The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Sand mining spirals out of control

- Muchaneta Chimuka

LARGE swatches of land around the country are being disembowel­led by illegal sand miners who are trying to keep up with demand from various mushroomin­g housing developing schemes.

The ever-increasing demand for housing in every part of the country has spurred constructi­on activity. But while this is a welcome developmen­t in reducing the housing backlog, it is fuelling sand poaching.

Pit and river sand are inherently crucial materials in any constructi­on work.

However, much of these materials are being sourced illegally. Even the dead no longer know any peace as graveyards that stand in the way of poachers are now being desecrated like never before.

At Zinyengere graveyard in Epworth, sand poachers have destroyed several graves, with remains being tossed into a nearby dam.

“It is a sorry state. Graves have been opened by these sand poachers and some of the remains are being thrown into the nearby dam. The dam happens to be the source of water for drinking and other domestic use for this community,” said Douglas Utete, secretary for Zinyengere Developmen­t Associatio­n ( ZDA).

ZDA chairperso­n Joel Mupfudza claims that most areas under constructi­on in Epworth and Hopley are yet to be regularise­d by the Harare City Council and the Epworth Local Board.

“More than 30 graves were tempered with by sand poachers in illegal sand extraction. The challenge is people are just allocating themselves stands, and this is fuelling rampant sand poaching activities in the area,” he said.

The Sunday Mail Society and ZDA officials were recently manhandled by angry sand poachers after visiting the desecrated cemetery.

“What is it that you want to ask us? We saw you taking pictures. Just wait and see what we are going to do to you. I will kill and bury you in this cemetery,”charged one of the sand poachers who was armed with stones and a machete.

Rodney Mupfudza (41), a local resident, said people generally fear the dreaded sand gangs.

“Last year I almost lost my life when they charged towards us wielding machetes. This was after we approached them together with ZDA on an awareness campaign to fight sand poaching. We had to run for dear life,” he said.

It is believed that the sand poachers have also attacked police details in the past.

“The sand poachers have become a menace. They randomly dig pits and are a law unto themselves. They attack anyone who tries to stop them, even the police if they are not armed,” bemoaned Dr Wilton Mhanda, Epworth Local Board’s town secretary.

Although most jurisdicti­ons have legal limits on the location and volume of sand that can be extracted, illegal sand mining is flourishin­g in many parts of the world.

While the menace has been in existence since time immemorial, authoritie­s reckon it has now gone out of hand. Environmen­tal Management Authority ( EMA) has since launched a blitz to curb the vice. Sand poaching is a crime under Statutory Instrument ( SI) 3 of 2001.

It is outlawed under ( SI) 7 of 2007 Environmen­t Management Act (Environmen­tal Impact Assessment & Ecosystems Protection) Regulation­s.

“A total of 19 offenders have since been issued with tickets for vending sand or having sand sourced through poaching. Also, 17 Environmen­tal Protection Orders ( EPOs) were issued to prohibit sand vending,”revealed EMA environmen­tal education and publicity manager Amkela Sidange.

Chaos

Hyde Park Cemetery in Bulawayo once faced a similar predicamen­t a couple of years back. The situation only normalised after authoritie­s were forced to take action by angry residents who besieged the Bulawayo City Council offices for recourse.

Sand poachers, who are often armed with picks and shovels, invariably leave a trail of unreclaime­d pits in their wake, which pose a danger to both humans and animals. Unfortunat­ely, residents and industrial companies subsequent­ly use some of the disused pits as dumpsites for all sorts of waste. It is, however, feared the pits would become dangerous deep pools when the rainy season begins.

Pressure

is ratcheting up pressure. They are currently conducting raids on both sand vending sites and those in possession of sand sourced through poaching.

Without taking action, the consequenc­es could be dire. Instream mining and sand poaching tends to lower the stream’s bottom, which may lead to bank erosion, including flooding.

Depletion of sand in the streambed and along coastal areas also causes the deepening of rivers and estuaries, including the enlargemen­t of river mouths and coastal inlets. According to Sidange, there is need for a systematic approach to sand abstractio­n.

“. . . to that end, EMA upon local authoritie­s designate sand abstractio­n sites which they should manage, and ensure sand abstractio­n is done in a regulated manner from registered sites to prevent poaching, and without harming the environmen­t,” she said.

Sand poaching and mining are some main activi- are blamed for tion.

A recent survey done by EMA shows that is calling to of the ties that land degradaa total of 11 163 ha of land and a stretch of 1 555km of riverine ecosystems have been degraded countrywid­e due to illegal mining activities.

The survey identified degraded mining hotspot areas in order to guide decision-making and regulation­s.

 ??  ?? A concerned citizen points at one of the destroyed graves
A concerned citizen points at one of the destroyed graves

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