobab fruit and being home to Africa’s biggest wildlife sanctuary, the Hwange National Park.

“We have also been told to consider twinning outside the region, with countries that are friendly to us, and can give us something to learn from,” Mdlalose said.

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