Policy
Richmond Landfill(Ngozi Mine) a ticking time bomb or an under utilised recycling site?
By: Bright F. Zindove
Richmond Landfill (Ngozi mine) is situated in the northern fringes of the city of Bulawayo, between Richmond and Cowdray Park Suburbs. The dumpsite is home to more than 400 households.
Residents residing near the site and surrounding suburb are making a living from the dumpsite. Early in the morning, from my backyard view, men, women and children can be seen going to work, at Ngozi Mine, some carrying big bags for packaging whatever they could scavenge for resale and recycling. This illustrates that the dumpsite is a place of ‘opportunity’ and people are making a living out of it, through refuse collection and recycling ♻️.
Environmental and health wise, one can say the site is a ticking time bomb. Residents from surrounding areas wake-up in a cloud of smoke. They inhale hazardous carbons from Ngozi Mine, and this exposes them to respiratory disease. Some of these disease may affect them in the coming years.
In accordance with the World Health Organization’s guidelines, the air quality in Zimbabwe is considered moderately unsafe. Most recent data indicate the country’s annual mean concentration of PM2.5 is almost double the recommended maximum of 10 µg/m3.
A double-edged sword indeed, which needs a peculiar solution from all stakeholders; residents, city father’s, non governmental organisations, media and government. The intervention should be a world class recycling factory, which is going to be a source of ‘opportunity’ and ‘defender of pollution.’
Disclaimer: These are the views of the writer and not the institution.
Policy
Harare Opinion: A Political Think Tank Positioned to Influence Public Opinion
Political Think tanks like SAPES have come and gone. Although, SAPES led by Ibbo Mandaza started well but later became partisan, taking the side position of the opposition and obviously becoming irrelevant.
Subsequently, there has not been independent academic political think tanks so far since the fall of SAPES, which was of course, never impartial.
Today, Zimbabwe has come to the crossroad where an independent academic political think tank should take centre stage especially towards the 2030 National Development Strategy 2.
Such a political think tank should be in line with the National Development Strategy 2. Unlike In Conversation with Trevor, Heart and Soul TV (HStv), Mandaza’s SAPES, the political think tank should podcast debates on national development agenda. The government of today and its national development agenda deserves a political think tank that will engage the citizenry from an academic approach.
Led by Dr Limukani Mathe (once a South African based scholar), co-founded by Roncemore Mhlanga, (LLB) and Paul Chairuka (MSC Finance), Harare Opinion (HO) has emerged to fill the gap.
Harare Opinion currently functioning as online editorial opinion, www.harareopinion.co.zw, with verified social media outlets on Facebook, X and WhatsApp, seeks to challenge political perspective from an academic point of view.
Taking its baby steps, Harare Opinion endeavours to become a popular political think- podcasting timely policy debates that seek to depolarise and engage miscellaneous audiences within Zimbabwe’s political demography.
Popular podcasts like Joe Rogan Experience, Crime Junkie and The Daily in America have not been seen in the Zimbabwean’s social media sphere.
Popular Podcasts like the Steven Barlett and the Rest in Politics have not been in Zimbabwe’s social media sphere. Common social life podcasts in Zimbabwe include that of DJ Ollar which remain superficial, touching on daily social life and with no benefit to Zimbabwe’s progressive government national agenda.
Thus, the National Development Strategy (NDS2) 2026-2030, needs supportive mechanisms through political think tanks like Harare Opinion which will group experts regardless of their political affiliation to debate national development. Harare Opinion endeavours to approach national development agenda from an academic expert’s view in order to
- offer unconventional and innovative persuasive dialogue
- Depolarise and popularise government developmental programmes
- Pull together home and diaspora in support of national agenda (2026-2030), NDS2
- Revive a united sense of belonging and patriotic citizenship
So far, Harare Opinion has published 34 opinion articles on its website mainly focusing on the Constitutional Amendment Bill No.3.
The Editor-In-Chief of the portal, Dr Limukani Mathe says the political think tank is yet to start podcasting on social media and running conference talks by inviting politicians to a free public debate in line with the National Development Strategy 2.
Dr Limukani Mathe is well established scholar with over 50 academic publications as books, book chapters and journal articles in high impacts journals. Published to his name are so far 6 books in Palgrave Macmillan and Routledge and another expected in Oxford Press.
Mathe says Harare Opinion is also in collaboration with the Zimbabwe Presidential Scholarship Alumni Association (ZPSAA) for Economic Development.
The Zimbabwe Presidential Scholarship Alumni Association (ZPSAA) attracts more than 10 000 professionals (including Doctors and Professors) at home and abroad. Led by the chairperson, Roncemore Mhlanga and Vice- Chairperson, Dr Limukani Mathe, ZPSAA will serve as supportive mechanism to Harare Opinion- making use of the intellectual capital from the pool of contributors.
Moreso, Harare Opinion’s intellectual capital will be drawn from industry experts in politics, economics, media, academics, and other. The success of the political think tank will be determined by its ability to attract vigorous engagement across the political divide, depolarising political segments, detoxing the political environment, and preparing Zimbabwe for 2030.
Policy
ZiG Currency Boost: RBZ Cuts Banking Costs
The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) has introduced significant reforms to banking fees, capping cash withdrawal charges at 2% and eliminating fees for account balance inquiries and cash deposits, as part of the 2026 Monetary Policy Statement presented on 27 February 2026.
RBZ Governor Dr. John Mushayavanhu announced the measures during his presentation, noting that banks had voluntarily approached the central bank with proposals for further reductions.
The changes, effective by 31 March 2026, aim to reduce transaction costs, encourage greater use of formal banking channels, and support the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG) currency framework amid ongoing efforts to stabilise the financial system.
Key reforms include:
- Cash withdrawal fees at banking halls and automated teller machines (ATMs) are capped at a maximum of 2% of the withdrawn amount for both US dollars and ZiG (previously ranging from 2.5% to 3.75% or higher in some cases).
- Point-of-sale (POS) transaction charges are limited to 1.5% of the transaction value for both local and international cards, with a cap of US$20 or the ZiG equivalent. From 1 April 2026, no minimum POS fee may be charged.
- Charges for account balance inquiries have been removed entirely across all banking and mobile banking platforms for both ZiG and US$ accounts.
- Fees for cash deposits have been eliminated.
Governor Mushayavanhu highlighted the collaborative nature of the reforms, stating:
“Just recently, bankers approached and offered a further reduction of cash withdrawal charges… to a maximum of 2%.”
He further directed: “Reduce cash withdrawal charges for both banking halls and automated teller machines (ATMs) to a maximum of 2% of the withdrawn amount for US$ and ZiG cash withdrawals.”
The RBZ applauded banks for additional concessions, with Mushayavanhu noting:
“The Reserve Bank applauds banks for exempting the banking public from monthly service fees for accounts with a balance of US$100 and below or the ZiG equivalent, and for waiving charges on transactions of US$5 and below or the ZiG equivalent.”
These steps address longstanding public complaints about high transactional costs that discouraged formal savings and lending.
Mushayavanhu framed the package as a response to sector scrutiny, emphasising that the banking sector had “come under heavy scrutiny and criticism for high bank fees,” and that the voluntary reductions would help shift focus toward productive lending.
The central bank has also instructed mobile network operators (including those behind EcoCash, OneMoney, Telecash, and similar platforms) to audit all accounts with assistance from the Registrar General and deactivate any that cannot be validated with a valid ID by the end of June 2026.
This measure targets fraud, money laundering, and illicit flows through anonymous wallets.
The reforms form part of broader measures to deepen ZiG usage, including increased mobile money and ZIPIT transaction limits and the rollout of new ZiG banknotes, with redesigned 10, 20, and 50 ZiG notes entering circulation from 7 April 2026.
Analysts say the changes will improve transactional efficiency, rebuild public confidence in the banking system, and support financial inclusion.
The announcement follows the government’s decision in December 2025 to scrap a proposed 2% tax on certain cash withdrawals from the 2026 national budget, which had faced widespread backlash over fears it would undermine trust in formal banking.
Banks and deposit-taking microfinance institutions must implement the new fee structures by 31 March 2026.
Policy
ZANU-PF Stands Firm on Vision 2030 Agenda
ZANU-PF Secretary for Information and Publicity, Christopher Mutsvangwa, on Thursday said the ruling party’s position on Vision 2030 remains clear, describing President ED as central to the fulfillment of the country’s long-term development agenda.
Speaking during a press conference at the party headquarters in Harare, Mutsvangwa said Vision 2030 is a structured national development programme designed to transform Zimbabwe into an upper-middle-income economy by the end of the decade.
He said the agenda is anchored on economic reforms, infrastructure development, rural industrialisation and youth empowerment initiatives being implemented under the leadership of His Excellency Emmerson Mnangagwa.
“Vision 2030 is a national mission which requires unity, discipline and policy consistency,” Mutsvangwa told journalists.
The press conference comes amid growing national debate over proposals within some party structures to amend the Constitution in a manner that could extend President Mnangagwa’s tenure beyond 2028.
Zimbabwe’s 2013 Constitution limits a President to two five-year terms. President Mnangagwa, who assumed office in November 2017 and was elected in 2018 before winning re-election in 2023, is currently serving his second and final term under the existing constitutional framework.
In recent months, some ZANU-PF provincial structures have publicly endorsed continued leadership up to 2030, arguing that stability and continuity are necessary to fully implement Vision 2030.
The discussion has triggered debate in political and legal circles. Constitutional experts note that any amendment to presidential term limits would require a two-thirds majority in Parliament and could necessitate a national referendum, depending on the scope of the proposed changes.
Opposition parties and civil society organisations have raised concerns over the implications for constitutional governance, saying term limits were introduced under the 2013 Constitution to strengthen democratic accountability and prevent prolonged incumbency.
President Mnangagwa has previously stated that he is a constitutionalist and respects the provisions of the Constitution.
Mutsvangwa maintained that the party’s primary focus remains the successful implementation of Vision 2030, describing it as a people-centred development blueprint requiring collective national effort.
As debate continues, ZANU-PF’s message at Thursday’s briefing was that Vision 2030 remains the guiding framework for the country’s socio-economic transformation.
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