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Crackdown
on illegal mining has unforeseen consequences
IRIN News
April 16, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=71631
GOKWE - A controversial
police crackdown on illegal mining late last year, followed by an
environmental rehabilitation project in which small-scale farmers
in central Zimbabwe were forced to participate, has left them struggling
to find their feet and adversely affected food security.
Police arrested more
than 20,000 "illegal miners" across the country in Operation
Chikorokoza Chapera (No to Illegal Mining), which began in November
2006, and then rounded up local people and forced them to work on
restoring the landscape. Many left their homes for safer places,
while small-scale farmers were forced to abandon their fields in
the planting season.
Faced with the world's
highest annual inflation rate - more than 1,700 percent - and 80
percent unemployment, thousands of Zimbabweans, including professionals,
have abandoned their jobs to dig for minerals in rural areas across
the country.
Illegal gold panners,
known as 'makorokoza', left a trail of gullies and pits in Gokwe,
a cotton-farming district in Midlands Province, about 260km west
of the capital, Harare.
Many subsistence farmers
had to give up working on their plots, and abandoned and now derelict
thatched huts dot the countryside in and around Chevecheve village
in Gokwe. Some residents have returned, but a number of huts remain
unoccupied.
"The police came
and raided the area, arresting a number of the makorokoza and, after
several crackdowns, the gold panners disappeared. That was when
we were forced to attend a meeting in the village at which we were
told that we should participate in filling up the gullies,"
Saiton Mukudu, a village elder, told IRIN.
He said the police accused
Chevecheve residents of causing damage to the environment by mining
illegally; they took the names of all the villagers and ordered
them, including teenagers and the elderly, to use shovels to fill
up the gullies and pits, and this "obviously scared those who
decided to leave the area".
People who refused to
participate were hunted down and sometimes beaten up. "We suggested
to the police that the government should instead make arrangements
for volunteers to get involved and get paid either in cash or kind,
but they would not hear of that, saying we were all responsible
for the damage to the environment," Mukudu said.
"I do not disagree
with the police that the environment has been badly damaged. In
fact, we also had problems with these makorokoza because sometimes
they invaded our fields and disturbed our farming activities. They
also even went as far as digging up graveyards, but the point is
that most of them came from other places," he added.
He had to take care of
some of the homesteads after the fleeing villagers pleaded with
him to do so.
Missed
out on planting season
Margaret Chimboza, 43,
a widow, recently returned to her home. "I am devastated by
what the police did. I have never participated in illegal panning
all my life since I could adequately cater for my family on the
cotton that I produced on my plot." She "escaped"
to a nearby farm, where she worked as a casual worker.
It was therefore extremely
unfair for the police to come and round all of us up and accuse
us of damaging the environment. After all, even if it is true that
there were people who were indiscriminately digging up the earth,
the timing of the operation was wrong because it was the farming
season and we had to abandon our fields."
''Even if it is true
that there were people who were indiscriminately digging up the
earth, the timing of the operation was wrong because it was the
farming season and we had to abandon our fields''
Having missed out on planting season, Chimboza, who is also asthmatic,
now has to raise funds to reconstruct her home and feed her two
children, who have also been unable to return to school.
"It is a real drawback
because my children have to spend the whole year doing nothing and
can only resume next year, assuming there is no operation like that
again," the frail woman said.
Legal
miners affected
Many legal small-scale
miners have also been left in a quandary after their operations
were stopped by the police. Joseph Rukodzi owned three gold mining
claims in the Ngezi district 20km west of Kadoma town, about 125km
southwest of Harare, but when the operation started he was accused
of mining illegally and forced to close them down.
Rukodzi was among more
than 50,000 small-scale miners who were forced to abandon their
livelihood after the police crackown last year, when the government
alleged that the country was being prejudiced of large quantities
of foreign currency, as illegal miners smuggled minerals out of
the country.
"I was surprised
that the police insisted that I should stop operating, even after
I produced valid certificates that showed clearly that I was a registered
miner and had been operating for five years," Rukodzi told
IRIN. He had managed to build a house in Kadoma and intended to
start a grocery store with the profits from his mining venture before
the clampdown.
He had made numerous
visits to the police and even approached Home Affairs officials
for the release of his confiscated equipment and certificates, but
to no avail.
"Some of my friends
have paid bribes to the police and are back in mining, but I don't
see any reason why I should go to the extent of giving them a kickback
when I am in this business legally. Besides, where will I get the
money to pay them when I have not been generating money for five
months?" he said.
Earlier this month, George
Kawonza, president of the Zimbabwe Miners Federation, reported that
only 100 small-scale miners had been allowed to resume mining. The
crackdown on illegal miners was scaled down when some of the miners
testified to a parliamentary committee that influential government
officials were soliciting bribes from them and participating in
illegal mining activities.
Innocent Makwiramiti,
an economist and former chief executive officer of the Zimbabwe
National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC), said the government had "gone
overboard" in carrying out the operation.
"It was legitimate
to put a stop to illegal panning, but the methods that the police
used were extremely wrong: they have left a trail of suffering through
the indiscriminate closure of mines and disruption of farming activities,
worse still now that the country has been hit by another drought,"
Makwiramiti told IRIN.
"But it
is vital to also consider why illegal mining is so rampant in the
country," he said. "Something should be done to fix the
economy."
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