Quarry Southern Africa May 2019 | Page 8

AFRICAN NEWS Artisanal and small-scale miners have disbanded their representative body, the Zimbabwe Miners Federation (ZMF), and formed a new body, the Zimbabwe Artisanal and Small-Scale Miners’ Federation (ZASMF), according to The Herald Business newspaper. ZMF was a representative body that fronted the interests of registered small-scale miners including quarries whose contribution to the mining sector has been on the increase. The sector is now accounting, for instance, for the largest portion of the country’s gold deliveries after overtaking their counterparts in the primary production sector, which is dominated by conglomerates. The move to morph into ZASMF was necessitated by the fact that the miners’ body felt that they were being limited in their activities under the old order. In an interview with The Herald Business, ZMF president Henrietta Rushwaya — who will assume the temporary leadership of the new body before the miners chart a new map — says hope was that they will be able to take unregistered miners on board in the new order. “The previous body restricted our activities to registered miners only, yet reality is that even the unregistered miners are playing a significant role in the small-scale and artisanal miners’ overall output,” says Rushwaya. “You don’t need to go far to see how this was long overdue; just look at the Battlefields mine disaster that killed miners. It was difficult New miners’ body formed Small-scale mining is a significant contributor to the Zimbabwean economy, needing its own representation. for us to come in and make sure we help and ensure we avoid such accidents because people operating there were unregistered miners. “So as a leadership, we agreed that let’s have a new way that is all-encompassing and the first step to this is to form a new federation altogether that takes care of this hurdle even from the perspective of its name. The leadership has agreed that the same people who were leading ZMF, continue in their previous roles, then at the appropriate time, we convene and seek a way forward from the miners themselves,” she says. The sector will remain important due to the geology of the country, which makes some mineral deposits more amenable to small-scale operations as opposed to conglomerate mining.  Zambian cement producer stocks up East Africa on the rise. Gross domestic product (GDP) growth for the African continent is forecast to accelerate to 4% in 2019, up from 3.5% in 2018, according to the African Development Bank (AfDB) in its latest economic outlook report. This makes it the fastest- growing region in the world after Asia — and it could have outstripped even Asia were it not for faltering growth in Nigeria and South Africa — the continent’s two biggest 6_QUARRY SA | MAY/JUNE 2019 economies making up almost half the continent’s GDP. This makes it the fastest growth rate since at least 2012. Nigeria’s GDP is forecast to expand 2.3% in 2019, below the country’s rate of population growth, as government struggles to reduce the nation’s oil dependence and attract foreign investment. South Africa’s expansion will be even slower, at 1.7%, as it battles self-induced recession. Both countries are in the AfDB’s list of the 10 slowest-growing economies. The continent’s economic growth will instead be driven by East Africa, which will be the fastest-expanding region for the fifth straight year. Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, and Tanzania all feature on the AfDB’s list of the 10 fastest-growing economies for 2019. Egypt, the biggest economy after Nigeria and South Africa, will also help drive growth. Output in Egypt will rise about 5.5% in 2019 as the government’s structural reforms attract more foreign investment. Subdued growth in southern Africa is primarily due to South Africa’s weak output, which affects neighbouring countries, AfDB says. While West Africa’s prospects are more upbeat, they may be clouded by risks including uncertainty in global commodity prices and security concerns in some countries, the lender says.  www.quarryonline.co.za