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Zimbabwe Bishops World Day of Migrants & Refugees statement | ICN – Independent Catholic News

Archbishop Alex Thomas Kaliyanil SVD

Archbishop Alex Thomas Kaliyanil SVD

The Zimbabwe Catholics Bishops’ Conference (ZCBC) have issued the following statement ahead of the 109th World Day for Migration and Refugees (WDMR), on the 24th of September 2023.

The ZCBC joins the Holy Father and the whole Church in celebrating the 109th World Day for Migration and Refugees, on the 24th of September 2023.

This year the celebration’s theme is, ‘Free to choose whether to migrate or to stay.’

The Holy Father, Pope Francis’ message towards this important celebration, is to give hope to the people on the move, namely migrants and refugees. He challenges receiving communities to open their hands to such people and make the displaced people feel at home while away from their original homes. In this way, the people on the move, will be assisted to build a new future, and work towards regaining their dignity. The Holy Father challenges all Christians, particularly here in Zimbabwe, as to how we can make our communities ever more inclusive and offer protection, promotion and integration of migrants and refugees.

The Catholic Parliamentary Liaison Office (CPLO) that works with migrants and refugees, as the social arm of ZCBC, wishes to assure the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development in the Vatican that, despite the limited resources, the local Church is active in advocating for the rights and dignity of migrants and refugees in Zimbabwe. The Church is constantly encouraged to receive such people and allow them to live peacefully within their communities besides living in the refugee camps. The CPLO is working in collaboration with Caritas and offers pastoral counselling services and advocacy for refugees and migrants who are sometimes abruptly arrested for different reasons.

Every migrant and refugee is unique and has a story to tell, and if that story is given a synodal listening ear, it can change the perceptions on how people look at the issue of migrants and refugees or those on the move. The migrant youth, elders, women, people living with disability, orphans, married or single persons, have a story to tell. Their story might be a painful one, full of despair, fear and yet full of trust on the one listening, as displayed in the story of the disciples on the road to Emmaus in Luke 24:13-49. What was of importance to Jesus was to listen to those disciples who had chosen to leave the rest due to fear and threats they had received from the surrounding communities of the Jews. Jesus listened to their story and in turn, they listened to Jesus’ narrative to the extent of welcoming each other into their home, their perceptions were enriched through that encounter. Displaced people have a lot to offer. They can enrich and broaden the way hosting communities see things.

This is the message of the Holy Father, to listen and to give hope to the people on the move, as they seek shelter and protection here in Zimbabwe or as migrants, in transit to neighbouring countries. The greatest gift one can offer to the displaced people is to listen to them and give them assurance that they are important, welcome and safe within the host communities. It is important that the local authorities be involved in this as well so that the re-integration of such people is done in accordance with the laws of the hosting country. In fact, migrants and refugees have had enough abuses, threats and degrading situations and have lost almost everything, even their dignity, and hence they should be accorded a dignified settlement and a new start within hosting communities. It is therefore the duty of every person, to protect, promote and help migrants and refugees, to be at home away from their original homes. It is when they are in safe places that they are free to choose whether to migrate or stay.

Abraham in the Bible, received Angels and these same Angels saved him and his relative Lot, from the predicament that befell Sodom and Gomora. (Gen. 21:1). In the Zimbabwean local tradition, it is said, a visitor never finishes the food in the barn, (Muenzi haapedzi dura), so any visitor is welcome and should be fed because the barn has enough for everyone, including the displaced people. Such visitors are a blessing to the hosting communities like in Tongogara Refugee Camp area in Zimbabwe, where over 14000 displaced people are in that Camp, while others are integrated into the communities through marriages or partnering into business ventures with the locals. This is possible only when displaced people are made to feel at home.

In integrating the displaced people, the Church and hosting communities are challenged not to plan for these people, but to involve them in finding a way forward in integrating them and in a way that benefits both communities. In fact, amongst the displaced people, some are professionals, university students, and entrepreneurs while others are good in some related fields, and hence through their expertise, both the hosted and the hosting community, benefit each other a lot. Such diverse fields and skills, can enrich the hosting community more. Being displaced is not being disabled, but it is a movement to share and showcase one’s skills and future skills.

As we celebrate the 109th WDMR, we the ZCBC, call upon our communities to be open to those on the move and offer necessary help as Christians where there is a need. In Mathew 25, Jesus challenged his audience that, “I was homeless and you never welcomed me, hungry and you never gave me food…” This is the time and era whereby we are called to live our gospel values of love and care for each other as called for in Fratelli Tutti. In that Encyclical Pope Francis, calls all people to live as one family while looking for solutions to restore the world’s political, health, social, economic crisis. We as Christians and people of goodwill, are challenged to become good neighbours as shown in Luke 10:25-37, in the story of the Good Samaritan. In this way, as we attend to the displaced people, we build healthy relationships within families, communities, cities and the world at large. (Fratelli Tutti Nos. 6; 8;17). This helps in building dreams with the displaced people, irrespective of their status, positions, religion, tribe, nationality, race, colour, and gender.

Therefore, in celebrating the WDMR the call is to treat those in need of our help, with dignity and respect. The way we treat them, will define our identity as Zimbabweans and as Christians. This can be made possible, once we allow the synodal spirit of listening, participation and mission, to prevail. Migrants and refugees are humans with the same dignity as those who host them. After all, we are all, pilgrims on our way to our heavenly home, where if the earthly tent we live in is destroyed, we have a building from God an eternal home. (2Cor. 5). We therefore acknowledge that migrants and refuges should feel at home among us and that they are free to choose whether to migrate or to stay. We pray for migrants within Zimbabwean borders and outside that they be respected and given the dignity they deserve as people on the move.

For any contributions in helping the national office to offer effective service to our vulnerable brothers and sisters who are displaced from their countries, kindly channel your donation through your Diocesan Offices. Any contribution towards this noble cause is greatly appreciated.

Bishop Chair on Migrants and Refugees Matters.

+ Archbishop Alex Thomas Kaliyanil SVD
Archbishop of Bulawayo

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Hippo Valley seeks solar energy supply from partners – NewsDay

The company revealed its plans to migrate to more eco-friendly processes in its operations in its annual report for the period ended March 31, 2023. This is part of plans to reduce its own pressure on the national grid in a country facing a deficit of over 1 000 megawatts of electricity.

HIPPO Valley Estate Limited has encouraged its partners to install solar plants to supply the sugar miller and help reduce pressure on the national grid.

The company revealed its plans to migrate to more eco-friendly processes in its operations in its annual report for the period ended March 31, 2023. This is part of plans to reduce its own pressure on the national grid in a country facing a deficit of over 1 000 megawatts of electricity.

In an interview with NewsDay Business at Hippo’s annual general meeting last Friday, the firm’s chief executive officer Aiden Mhere said the company was not going to directly procure the solar system, but rather encourage partners to lead the project.

“Well, the solar plants are not necessary for ourselves to actually spend money on them,” he said. “We are asking for other people to put up those solar plants, but we are looking at about five to 20MW of electricity for the solar system.

“So, to alleviate the electricity challenges we are looking at either, directly ourselves or indirectly, inviting other partners to produce solar. We have had prototype solar systems to power our pumps and now we are inviting those companies that are capable of providing solar energy to come and put-up solar plants and then we can buy the energy from them during the deficit periods.”

He also indicated that the firm was, however, an independent power producer which produces more than enough power through thermal station, which uses sugar cane bagasse to produce thermal energy for the sugar milling processes.

“So, when we are running the sugar mills, we actually have thermal power stations both at Hippo Valley and Triangle that produce electricity. As long as we are running, we produce electricity,” Mhere said.

“We irrigate using very good pumps in some of our operations that depend on electricity so when we have electricity challenges it becomes a problem.

“When we are running normally, we actually produce more energy than what we need. For example, at Hippo Valley we produce approximately five to 10 megawatts of electricity which we put on the national grid,” Mhere added.

National power generation challenges stem from low water levels at the country’s top electricity producing plant, the Kariba South Hydro Power Station and an overload at the Hwange Thermal Power Station.

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Hippo Valley seeks solar energy supply from partners – NewsDay

The company revealed its plans to migrate to more eco-friendly processes in its operations in its annual report for the period ended March 31, 2023. This is part of plans to reduce its own pressure on the national grid in a country facing a deficit of over 1 000 megawatts of electricity.

HIPPO Valley Estate Limited has encouraged its partners to install solar plants to supply the sugar miller and help reduce pressure on the national grid.

The company revealed its plans to migrate to more eco-friendly processes in its operations in its annual report for the period ended March 31, 2023. This is part of plans to reduce its own pressure on the national grid in a country facing a deficit of over 1 000 megawatts of electricity.

In an interview with NewsDay Business at Hippo’s annual general meeting last Friday, the firm’s chief executive officer Aiden Mhere said the company was not going to directly procure the solar system, but rather encourage partners to lead the project.

“Well, the solar plants are not necessary for ourselves to actually spend money on them,” he said. “We are asking for other people to put up those solar plants, but we are looking at about five to 20MW of electricity for the solar system.

“So, to alleviate the electricity challenges we are looking at either, directly ourselves or indirectly, inviting other partners to produce solar. We have had prototype solar systems to power our pumps and now we are inviting those companies that are capable of providing solar energy to come and put-up solar plants and then we can buy the energy from them during the deficit periods.”

He also indicated that the firm was, however, an independent power producer which produces more than enough power through thermal station, which uses sugar cane bagasse to produce thermal energy for the sugar milling processes.

“So, when we are running the sugar mills, we actually have thermal power stations both at Hippo Valley and Triangle that produce electricity. As long as we are running, we produce electricity,” Mhere said.

“We irrigate using very good pumps in some of our operations that depend on electricity so when we have electricity challenges it becomes a problem.

“When we are running normally, we actually produce more energy than what we need. For example, at Hippo Valley we produce approximately five to 10 megawatts of electricity which we put on the national grid,” Mhere added.

National power generation challenges stem from low water levels at the country’s top electricity producing plant, the Kariba South Hydro Power Station and an overload at the Hwange Thermal Power Station.

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Our meat is rotting, Cde Mnangagwa – NewsDay

Amid the pomp and fanfare, Mnangagwa proudly and confidently declared that Zimbabwe’s perennial power crisis had finally come to an end. This was after the country had endured up to 20 hours of daily power outages in some areas.

ON August 3, 2023, President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa commissioned the new Hwange Thermal Power Station Units 7 and 8.

Amid the pomp and fanfare, Mnangagwa proudly and confidently declared that Zimbabwe’s perennial power crisis had finally come to an end. This was after the country had endured up to 20 hours of daily power outages in some areas.

An excited Mnangagwa bragged that load shedding was now a thing of the past and went as far as to sarcastically challenge those whose meat was rotting in their fridges because of power cuts to come forward.

Well, almost immediately after August 23 an 24 harmonised elections, the dreaded power cuts returned with a vengeance.

It became clear that the brief lull the country went through without experiencing any load shedding in the run-up to the crucial election was nothing but a ruse. The nation is largely in darkness.

Zimbabweans were, in fact, foolhardy made to believe for a minute that the ruling Zanu PF party was sincere and had abandoned its trickery and chicanery.

It is quite possible that the government merely imported plenty of electricity from our neighbours, knowing fully well that the country was not producing sufficient energy for its domestic needs.

This whole “no more load shedding” ruse was just to get votes from an unquestioning and gullible citizenry who believe everything this government says.

Of course, some of us had always raised valid concerns over the numerous claims by the Mnangagwa administration. I remember penning a piece on March 22, 2023 titled: Is Hwange Unit 7 another big scam and con job?

As much as there are those who may view my thoughts and observations as too cynical and always negative, but decades of relentless deception authored by the Zimbabwe regime has shaped my mindset.

It should be known that people who are always sceptical and suspicious about a particular individual have good reason for doing so. If one is at the receiving end of countless lies and broken promises at the hands of someone, they end up taking whatever they are told by the perennial liar with a pinch of salt.

The persistent propensity to lie and deceive by the Mnangagwa administration troubles me.

Why do they have to mislead the nation — solely for the sake of political expediency?

As much as some may perceive this as a small insignificant thing — to be expected during the election season — however, there are always severe consequences.

For instance, having assured the corporate world that Zimbabwe’s energy crisis had finally been resolved — what is the sudden resurgence of power cuts going to do to investor confidence? Will investors, both local and foreign, be prepared to sow their hard-earned monies in a country where what the leadership pronounces is not to be trusted?

It was so heart-breaking listening to the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce chief executive officer Christopher Mugaga stating last week that business is losing between US$70 and US$80 million each month due to these persistent power cuts.

In so doing, this may lead to increased prices of goods and services because these losses are simply passed on to the consumer, further worsening the already dire situation of the ordinary citizenry.

Need I remind anyone that under Mnangagwa first five-year reign, half the population have been thrown into extreme poverty, while two-thirds of the workforce earned and still earn below the poverty datum line.

All this is largely because we have a government which cannot tell the truth!

If those in power had been honest all along — that the country’s power crisis had not been averted and was far from over — this would have enabled the business community to be better prepared.

Who knows, maybe due to the false assurances that the days of load shedding were past us, some corporates decided to shelve any plans for alternative power sources — opting to invest the capital elsewhere, only to be met with a rude awakening a few days after the elections.

Government needs to show some seriousness on such critical matters as power supply.

My late father, in his profound wisdom, taught me that lies had short lifespans and the repercussions were never good for anyone. There was really no need to lie to the nation that our power challenges had been resolved.

All the Zanu PF regime had to do was tell the nation that Hwange Units 7 and 8 were complete (if that is the real truth) — and should have also emphasised that power cuts will continue reoccurring because the Units will not be able to meet the ever-increasing demand for electricity by the growing population.

This would have given both commercial and domestic consumers a clear picture so as to enable proper planning. However, by lying that there is no longer an electricity shortage in Zimbabwe, this had the potential effect of dissuading and discouraging prospective investors in the energy.

Indeed, lies have a very short lifespan and have a tendency of backfiring in a big way. All we can now do is brace ourselves for increased prices of goods and services — just because we have liars in power.

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