Villagers Access Fields, Water Holes After Successful Landmine Removals

A villager showing part of his field that has been demined by Halo Trust in Mukumbura communal lands.

Thirty-six years after independence, villagers along the Zimbabwe-Mozambique border are still being seriously affected by landmines planted during the war of liberation of the 1970s by the Rhodesian security forces to stop freedom fighters from entering the country.

In several areas, some of the minefields are being cleared by a non-governmental organization, which is giving the villagers a new lease of life.

Most of the areas worst affected by landmines planted by the Ian Smith regime include Mukumbura communal lands, Sheba Forest, Burma Valley, Rusitu to Muzite Mission, Sango Border Post to Crooks Corner and Border Streams.

Demining in process in Mukumbura communal lands.

Some organizations clearing the landmines in Mukumbura say undetonated mines in the area are very dense, unfenced and situated close to homesteads, schools and clinics and as a result are still seriously affecting the lives of local people.

Several lives have been lost in the past as villagers have tried to use hoes and shovels to dig the landmines. Some villagers have also lost a lot of livestock, a source of livelihood in this border area.

A non-governmental organization, Halo Trust, has brought hope to villagers in Mukumbura communal lands as it is in the process of clearing the minefields using modern technology.

Some landmines marked on a patch of land in Zimbabwe's Mukumbura communal lands.

Halo Trust has cleared about 25 kilometers of the 400 kilometer stretch occupied by local people. Some of the villagers say they are now accessing their fields, grazing land and a local river full of fish in cleared areas.

Some of the happy villagers are Shepherd Madzengerere and Michael Murinyu of Kapfudza village, who said the minefields have seriously affected their lives.

July Picture Knowledge, the demining manager of Halo Trust, said they are expected to demine a 400 kilometer stretch along the border area.

Halo Trust is expected to demine a 400 kilometer stretch along the Zimbabwe-Mozambique border.

Tom Dibb, Halo Trust program manager, noted that they needed more resources to demine the border area.

Some of the people involved in the demining exercise showing part of the area that has been cleared of landmines.

Halo Trust estimates that over 1,550 have been killed by the landmines from the time they were planted by Rhodesian security forces.

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Report on Demining Exercise Filed By Patricia Mudadigwa