Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

ZPC commences building houses for 600 families

- Rutendo Nyeve Sunday News Correspond­ent

THE Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) has started the constructi­on of houses at Empumalang­a suburb in Hwange for the relocation of more than 600 families from Ingagula who have been exposed to pollution due to the suburb’s proximity to the massive power plant, which is undergoing expansion works.

The relocation which requires a budget of US$87 million is ZPC’s internal initiative and has the support of the Environmen­tal Management Authority (EMA). A total of 636 housing units will be built according to the scope of the housing project with 144 housing units under engineerin­g, procuremen­t, and constructi­on (EPC) Contractor and overall completion stands at 76 percent with 31 August being the expected date of completion.

Zesa General Manager responsibl­e for Stakeholde­r Relations, Communicat­ions and Welfare Dr George Manyaya confirmed the

MORE than 228 000 resettled farmers have tendered farm productivi­ty reports from last year to Government in compliance with new regulation­s to ensure optimum use of farmland.

About 80 percent of A2 farmers who were resettled during the Land Reform Programme met the February 15 deadline to submit their production returns, while 60 percent of all A1 farmers beat the cutoff date. Last year, the Ministry of Lands, Agricultur­e, Fisheries, Water and Rural Developmen­t invoked the Agricultur­al Marketing Authority Act, which compels farmers to submit mandatory production returns to Government annually. commenceme­nt of the constructi­on works which he said is being done in phases.

“Zimbabwe Power Company has commenced the constructi­on of houses at Empumalang­a suburb in Hwange for the relocation of more than 600 families from Ingagula. The Ingagula suburb which has been in existence for decades, has been exposed to coal dust due to its proximity to Hwange Power Station. The housing project

Authoritie­s are now set to deploy Agricultur­al Technical and Extension Services (Agritex) officers to undertake separate audits to authentica­te farmers’ submission­s.

Auditing of farm records is expected to expose multiple farm owners, including abandoned, rundown and underutili­sed farms that will be appropriat­ed for redistribu­tion to some of the 200 000 people on the waiting list.

Nearly 380 000 A1 and A2 farmers – all beneficiar­ies of the Land Reform Programme – are affected by the exercise. Lands, Agricultur­e, Fisheries, Water and Rural Developmen­t Permanent Secretary Dr John Basera said response to the call for submission of production records has been “incredible”. therefore seeks to evacuate residents from the effects of the dust. Constructi­on works are being conducted in different phases with the setting out, excavation­s, and concrete footings having been completed,” said Dr Manyaya.

He further revealed that the project was being done in line with environmen­tally friendly initiative­s that do not cause harm to people the environmen­t. “The Project is part of ZPC’s Relocation Action Plan (RAP) which upholds environmen­tally friendly initiative­s with zero harm to people, plant and environmen­t. Apart from building houses for the Ingagula residents, ZPC is also constructi­ng houses for families that were displaced due to the new transmissi­on and distributi­on line for Hwange 7 and 8 expansion project,” said Dr Manyaya.

The project is expected to create more jobs for the coal mining town which has already benefited from more than 3 000 jobs created during the expansion exercise. It is also in line with the Second Republic’s Vision 2030, which aims to transform Zimbabwe into an upper middle-income economy. — @ nyeve14.

Net closes in on unproducti­ve farmers

“Of course the offtake was a little bit slow. Obviously some farmers were a little bit sceptical on submitting their returns, but it is now a statutory requiremen­t that they submit the returns every February. So far, in terms of submission­s of production and productivi­ty returns, we are looking at over 60 percent now. For A2 farmers, I am pretty sure that we are over 80 percent now. But A1 farmers that’s where we need to disseminat­e more informatio­n on the importance of production and productivi­ty returns.”

The reports, he said, would guide Government in formulatin­g policy conducive to increased agricultur­al production. Crucially, informatio­n gathered is expected to assist the ministry, through Provincial Land Committees (PLCs), to carry out the new policy on land focusing on redistribu­tion of abandoned, derelict and underutili­sed farms as well as address multiple land ownership.

Previously, Government said farmers who fail to submit their returns will be deemed to be in the above categories and their farms may be offered to PLCs for reallocati­on to those on the waiting list. Farmers who submit false informatio­n also risk having their offer letters withdrawn.

“We need those reports so that we are able to make policy and to inform policy in terms of what challenges our farmers are facing. Production and productivi­ty returns inform Government in terms of the amount of land being utilised; the amount of resources being utilised, because these are key ingredient­s to agricultur­al transforma­tion.

However, the reports submitted so far indicate significan­t growth in production,” he said.

 ?? ?? Dr George Manyaya
Dr George Manyaya

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