Categories: Stories

Canadian mining firm behind exploration at Oppenheimer’s Zimbabwe farm

Duration Gold said the work it intended to carry out on the Oppenheimer property and in other parts of the country was a game-changer for Zimbabwe’s mining industry.

“With a state-of-the-art and modern approach to airborne geophysical surveying, the radiometric and magnetic survey will be the second-largest such endeavour of its kind, following another such project conducted in the 1980s. However, the ‘game-changer’ this time will be the use of modern, cutting edge, technologies, which shall make the results much more comprehensive,” said Duration Gold.

“The survey dovetails with the call by President Emmerson Mnangagwa for investment in mining to partner the nation with a view to creating a multibillion-dollar mining industry as the nation heads to middle-income status as per the President’s vision,” the company added.

Duration Gold is owned by Canadian national Allan Dolan. Quoted in the statement, Dolan said he was humbled that his company was in charge of such an important project.

“We are extremely humbled to be the company coming in to do this much-needed exercise, in what should help put the country firmly on the road to achieving the national targets as espoused by government in mining.

“Airborne surveys such as ours, hopefully inspiring many more, are a key cog in the development wheel heading towards that crucial middle-income economy status,” he said.

Another battle is brewing between farmers and miners in Concession, a small farming town in the Mashonaland Central province, approximately 45km from Harare.

Eighteen farmers are locked in a dispute with a mining syndicate called Zawadi Mining, which has been mining in their farming area since 2011.

The dispute erupted when the mining company pegged land on which the farmers have been farming since 2001.

In Matabeleland South, in a village called Ntola in the Umzingwane District, Heywood Mining has pegged graveyards, a school and farmland belonging to the community.

Both issues have been reported to the mines and agriculture ministries.- News24

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Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

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