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Climate migrants clash with timber industry

“The good news is that the government of Zimbabwe has taken the leadership by doing this flash appeal in collaboration also with the partners which are currently supporting that.

OVER the past 10 years, widespread drought has forced thousands of Zimbabweans to leave behind their farms and ancestral land in search of greener pastures along the country’s eastern highlands, where higher rainfall makes agriculture viable.

Writing for Climate Change News, Andrew Mambondiyani said that “these climate migrants have settled in an estimated 20 000 hectares of timber plantations, clashing with the wood industry and government”.

Although other African countries, including South Africa, have established policies to address climate migration, the Zimbabwean government has opted to evict the migrants from the plantations. Although other African countries, including South Africa, have established policies to address climate migration, the Zimbabwean government has opted to evict the migrants from the plantations.

Gift Sanyanga, a co-ordinator for Haarlem-Mutare City Link, a Dutch co-operation organisation that aids migrants, told Climate Change News that the migrants had no real alternative but to leave their homes. “Unless better adaptive and community resiliencebuilding measures are in place in areas of origin, climate-induced migration is likely to remain a big issue,” Sanyanga said.

According to the World Food Programme, over the past decade, Zimbabwe has been hit by severe recurring droughts with around half the country’s population facing severe hunger in 2019. Climate-related displacement has been widespread in Africa during the past decade, according to the latest UN climate science report.

Migrations to urban areas have increased, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, due to drought and household vulnerabilities. In Zimbabwe, the eastern highlands, bordering Mozambique, has become a popular destination.

There, migrants cut and burn swathes of forest to plant crops, timber industry officials report. Some are allegedly involved in illegal gold mining, tearing down tracts of standing timber in search of the elusive precious mineral. Industry body the Timber Producers Federation (TPF) estimates that 20 000 hectares are affected.

There, migrants cut and burn swathes of forest to plant crops, timber industry officials report. Some are allegedly involved in illegal gold mining, tearing down tracts of standing timber in search of the elusive precious mineral. Industry body the Timber Producers Federation (TPF) estimates that 20 000 hectares are affected. — IOL

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