Photo: TMRRT. Amai Wadzanai Moyo sits outside her new home soon after being relocated to Nuanetsi Ranch
Source: IRIN
MASVINGO, 5 December 2013 (IRIN) - Several thousand people in southeastern Zimbabwe's drought-prone
Masvingo Province have had to leave their ancestral homes and villages
in exchange for plots of undeveloped land lacking any infrastructure, in
order to make way for the construction of a dam.
The Tokwe-Mukosi dam is being built by an Italian company, Sanlin, with
funding from the Zimbabwean government, to provide irrigation to the
local communal area of Chibi, which is vulnerable to recurrent food
insecurity due to the area’s low rainfall. The dam will also supply
water to the city of Masvingo, where severe water shortages have been
experienced in recent years.
Construction began in the 1990s but stopped a decade later when
Zimbabwe's economy experienced hyperinflation, and only resumed after
the formation of the Government of National Unity in 2009. If
successfully completed, Tokwe-Mukosi is set to become the largest inland
dam in the country, with a capacity of 1.8 billion cubic meters and a
flood area covering more than 9,600 hectares.
“No choice but to vacate”
In October 2013, about 400 families (equivalent to about 2,500
individuals) were moved from their village in Chibi district to Nuanetsi
Ranch in Mwenezi district, some 100km away, where each household was
given a four-hectare plot of uncultivated land and between US$3,000 and
$8,000 as compensation for their previous property. Many are complaining
that the money is not enough to compensate for the loss of their homes
and livelihoods, and that the area lacks schools, shops, and even
toilets.
They also told IRIN that their relocation was not voluntary. "I had no
choice but to vacate because the government wanted us out of the dam
site," said village head Richard Taruvinga, 66. "[That was] my ancestral
home and not even any amount of compensation will make me happy."
Poorly built pole and dagga (mud) huts are currently the only form of
shelter, and there are not enough boreholes to provide all the new
residents with sufficient water. With the onset of the rainy season, it
is time to plant the staple maize crop, but the villagers are still busy
clearing the land of trees and bushes with axes and hoes.
"It is really painful that the government had to dump us to such a place
before they even set up any housing structures for us,” said Marlyn
Mathambo, 44, a widow who takes care of her four children as well as
three grandsons.
“The money that they awarded us is not adequate to construct good houses
as what my family had built in Chibi. This relocation exercise was
poorly planned and I can see hunger looming in the coming year."
Scores of families told IRIN that their children had had to drop out of
school as a result of the relocation, and they had left behind
employment and were unsure how they would survive. Others lamented the
government's failure to provide them with transport for their livestock.
"I was earning a living by guarding cars at a nearby shopping centre
and don't know how I will survive here," said Takura Moyo, 48, a father
of six.
"I had to leave behind my cattle with my relatives in another village
since I couldn't get transport to ferry them here. I don't know how I
will bring them here," he added.
Poorly implemented
Like Chibi, Nuanetsi Ranch is located in a region that receives low and
erratic rainfall and is considered unsuitable for anything but livestock
farming. Unlike Chibi, the area's remoteness offers few alternatives to
earn a living other than by farming.
Tasara Wamambo, director and founder of Tokwe-Mukosi Rehabilitation and
Resettlement Trust (TMRRT), which represents families affected by the
dam and advocates their rights, said the relocation exercise had been
poorly implemented, with the government failing to construct promised
infrastructure such as schools, clinics, cattle dip-tanks and shops,
before resettling families.
He told IRIN that about 150 children were missing out on schooling as a
result of the relocations and a number of them were unable to write
their final examinations in November.
"What the government did to the people is just unfair and inhumane
because we poor villagers were just dumped at a farm that has no basic
facilities," said Wamambo, who was also resettled. "Life will never be
the same again for the villagers, and they will not benefit from the dam
since they are some 100km away from the project." He added that TMRRT
was mobilizing resources such as tents and medicine to assist the
villagers.
Dam to relieve food insecurity
Ignatius Chombo, the Minister of Local Government and Public Works, said
he was unaware of any complaints about the relocation exercise. "I can
safely say that the relocation exercise is going on very well, and the
government played its part and the villagers were compensated for their
properties," he told IRIN.
Masvingo Provincial Administrator Felix Chikovo pointed out that “the
successful completion of the dam will result in the province having
adequate food security and water supplies.”
“This project will go a long way in alleviating the food crisis that has bedevilled the whole province," he told IRIN.
In an October 2013 report
focusing on Zimbabwe, the World Food Programme (WFP) notes that
Masvingo is one of three provinces where food insecurity is at crisis
level. It also notes that Zimbabwe “has limited fiscal and economic
capacity to buffer against the underperforming agricultural production
and weather-related shocks” and predicts that the recent economic
slowdown will further reduce government capacity.
The government is trying to meet a November deadline to complete the dam
project, but a senior official was recently quoted in a local
provincial weekly paper as saying that the government was battling to
raise enough money to complete its resettlement programme. According to
TMRRT, a further 1,200 people are expected to be moved to Nuanetsi Ranch
by the end of the year.