Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Teacher dies panning for gold

- Munyaradzi Musiiwa & Sharon Chimenya Sunday News Reporters

A MATHEMATIC­S teacher from Zvishavane, who had absconded work to go and conduct illegal mining, died after he fell headlong into a 15-metre deep mine shaft while lowering his colleague with a rope.

The incident occurred last Wednesday when Pesanai Chiresve (42), of Izaya Park in Zvishavane who is a teacher at George Chipadza Secondary School in the asbestos mining town fell headlong into the mine shaft while conducting illegal gold mining at Hall 8 Mine.

National police spokespers­on Assistant Commission­er Paul Nyathi confirmed the incident saying police in Zvishavane attended the scene and Chiresve’s body, was taken to Zvishavane District Hospital mortuary awaiting post-mortem.

Sources at the mine said on the day, Chiresve was mining with friends Enias Makaya (51) of Izaya Park, Tafadzwa Makasi (21) of Dadaya and Cleopas Gumbochuma (49) of Hillview, Zvishavane. The source said when Chiresve was lowering Makasi into the mine shaft, which is about 15 metres deep, using a manual hoist, he lost control of the hoist leading to him falling headlong into the shaft. He died instantly. The source said Makasi who was already in the shaft came out and informed the others who reported the matter to the police.

Meanwhile, in Masvingo, schoolchil­dren in some parts of the province are venturing into gold panning and even prostituti­on due to poverty.

Zimbabwe National Family Planning Council (ZNFPC) Masvingo provincial education and marketing officer Mr Herbert Chikosi said cases of sexually transmitte­d diseases, high teenage pregnancie­s, early child marriages, alcohol and substance abuse were now on the increase among the children.

In an interview Mr Chikosi said idleness was partly to blame as some children last went to school in March. He said in instances some girls as young as Grade Six in Gutu and Bikita Districts are turning to gold panning while some are now employed as maids.

“Almost 40 percent of children from Grade Six to Form Six in a community went for gold panning. The first three months were okay because the youths were hopeful that schools will open and also they were busy in the fields and herding cattle. Thereafter the following three months there was no hope of reopening and the Covid-19 had affected the livelihood issues. Most of the boys went for gold panning and some tried going to South Africa.

“We are now realising that in Chivi and in Mwenezi along Runde River there is gold panning. It means they want to get extra cash to survive at home. The environmen­t that is along Runde is survival of the fittest so the young girls end up involved in prostituti­on,” he said.

He said that from the interactio­ns that they are having from their community-based workers, three children from Gutu District were admitted to a local hospital after they were intoxicate­d. Mr Chikosi said parents have limited appreciati­on of the parent to child communicat­ion and there was a missing gap in addressing sexuality education.

“Lockdown created a vacuum in which schools were closed and the community-based workers were operating from home so it was difficult for people to access services and it created a lot of challenges among young people. Parents have limited appreciati­on of the parent to child communicat­ion in terms of sexual education. A parent would say as far as sex education is concerned pupils will learn it from school and so the missing link was the parent as the children are at home.”

He said his organisati­on has however engaged the parents to have an appreciati­on of Comprehens­ive Sexual Education because the more they talk to their children the more they become responsibl­e.

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