
Land Rovers and whisky: Gold boom brings riches to rural Zim
The three-year surge in gold prices, driven to a record this year as US President Donald Trump's trade war bolstered its allure as a safe haven, is enriching the country's more than 700 000 informal, or artisanal, miners. They are flocking to gold mining belts and throwing a lifeline to an economy that's been in economic turmoil since the turn of the century.
In the first five months of this year, those miners almost doubled the metal they delivered to a state refinery from a year earlier to more than 11 tons, swelling the country's export income. At the current pace of production, the country could earn a billion dollars more from gold shipments this year than in 2024.
'The prices have been very favorable to the miners which is something we are so happy about,' said Wellington Takavarasha, the president of Zimbabwe Artisanal and Small Scale for Sustainable Mining Council. 'This year is looking very good. We must capitalize on this rally.'
It's a scene that's playing out across Africa for good and bad. Ghana, the continent's biggest producer, expects to double the amount of gold it gets from small-scale miners to $12 billion (R212 billion) by the end of next year and Ethiopia's central bank said record deliveries of the metal are boosting its reserves. In the eastern regions of the Democratic Republic of Congo rebel groups are pressing ordinary citizens into mining the metal to capitalize on the price surge.
For the about 4% of people living in Zimbabwe, and their dependents, who are involved in the gold mining its been a vital source of income in a country where a botched and violent land reform program in 2000 saw exports slump, setting off a spiral of famine, hyper-inflation and currency collapses that persists to this day.
Formal employment has withered and millions of citizens have emigrated to South Africa, the UK and other countries in search of economic opportunities. For now it's their only hope and one that depends on the high prices holding.
So far there's no sign that the rally will come to end. The price of the metal has surged 22% since Trump's inauguration and is up by three-fifths since the beginning of last year.
It hit a record of $3 432 an ounce on May 6 and Goldman Sachs forecast it will reach $3 700 by year end.
That's pushed Zimbabwe's central bank to paying cash for gold deliveries, targeting a record 40 tons of purchases this year after it earned $2.5 billion in 2024, a 37% jump from the year earlier. Artisanal producers supplied three-quarters of the metal delivered in April, whereas a few years ago the majority of their output would have been smuggled out of the country.
For artisanal workers like Mxolisi Dube, clad in navy blue work overalls with a miner's torch strapped to his head as he walks through Filabusi, the gold price rally has been a boon. The 33-year-old began mining for gold illegally in 2008, becoming a 'makorokoza,' a reference in the Ndebele language to the action of sifting gold-bearing river silt in a pan.
But now with higher prices and the cooperation of mine owners, who have begun to invite artisanal workers onto their properties to boost production, his earnings have surged.
'You are assured of getting something at the end of the month,' said Dube, who has a copper dental filling and a brass chain around his neck. 'You are protected. If you are not under a company you always have to run away.'
Mine owners, struggling with dilapidated equipment and a lack of finance, are increasingly urging those operators to swap the pans they used to sift through river sand for gold flecks for picks and shovels to help them extract as much gold ore to process as quickly as possible.
'This means we always have ore available and are milling more,' said Meli Nkulumo, plant manager at Macoomber 7 mine, which lies 12 miles west of Filabusi down winding dirt roads. Artisanal miners were invited onto the property two years ago.
At the mine, workers use Elon Musk's Starlink internet service to compare the prices offered by the central bank to global benchmarks. Goldprice.org is their favored website.
'Higher gold prices are better for everyone,' said Thulani Ndlovu, the acting mine manager.
'We can also look forward to a raise in salaries.'
Still, it's backbreaking work that's carried out around the clock. The miners break up rocks underground with picks, shovel it into a loader which is then winched to the surface. During their eight-hour shifts their only sustenance is maheu, a drink made from fermented corn meal.
But for artisanal miners the price surge has been life-changing and nowhere is that more evident than in Bekezela, a suburb of Filabusi where property owners are busy putting up brick houses ringed by electric fences and equipped with water storage tanks and solar panels.
The town council is having to rezone more land for residential and commercial use and at car washes 4x4s queue to have the dust of the surrounding savannah rinsed off.
Drinking holes are busy with 'all sorts of people' spending big, Thabo Mpofu, the manager of Next Generation bar, said, adding that he has seen clients buy bottles of Hennessey Cognac and pour them out on the ground as a show of wealth.
It's also curbed crime including invasions of local mines by illegal operators.
'There's nothing bad here that happens,' said Melusi Nyoni, the manager of Fred and Fernando mines, which are on the outskirts of Filabusi town, He now allows artisanal miners to work in shafts as deep as a kilometer (0.6 miles).
'There is gold just all over,' he said.
Still, with rudimentary equipment and limited safety protocols, digging up the ore is dangerous work.
Informal miners accounted for 87% of the 186 deaths in Zimbabwean mining accidents, the Chamber of Mines said in its last annual report. As recently as late May four died at a mine near Chegutu in northern Zimbabwe when a wall of earth collapsed onto them, according to local media reports.
But as long as the rally lasts, that's little deterrence for artisanal miners who until recently were eking out a living by camping out and panning for gold in remote wild areas for several months.
'The high prices mean in the near future I will also be seen in a car,' says Dube, a father of four.
'I want a Toyota Hilux 4x4, with a 2.7-liter engine.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News24
36 minutes ago
- News24
R440bn ITP initiative: Minister says transmission reforms to spark more investment and job creation
Kgosientsho Ramokgopa announces R440 billion investment programme to support renewables and economic development. Eskom says the ITP launch is a milestone for private sector energy investment and a low-carbon transition. Local ownership, skills training and inclusive participation are central to the ITP framework. Electricity and Energy Minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa says the independent transmission projects (ITP) initiative is not only a solution to SA's power constraints, but also a foundation for broader economic transformation, including job creation, localisation and industrialisation. Speaking at the JSE on Thursday, Ramokgopa formally announced the request for qualification (RFQ) for private sector participation in new transmission projects, describing the ITP as the largest infrastructure build programme initiated by the post-apartheid government. 'A significant part of the R440 billion investment over the next ten years will come from the private sector.' We've created a procurement framework that invites them to build, operate and later transfer the transmission lines back to the state via the National Transmission Company SA [NTCSA]. Kgosientsho Ramokgopa The minister emphasised that these efforts are intended to not only improve grid access for renewable energy but also promote inclusive growth. The ITP programme aims to support the launch of solar and wind energy projects, which often struggle to feed electricity into the grid due to limited transmission capacity. 'We're addressing more than just megawatts. We're resolving issues of access, affordability and economic participation,' said Ramokgopa, noting that around 1.6 million households remain without electricity. 'We require that 49% of any winning bidder's ownership be SA-based, and there are expectations around local content, skills development, and inclusion of women and youth.' The minister said energy access in rural and peri-urban areas would be improved through the programme, while also stimulating industrial development. He added that energy constraints have limited SA's economic performance, but the reforms under the ITP could help unlock growth as envisioned in the National Development Plan. 'The economy has been held back by load shedding. We want to make energy a catalyst for economic recovery.' This transmission plan supports decarbonisation while maintaining base load generation from coal and nuclear. It's a balanced approach to ensure reliability and sustainability. Kgosientsho Ramokgopa Eskom has welcomed the milestone. In a statement on Thursday, group CEO Dan Marokane described the RFQ launch as 'a significant milestone' that sets the stage for greater competition and helps shift the country's energy mix towards lower-carbon sources. 'A significant milestone has been reached today to realise the delivery of new transmission infrastructure that will deliver greater competition and facilitate the transition from high carbon to low carbon sources of energy to drive economic growth to the benefit of all citizens, thanks to the leadership of the minister and the director-general of the National Treasury,' Marokane said. He added that the framework developed under the ITP process provided clarity and predictability for private investors: 'The clear, transparent policy framework is designed to crowd in large-scale private sector funding by providing the safeguards required, including predictability and governance, that enable developers to seamlessly start due diligence to bid competitively.' Eskom, through its subsidiary NTCSA, has been preparing seven projects for procurement under phase one of the ITP. These projects go beyond the Cape regions and are expected to be ready for implementation by next year. The NTCSA has worked closely with the ministries of electricity and energy and the Treasury on aspects such as strategic oversight, procurement and regulatory matters. 'We are comfortable that the NTCSA will continue with these projects to ensure that they are ready for the ITPs to construct after the procurement process is completed,' said the utility. Ramokgopa added that the RFQ issued this week marks the first stage, with a request for proposals to follow, paving the way for construction to begin within the next two years. This isn't just about transmission lines and substations; it's about tackling economic challenges head-on and creating new growth opportunities.


News24
2 hours ago
- News24
‘Please Call Me' case back to SCA; Rates relief: Today's top 7 stories in 7 minutes
News24 brings you the top 7 stories of the day. News24 brings you the top stories of the day, summarised into neat little packages. Read through quickly or listen to the articles via our customised text-to-speech feature. No, the US did not confirm AfriForum's farm murder claims in an official investigation - A US State Department's human rights bureau X thread on South African farm attacks is being misrepresented as a formal investigation, with AfriForum claiming it confirms their stance. - The X thread draws heavily on AfriForum's data, omits the group's own report of a sharp decline in attacks in 2024, and makes politically charged assertions without sufficient evidence. - The Human Rights and Labour's future is uncertain due to potential budget cuts and internal turmoil, raising questions about whether its messaging is being influenced by political priorities. ConCourt dismisses Zuma, MKP's urgent legal challenge over Mchunu's special leave - The Constitutional Court dismissed the MK Party's legal challenges regarding Police Minister Senzo Mchunu's special leave and the Madlanga Inquiry. - The court found the MK Party failed to prove it alone could decide on litigation and didn't justify direct access to the Constitutional Court. - The ruling allows Professor Firoz Cachalia's appointment as acting police minister to proceed, but Jacob Zuma and the MK Party can still challenge the matter in the High Court. Mashatile's man, ANC leaders party with Cat Matlala at corruption-accused Sodi's mansion - Underworld figure Vusimusi 'Cat' Matlala attended Edwin Sodi's 50th birthday party, mingling with high-ranking ANC politicians. - Matlala faces criminal charges for a botched hit and his company won a R360 million police tender that was later cancelled amid fraud claims. - The presence of Matlala and his connections with influential figures have raised concerns about political influence and corruption. Vodacom victory sends 18-year 'Please Call Me' battle back to Supreme Court of Appeal - The Constitutional Court has ordered the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) to rehear the 'Please Call Me' case between Nkosana Makate and Vodacom. - The Constitutional Court found that the SCA failed to provide proper reasoning in its previous ruling, which directed Vodacom to pay Makate 5-7% of the product's revenue. - Makate remains confident and Vodacom is reviewing the judgment to determine its next steps in the long-standing legal battle. Interest rates cut to lowest level since 2022 - The SA Reserve Bank lowered interest rates by 25 basis points, reducing the repo rate to 7% and the prime rate to 10.5%. - Inflation has been below 3% since March, but is expected to rise to 3.3% by year-end due to factors like higher fuel prices. - The SA Reserve Bank downgraded its growth expectation for the year due to the impact of US trade tariffs, which are set to increase on South African goods. Ashley Vlotman/Gallo Images 'A unifying factor': 20 000 in Paarl brace for world rugby's biggest schoolboy derby - Paarl Gimnasium and Paarl Boys High will compete in their annual Interschools derby, a major schoolboy rugby event. - Gimnasium is aiming for an undefeated season, while Boys High seeks to break their two-derby losing streak. - The derby is a unifying event for the schools and the town of Paarl, drawing a crowd of over 20 000.


Bloomberg
2 hours ago
- Bloomberg
Zimbabwe's Treasury Chief Sees Lower Economic Growth from Next Year
Zimbabwe's economy is expected to expand an average of about 5% a year between 2026 and 2029, with risks to output from the agriculture, mining and electricity sectors, according to Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube. A growth rate of 6% is anticipated this year, unchanged from a December projection, Ncube said in his mid-term budget speech to lawmakers in Mount Hampden, north of the capital, Harare, on Thursday.