Presidential herd under fire
VLADIMIR MZACA | 07 August, 2011 04:23
The presidential herd – a herd of elephants granted “perpetual protection”
by President Robert Mugabe – faces severe threats as mines and human
settlements mushroom in their conservancy in Matabeleland North.
Environment and Natural Resources Management Minister Francis Nhema has
declared that doing anything that harms the presidential herd is as good as
going against Mugabe.
“Anyone who shoots at the presidential herd is as bad as someone shooting at
the president. When you shoot at these animals, you can expect to be shot
back at. If you kill them, you will also be killed. No one should compromise
the presidential herd,” said Nhema.
However, it is Zanu-PF officials who have been implicated in poaching
activities around the country.
This is especially so in Matabeleland North, where the biggest national
park, Hwange, is located, as well as investors who have been given mining
concessions in that region.
The presidential herd and all the other animals in the Sinamatella area of
the Hwange are in danger from toxins that are found in the surrounding
rivers.
Makomo Resources, a coal mine given a licence despite protests from
stakeholders in Gwayi and Dete, is in the heart of the Hwange National Park.
“Mining activities right inside the national park are not healthy. You will
find toxins that pollute the water that is taken in by the wildlife.
“So if the presidential herd and other animals consume this water what would
become of our remaining animals?” said Langton Masunda, the Gwayi
Conservatory chairperson.
“Since this is the presidential herd we are talking about, no other activity
should be given priority over a species that the president dedicated to
protect.”
Hwange National Park is part of the Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Park
between Zimbabwe, Zambia, Botswana, Namibia and Angola.
It covers 30000 square kilometres encompassing the Okavango and Zambezi
river basin, including a total of 36 national parks, game reserves,
community wildlife areas and wildlife management areas such as Victoria
Falls, Hwange, Okavango Delta, Chobe Game Reserve and Caprivi Strip.
The protected area is the 14th cross-border conservation area in the
Southern African Development Community (SADC).
Mining activities on the Zimbabwean side are starting to affect the park’s
wellbeing as animals are exposed to dangerous toxins and hungry farmers in
Zimbabwe.
“Activities on the ground are a breach of regional agreements. Part of the
agreement among member states says that animals should move freely and their
ecology should not be disturbed, but now that things are changing on the
Zimbabwean side in a few years the whole region will start feeling the
effects,” added Masunda.
With more than 20 mines given licences in the area, humans are also at risk.
The extraction of coal is likely to culminate in water pollution through
acidic mine drainage.
Though water affected by acidic mine drainage can be treated, this comes at
a cost and it would definitely strain the budgets of the country and local
authorities.
South Africa is also struggling to contain acidic mine drainage at some of
its mines.
In the late 1990s Hwange Colliery Company Limited failed to control the
acidic mine drainage from one of its disused mines and the pollutant flowed
into the Deka River, killing aquatic life and livestock. Children also
developed health problems after consuming the polluted water.