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Dying
rivers dry up livelihoods
IRIN
News
April 25, 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/95354/ZIMBABWE-Dying-rivers-dry-up-livelihoods
Thousands of poor Zimbabweans
have turned to illegal panning for precious minerals, but environmental
and water experts say their activities are contributing to the drying
up of rivers which many communities rely on for their livelihoods.
"Siltation of rivers
is becoming endemic in the country, particularly in regions where
there is acute illegal panning of minerals, especially gold. Rivers
have been reduced to rivulets," said the Zimbabwe National
Water Authority (ZINWA) in a November 2011 statement aimed at drawing
attention to the country's "dying rivers and water bodies"
and their impact on downstream communities.
Illegal gold mining is
common along rivers that run close to the Great Dyke, a hilly mineral-rich
belt which cuts across most of the country, and is concentrated
in Mashonaland Central, West, East and Midlands provinces. Diamond
panning is associated with the Chiadzwa District of Manicaland.
According to John Robertson,
a Harare-based economic consultant, people began turning to gold
panning in large numbers in the early 1990s when the country was
hit by poor harvests due to droughts and job layoffs resulting from
the government's economic structural adjustment programme.
"The damage caused
by illegal mining is enormous. It is a vicious cycle as people are
taking to panning in order to earn a living, but in the end their
activities are causing untold degradation," Robertson told
IRIN.
Monica Mapeka, a 24-year-old
single mother of two from rural Murewa District, about 100km northeast
of Harare, the capital, regularly visits the banks of Mazowe river,
a tributary of the River Zambezi which passes through the area,
in search of alluvial gold. Armed with a pick, shovel and container,
and clad in muddy overalls, she joins hundreds of other illegal
gold panners popularly known as `makorokoza' in digging up
the riverbed.
From dusk until dawn,
she and two other women work together to mix the earth they have
dug up with water and move it in circular motions in containers
until they are left with small quantities of mud containing shiny
yellow particles of alluvial gold.
"On a lucky day,
we get something like two ounces that we sell for US$40 and share
the money. If you work hard enough, it's easy to get rich,"
said Mapeka. "We are single mothers and have to do something
to fend for our children and other members of the extended family,
otherwise we will starve and walk in rags."
Mercury
pollution
In an effort to concentrate
their yield, the `makorokoza' often mix the residual ore with
mercury, a practice that Steady Kangata, the education and publicity
manager for the Environmental Management Authority (EMA), said created
a health hazard for people and animals downstream.
"Mercury has the
tendency to accumulate in the bodies of animals and humans who consume
it, and in the case of people, if it gathers to a certain level,
it can cause hair loss and the breakdown of the nervous system,"
he said.
In recent decades, Mairosi
Mangwende, 60, also from Murewa, has witnessed Mazowe river degenerate
from a fast-flowing waterway which was too deep to cross during
the raining season, to a muddy trickle. The activities of the illegal
miners have marked the river bed with deep holes and gullies where
the water collects in small rivulets that quickly dry up. The large
amount of soil they dig up is eventually washed away by rain, silting
up the river downstream.
"Almost throughout
the year, we would get fish to eat at home and sell but that is
no longer the case," said Mangwende. "The cattle and
goats are suffering because they cannot drink this muddy water."
He added that households
used to own as many as 50 cattle, but that it had become rare for
a family to have even eight beasts, partly because of the scarcity
of drinking water for livestock.
Vegetable gardens that
used to dot the river banks had also virtually disappeared, said
Mangwende, and households could no longer rely on the income they
earned from selling produce from riverside gardens.
Diamond
mining
Zimbabwe's largest
river, the River Save, which flows east towards Mozambique and the
Indian Ocean, is another victim of illegal mining. Diamond
mining at Chiadzwa, where thousands flocked after the discovery
of alluvial diamonds in 2005, has contributed to the drying up of
the river and the many communal livelihood activities it supported
such as gardening, smallholder irrigation projects and bricklaying.
ZINWA has called for
stiffer penalties for illegal mining and urged greater joint action
with the mines ministry, EMA and the Wildlife Management Authority,
while EMA has carried out joint operations with the police to arrest
the illegal panners.
According to Mapeka,
such efforts have had little effect: "There is so much poverty
and some of these police officers take bribes to let us continue."
Climate
change
According to a 2010 report
on climate change vulnerability and adaptation preparedness in Southern
Africa commissioned by the German organization, Heinrich Böll
Stiftung, rising temperatures and droughts are also playing a role
in the drying up of Zimbabwe's rivers.
The report predicted
that rates of evapo-transpiration from river basins will continue
to increase as temperatures rise while runoff was projected to decline,
with the Zambezi Basin the worst affected.
"It is often the
case that when people's livelihoods are threatened, as has
happened in the case of rivers running dry, they tend to look for
alternative survival opportunities that the environment can provide,"
said Unganai. "For instance, they invade the forests and cut
down trees, leading to deforestation that in turn causes massive
runoff that further silts up the rivers."
Robertson said siltation
was reducing water volumes in downstream dams and would eventually
affect agriculture. "We still have commercial farming activities
that are fed by existing dams but siltation will finally affect
them, leading to hundreds of families losing their sources of income
when breadwinners lose their jobs," he told IRIN.
Communities that have
been heavily dependent on rivers for their livelihoods need to be
helped to look for other sources of income away from the river courses,
said William Nduku of the Forum for Environmental Education.
"Faced by dying
rivers, the best option is to relocate livelihood activities from
those water bodies to the homesteads through the provision of communal
water points such as boreholes which can be effective in communal
or smallholder market gardening while also providing water for livestock
and other uses," he said.
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