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Only 50 Covid-19 tests done in Chiredzi district

Beatific
Gumbwanda

CHIREDZI
The
Ministry of Health and Child Care had by May 06 conducted only 50 Covid-19
tests based on their case definition due to resource constraints, TellZim has
learnt.
The district is
Masvingo province’s largest district by area size and is one of the largest by
population size of close to 300 000 people.
Chiredzi borders
Mozambique and South Africa, and there exists many illegal crossings that make
the district particularly vulnerable to possible Covid-19 infections
originating from those neighbouring countries.
This was heard during a
recent collaborative sensitization meeting between the ministry and the United
Chiredzi Residents and Ratepayers Association (UCHIRRA.
Chiredzi District
Health Promotion Officer, David Frank Maziva revealed that they had managed to
conduct around 50 Covid-19 tests based on stipulated case definitions.
“Chiredzi district
has carried out about 50 tests from Chikombedzi Mission Hospital, Collin
Saunders, Chiredzi General Hospital and Hippo Valley Medical Centre.
“We are currently not
doing random testing on every visitor at our hospitals but our tests are mainly
based on case definitions. Those with respiratory symptoms and high fever get tested
for Covid-19 after we have exhausted all other tests we know,” said
Maziva.
UCHIRRA advocacy officer,
Bernard Dhachi said their organisation wanted more people to be tested and for
greater awareness campaigns to be held in communities.
“Covid-19 affects
everyone regardless of political affiliation, race, tribe or colour so this is
the time to put our differences aside and work together for the health and
safety of our communities,” said Dhachi.
The sensitisation was
mainly focused on the spread, myths and prevention of the novel coronavirus as
well as demonstrations on the importance and proper use of face masks.
As on May 06, 14 821
people had been tested for coronavirus in the whole country.

Govt targets 80 000 hectares winter wheat

Winter wheat produced at minister Marapira’s farm last year
…minister Marapira takes lead in Masvingo
TellZim Reporter
With wheat being one of the most imported commodities in the
country drawing the much needed foreign currency from treasury, the government
has moved to cut the expenditure by targeting 80 000 hectares of land across
the country to be put under winter wheat production.
The 80 000 hectares have the capacity to produce in excess
of 415 000 metric tonnes of wheat with the country needing about 400 000 metric
tonnes per year.
Launching the winter wheat programme at Masvingo North legislator
and minister of State in Vice President Kembo Mohadi’s office Davison Marapira’s  Mighty Lamotte Farm, the deputy minister of
Lands Douglas Karoro said that the country has the capacity to produce enough
wheat and stop imports.
“We are encouraging wheat production in the country. The government
is targeting 80 000 hectares across the country to be put under wheat this
winter.
“The 80 000 hectares can produce about 415 000 metric tonnes
of wheat which will be more than enough to sustain the whole country which
needs about 400 000 metric tonnes a year.
“If we are successful it means we will not import wheat
again and the money can be used on other developmental initiatives,” said
Karoro.
He said that farmers must make sure that they put their and
to good use and emphasised that the government will not hesitate to repossess
idle land.
Marapira said that he is only limiting himself to 60
hectares of winter wheat due to water challenges but has the potential to do
more.
“Wheat is one of the things this country is importing and as
farmers we are encouraged to step up and make sure that we provide enough wheat
for the country.
“Because of water challenges we are only going to do 60
hectares of winter wheat on this farm but we have the potential to do more. Farmers
must make sure that they put their land to good use and if they do not have the
capacity they must excuse themselves for producers.
“We must not import wheat when we have huge tracts of land
which we can put to good use,” said Marapira.
Minister of State for Masvingo Provincial Affairs Ezra
Chadzamira said that Masvingo has the potential to feed the whole country if
farmers step up and fully utilise their land.




Police badly beat, injures woman in Mutare sugar queue

Alice Manikai

Monalisa Matongo
MUTARE – A police officer today, May 06, assaulted a middle-aged
woman on her forehead using a button stick at a sugar queue at TM Supermarket
Sakubva in an overzealous effort to maintain order on the queue.
Alice Manikai went on to report
the case at ZRP Sakubva Musika base with the open wound on her forehead and her
clothes blood-stained.
At the police base, the female
police officer tried to disguise herself by changing her face mask but
later apologised after her victim correctly picked her out among colleagues.
Manikai demanded immediate medical
assistance and the police officer accompanied her to a nearby clinic.
Manikai  said the police officer
had acted irrationally and was overzealous in her work, choosing to beat her up badly despite that she had properly maintained her place in the queue as was expected.

Manikai is accompanied to clinic by the police

Bikita Minerals plans mass lay-offs as lockdown bites

The burrowing aardvark is Bikita Minerals’ emblem



…tantalite production stopped

TellZim Reporter

Bikita Minerals is offering many of its workers retrenchment packages as the lithium producer
takes a heavy battering from coronavirus-induced market turbulence and the
country’s macro-economic instability, TellZim has learnt.
The company operates a
15km2 mining lease area, producing mainly lithium-bearing petalite
for export mostly to China, sustaining hundreds of workers directly and
hundreds more people through downstream industries.
On a smaller scale, Bikita Minerals also processes tantalite from rocks known as lepidolite, but
the company says it has decided to suspend this operation for such reasons as
the processing plant’s size and efficiency that the company says are too
limited to continue running it profitably.
Lithium and its
compounds have many industrial applications including production of heat
resistant ceramics, lithium lubricants, lithium batteries and lithium-ion
batteries.
However, the global
market has faced immense disruption as a result of the worldwide lockdown which
has affected at least a third of the global population in recent months.
Commodity prices have
plummeted in light of depressed demand from major economies and significant
industry players like Australia, China and Germany.
In a statement released
in March, the company lamented that ‘prevailing macro-economic challenges, a
dip in the price of certain lithium-based ores, and a global health scare have
had a knock-on effect on the performance of Bikita Minerals as sales volumes
have gone down by nearly 50 percent in 2020.’
But even before the
coronavirus outbreak, the company had been taking a battering from the
country’s debilitating economic crisis, having to run costly massive diesel
generators for prolonged periods of electricity load-shedding regimes.
There is palpable fear
that any further disruption of operations at Bikita Minerals, which is one of
the three major employers in Masvingo province, would have far-reaching
economic implications. Despite its precarious financial situation, the company
has maintained an impressive level of social responsibility – donating $50 000
to the Masvingo Covid-19 Provincial Taskforce in April.
Close sources say so
far, the company has already terminated short-term contracts for hundreds of employees
while those on full-time contracts have been advised to take the voluntary
retrenchment offers that the company has reportedly dangled to ensure a safer
landing for them should things go for a head as is expected.
Bikita Minerals general
manager David Mwanza, when asked if it was true that the company planned mass
lay-offs, could only say it was partly true without elaborating.
He referred further
questions to the company’s Harare-based public relations manager Precious
Chitapi who, in e-mailed responses to TellZim News, said the company was only planning to
retire those that have reached the age of 60.
Bikita Minerals is not closing. The mine is not laying-off its employees. Only the over 60
are retiring with due notice at the end of June 2020.
The market is waking up slowly
from the Covid-19 lockdown.
Just to keep you
informed, Bikita Minerals is still selling stones. We have customers buying in
the normal way, but it is in small batches because of the market condition in
the world. We are also milling products for a few customers that was prepaid,”
she said.
However, in
the March statement, the company admits that it could only ‘minimise job
losses’, adding that many workers on contract had already been affected.
“The mine currently has
about 250 permanent employees, 300 contract workers and 500 contractors. Over
the past two months, the number of contractors has been shrunk significantly,
an exercise which will be supplemented by normal attrition and a moratorium on
the hiring of new staff,” reads part of the statement.
Other sources that
spoke on condition of anonymity said the miner was likely to either look for
fresh foreign capital, which would not be easy post-lockdown considering the
country’s unattractive risk premium in the eyes of investors, or dispose of its
assets.
“As would be expected
anywhere, the company is putting up a brave face but things are not OK. All
monthly contracts have been stopped but the final position will only be clear
after lockdown. As of now, only essential maintenance staff members are on
standby. The company’s options are few, that is if there are any,” said one
source.
Other sources said
there were still significant mineral deposits in the company’s lease area to
merit new investment and expansion, but diminished activity in the world
economy coupled with unstable fundamentals in the local economy was making it
extremely difficult to sustain current operations.

Masvingo resumes Covid-19 testing after eight-day lull



….anxiety as province
grapples with testing kits, PPE shortages

TellZim Reporter

Many people from
Masvingo expressed disquietude after their province registered a prolonged
absence from the daily Covid-19 test results table that is released by the
Ministry of Health and Child Care, a situation which was later blamed on a shortage
of test kits.

Masvingo last appeared
on the national test results diagram on April 23 when 10 of the 460 national
specimens tested that day were from the province.

This was then followed by an
eight-day long hiatus which caused much concern until May 02 when national results
showed that 68 of the 1 436 tests done on that day were from Masvingo.

Apparently, specimens
that are sent to the country’s two testing centres; the National Microbiology
Reference Laboratory in Harare and the National TB Reference Laboratory in Bulawayo are first tested at local isolation centres using Rapid
Test Kits.

Currently, the province
has 10 isolation centres across the seven districts but work is being done to
establish the 11th one at Mashava Mine Hospital.

Specimens are then sent
either to Bulawayo or Harare where confirmatory tests are done using a
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) system whose results are more reliable. This
test uses sample mucus often drawn from a person’s nose or throat to trace the
genetic material of coronavirus.

The first batch of
Rapid Test Kits that provincial authorities received in mid-April got finished,
and tests could no longer continue.
“We had run short of
tests kits but we have now received another batch so we will resume testing
today (May 02). Our specimens are now being sent to Bulawayo for confirmatory
tests because Harare is congested,” said Provincial Medical Director (PMD)
Amadeus Shamu.

There is, however,
another nagging problem: the acute shortage of personal protective equipment
(PPE) at all hospitals and clinics, a situation which puts nurses, doctors and
other staff members at great risk.

Early last month, the
body of a woman who died after exhibiting Covid-19 symptoms at Chiredzi General
Hospital spent almost two days on the deathbed after nurses refused to take it
to the mortuary as they were not sufficiently protected.

The woman, however,
posthumously tested negative for coronavirus.

In mid-April,
government pledged a ‘mass testing’ programme for citizens, promising to
conduct 40 000 tests every month but that seems too hard a target considering
that the daily averages of recent days have been far off the mark.

Shamu said only
frontline health staff and those that met the criteria of clear suspected cases
were getting tested, and the service is not yet available for random walk-ins.

Mopani worm harvesters defy lockdown

                                                             File image
Cephas Shava

MWENEZI– Scores of
desperate people from rural communities in the southern parts of the country
are defying the lockdown by flocking to the forests of Gwanda district to harvest mopani worms, TellZim can report
People
from Lutumba in Beitbridge as well as some parts of Mberengwa, Chikombedzi,
Mwenezi, West Nicolson and Gwanda district find their way into the
forests in search of the treasured worms despite the national lockdown which has since been extended twice.
Private
transport operators use illicit dusty tracks to ferry the worm hunters
and avoid the obvious routes for fear of police roadblocks, sources say.
“We
go to Gwanda between every December and April to harvest madora and this
year should not be different. If we are to think about the lockdown, how do we
survive?
“They
have extended to lockdown without giving as social grants so we cannot help it.
You can’t expect us to remain indoors hoping that someone will bring us some
food to eat,” said one woman who had just returned from one of her numerous
Gwanda trips.
Other
sources said the deployment of police and soldiers to stop unsanctioned
movement in the areas was not helping much.
“There
are many people who are working all the time in the forests of Gwanda. Some go as traders selling food and drinks to the worm catchers so there is a lot of
activity in the bush. Our main problem is that water is scarce and we often drink
from unprotected sources,” said the source.
With
a bucket full of Mopani worms now trading between 350 to 500 South African
rands, the Mopani catchers say they cannot let go of their only opportunity to
make money in a troubled economy.
       
      
      

Onward Gibson Foundation joins Covid-19 relief efforts


TellZim
Reporter

Youthful clergyman,
philanthropist and gender equality campaigner, Onward Gibson yesterday moved
around some suburbs of Masvingo distributing food items and other basic
commodities to people identified as hardest hit by the national lockdown.
Prophet O, as he is
widely known, recently travelled from Harare, where he is now based, for the
sole purpose of lending a hand to vulnerable people in the city where he was
born and bred.
The benevolence gesture was carried out under the newly-formed Onward Gibson Foundation.
Child-headed families,
widows, the disabled were among the beneficiaries of the philanthropic effort.
Each beneficiary
received a package comprising 20kg Red Seal maize meal, 2 litres cooking oil,
beans, kapenta fish, sugar and salt.
Non-food items included
bars of washing soaps, sanitary pads, petroleum jelly and candles.
Speaking in Mucheke
where the distribution exercise began, Prophet O said it was in times of severe need
as this that people should prove their humanity.
“In our communities, we
have people who have every material thing they need and those who can barely
afford anything. This is a most appropriate time to serve the Lord because we
are in a crisis of epic proportions. My team and I do not have everything that
we need, but here we are, doing the little we can to help the next person,” he
said.
He also said he will
continue to mobilise other people to contribute whatever they can towards
further relief efforts for the duration of the lockdown and beyond.
“Giving should help to
inspire others to follow suit. It should also be a way of spreading the glory
of our Lord Jesus Christ,” he said.

He said the Onward Gibson Foundation has  set aside a $700 000 fund to fight coronavirus.

1000 Chiredzi families face displacement for grass farming

0
Chiredzi RDC offices


…journalists expelled from
explosive community meeting

Beatific Gumbwanda

CHIREDZI – Journalists from TellZim News, NewsDay and The Herald
were today expelled from a meeting involving villagers from Chilonga Irrigation
Scheme, Chiredzi Rural District Council (RDC) and the Minister of Local Government
minister July Moyo.
The villagers are understood to
be resisting plans by government to give their land to dairy company Dendairy
which wants to use it for a lucerne grass farming project.
As the meeting was about to start
at Chiredzi Town Council offices, District Intelligence Officer (DIO) Joseph Urimbo
asked the media to go away.
“You guys are being recused
from this meeting as it is a closed door meeting. All media are not allowed
here,” said Urimbo.
However, he allowed a Zimbabwe
Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) reporter to stay behind before ordering police
officers to forcibly move away the reporters who had gathered some 20 metres
away from the venue.
Dendairy is eyeing an approximate
10 000 hectares in Chiredzi South and East for lucerne farming, and the project
is expected to displace over 1000 families from their ancestral land.
Lurcene grass, also called
alfalfa, is used for making hay or animal fodder.
Some village sources say they cannot
cooperate with authorities as they fear yet another Chingwizi debacle.
From 2014, government moved
thousands of people from the vicinity of the Tugwi-Mukosi Dam which was still
under construction, to a barren piece of land at Chingwizi in MWenezi East
where they still live in overcrowded and squalid conditions with no basic
social amenities.
Compensation for the displaced
people has largely not been paid six years on although promises are made
whenever an election is around the corner.

Bikita Ward 21 Cllr Mudyiwa dies

0

TellZim Reporter

Bikita Rural District Council (RDC) Ward 21 Councillor
Alderman Muza Mudyiwa has died, TellZim News has learnt.
He was 64.
Alderman Mudyiwa died of stroke yesterday, April 28, at his
home in the Gangare area, after serving in council for a solid 28 years.
The retired school teacher joined Bikita RDC in 1992 and
served six terms as councillor including as vice chairperson between 2013 and
2018.
In his condolences messages, Bikita RDC Chief Executive Officer
(CEO) Peter Chibhi described Mudyiwa’s death as a loss to the local authority.
“For the 28 years he worked in council, he was a father
figure who nurtured some council employees into what they are now. We will
forever miss his great experience and we will always treasure his immense
contribution to council business over the years,” said Chibhi.
For the duration of his tenure at the local authority, the
now late Mudyiwa served in three council committees namely Human Resources
Development, Roads and Audit.
He was born on 28 February 1956 and was a firm member of the
Johanne Marange Apostolic Church.

Zivhu fundraises for lockdown food relief

0
Zivhu with Tongai ‘The Greatman’ Gwaze

TellZim
Reporter

Chivi South Member of
Parliament (MP) Killer ZIvhu has launched a campaign to mobilise funds to buy
basic foodstuffs for distribution to vulnerable people in his constituency and
elsewhere, TellZim can report.
Zivhu, who is known for
his far-reaching works of philanthropy, says people who want to contribute to
the effort could get in touch with him on his cellphone number 0773538781.
He has already
distributed some grocery items and $2000 in cash to wheelchair-bound musician Tongai
‘The Greatman’ Gwaze whose own informal trading business was affected by the
lockdown.
“This is a response to
the increased vulnerability of orphans, widows, the disabled and the elderly as
a direct result of the coronavirus pandemic and the subsequent lockdown. People
in Chivi are particularly vulnerable because most of them did not get a good
harvest due to the poor rains received this farming season,” said Zivhu.
He urged people should
be there for each other at times of great crisis as this, saying there was no
comfort to be drawn from watching people suffer the indignities of extreme destitution.
“We cannot expect
government to do everything on its own because the money available is not
enough. Government is already doing a lot of things to fight the double tragedy
of hunger and Covid-19 so let us all be good citizens and care for each other,”
said Zivhu.
He also said his
efforts are primarily focused on assisting orphans, widows and the elderly but
that could be expanded to include other vulnerable people if more resources
become available.