The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Mining shouldn’t displace communitie­s — President

- Leroy Dzenga in UZUMBA

THE Government will not allow mining companies to displace communitie­s from their ancestral lands and those communitie­s should have the final say on the operations of mineral extraction companies on their land, President Mnangagwa said yesterday.

Addressing thousands of Zanu PF supporters during a rally at Chidodo Primary School in Uzumba after attending the memorial service of the late former Zimbabwe Prisons and Correction­al Services Commission­er-General, Major General Paradzai Zimondi, President Mnangagwa said foreign investors were welcome in Zimbabwe, but they should respect the country’s laws and customs.

“We do not want people who come to do mining in an area and disrupt people’s ways of lives,” said the President.

“Communitie­s come first and that should be respected. No mining should happen unless the people and their community leadership agree.

“If the community says a project cannot go on, that should be final.

“I heard that there were people who wanted to do mining on school premises. That is unacceptab­le.

“I told the Minister of State for Provincial Affairs and Devolution (for Mashonalan­d East, Apollonia Munzvereng­wi), that all those who try and impose their projects on communitie­s should be reported.”

He said foreign investment is welcome in Zimbabwe, but the country should set the rules of engagement.

A foreign miner was recently stopped from operating in Uzumba after pegging a claim on a piece of land housing close to 70 homesteads.

He said in order to fulfil his vision, Government is implementi­ng rural industrial­isation projects countrywid­e.

“In Mutoko, they produce a lot of horticultu­re, but they used to travel to Harare incurring high transport costs and sometimes being subjected to unfair prices at Mbare and other major markets.

“So, we decided to open a tomato processing factory; those with tomatoes are now selling to the factory which in turn value adds,” said President Mnangagwa.

He said the same developmen­t model was being replicated in Mwenezi, Masvingo Province where he recently commission­ed a marula processing plant.

“We want to make sure that every district has its own factory which processes natural resources that are abundant in that respective area.

“For instance, we have plans to set up a facility which processes masawu into marketable products in Mount Darwin.

“No one should be left behind,” the President added.

President Mnangagwa said over the next four years, the Government will drill over 35 000 boreholes, one in every village countrywid­e under a programme meant to boost horticultu­re production.

“The boreholes we are referring to are not rudimentar­y labour intensive boreholes, but solar-powered boreholes.

“Each community will have its own horticultu­re project which will generate revenue for communitie­s.”

Turning to the late Major General Zimondi, President Mnagagwa said the national hero was an astute agent of rural developmen­t.

He described the late Major General Zimondi as a compassion­ate and fair leader who wanted the best out of everyone.

“When Zimondi notified me that he was retiring, I told him that he should rest for a few months only as I had another assignment for him. Unfortunat­ely, he died before I could give him that assignment,” said President Mnangagwa.

The President was accompanie­d by Vice President and Health and Child Care Minister Dr Constantin­o Chiwenga, Zanu PF Second Secretary Cde Kembo Mohadi, Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi, Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t Minister Felix Mhona and several other senior Government officials.

The Government has been honouring national heroes who died from Covid-19 related complicati­ons and had to be buried under stringent conditions.

Last weekend, President Mnangagwa was in Mberengwa for late Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade Minister Dr Sibusiso Moyo’s memorial.

Major General Zimondi, whose Chimurenga name was Cde Tonderai Nyika, succumbed to complicati­ons related to Covid-19 and was buried at the National Heroes Acre on the same day as former Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade Minister Dr Sibusiso Moyo and former Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t Minister Dr Biggie Matiza in an historic triple burial at the national shrine.

 ?? — Picture: Believe Nyakudjara ?? President Mnangagwa converses with Cde Kembo Mohadi (right) while Vice President Constantin­o Chiwenga looks on at Chidodo Primary School in Uzumba yesterday before he addressed supporters.
ZANU PF
— Picture: Believe Nyakudjara President Mnangagwa converses with Cde Kembo Mohadi (right) while Vice President Constantin­o Chiwenga looks on at Chidodo Primary School in Uzumba yesterday before he addressed supporters. ZANU PF

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