The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Chisema decries land degradatio­n

- Tawanda Mangoma in CHIREDZI

CHIREDZI district administra­tor Mr Lovemore Chisema has lamented rampant land degradatio­n in resettleme­nt areas across the district and attributed it to poor farming methods.

Mr Chisema said land degradatio­n was fuelling siltation of rivers and dams in the district where irrigation was the bedrock of food security.

This comes as the Environmen­tal Management Agency has raised a red flag, saying plans to create a greenbelt in the Lowveld now hang in the balance because of rampant siltation of water sources.

Mr Chisema told The Herald in an interview that there was growing concern over the pace at which the environmen­t was being ravaged.

“We are alarmed at the rate at which farmers are failing to preserve their pieces of land through basic farming practices which used to be religiousl­y employed in the past,’’ he said.

“Back then, Agritex officials would put more emphasis on the need to make terraces on steep slopes, use of drains to minimise erosion and capture excess water but if you undertake a snap survey in most of our resettleme­nt areas here today, farmers are very much reluctant to do all this.’’

Mr Chisema said there was need for urgent interventi­on to arrest land degradatio­n before the situation spirals out of control.

He cited the threat of siltation to perenniall­y-flowing rivers in the area such as Chiredzi, Runde, Save and Mwenezi due to rampant land degradatio­n.

“A look at big perenniall­y flowing rivers that pass through the district shows they are under serious threat from siltation and their water holding capacity continues to recede gradually raising the need for urgent measures to preserve them for the benefit of future generation­s,’’ he said.

Mr Chisema said it was incumbent upon communitie­s in the Lowveld to be alive to the dangers of environmen­tal degradatio­n as their survival hinged on availabili­ty of water for irrigation to produce food.

“We need the perenniall­y flowing rivers for irrigation purposes and even the much talked about Tugwi-Mukosi Dam can only irrigate the anticipate­d 25 000 hectares here if we preserve our environmen­t,’’ said Mr Chisema.

He lamented a spike in the number of farmers practising stream-bank cultivatio­n across the district saying ensuring food security will remain a pipe dream in Chiredzi unless measures were put to arrest land degradatio­n.

Chiredzi Rural District Council ward 10 Councillor Hardlife Tiyisa said siltation had choked the once vibrant Chilonga Irrigation Scheme in the district.

He said siltation of Runde River had led to inadequate water supplies to the scheme which used to be the lifeblood of communitie­s in the arid southern Chiredzi.

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