Blending youth, experience

Wallace Ruzvidzo Herald Reporter PRESIDENT Mnangagwa yesterday swore in Deputy Ministers for the Ministry of Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprises Development and that of Mines and Mining Development at State House in Harare, with both pledging to serve their respective portfolios with distinction. Deputy Minister Fred Moyo will serve in the Mines ministry, while Deputy […]

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Wallace Ruzvidzo

Herald Reporter

PRESIDENT Mnangagwa yesterday swore in Deputy Ministers for the Ministry of Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprises Development and that of Mines and Mining Development at State House in Harare, with both pledging to serve their respective portfolios with distinction.

Deputy Minister Fred Moyo will serve in the Mines ministry, while Deputy Minister Kiven Mutimbanyoka will be in the Women Affairs portfolio.

Speaking to the media after the swearing-in ceremony, Deputy Minister Moyo, who has served in the ministry before, said he was elated to be back.

“I’m back . . . I’m happy to be back. I think maybe there was unfinished business, you never know, but let me go back and start again and see what we can achieve here,” he said.

The Deputy Minister, who is a mining engineer explained the modalities that make the mining sector viable.

“It (mining) is a low hanging fruit, but I think people also tend to underestimate the complexities of mining. So while it is a low hanging fruit, there are certain things that mining demands that must be done procedurally in a certain way in order to achieve the desired results,” he said.

The President swears in newly-appointed Deputy Minister of Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Kiven Mutimbanyoka at State House

Deputy Minister Moyo said mining was an international business especially for Zimbabwe, as its value chain included international players be it in terms of equipment or buyers.

“We use equipment sourced internationally, we use skilled scientific formulas that are international, we trade the minerals internationally.

“If I give an example, if we have a mineral buyer who comes from the US, for example, who wants to come and buy a mineral from here, that’s a top executive from the US coming into Zimbabwe to come and negotiate to buy our commodity.

“If you deploy a half-baked marketer at MMCZ (Minerals Marketing Corporation of Zimbabwe), you lose,” he said.

The Deputy Minister also touched on mining regulations in the country as well as the need for synergies between the ministries of Mines and Small and Medium  Enterprises.

“You need to say in Zimbabwe, our mining sector is regulated to use technology of this type, of this standard, so that the universities and colleges train, focused on certain practices and technologies.

“It looks like a small thing, but the miners don’t know who is their regulator, small ones. Small farmers they know, small hospitalities, lodges they know, health sectors, small nursing houses they know, but miners (there is a) grey area.

“So I look forward to an exciting period here.”

President Mnangagwa poses for a photograph with the newly-appointed Deputy Minister of Mines and Mining Development Engineer Fred Moyo (seated, second from left), his Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprises Development counterpart Kiven Mutimbanyoka (seated, second from right), following their swearing-in at State House in Harare yesterday. Also present are Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet Dr Martin Rushwaya (seated, right) and Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi (seated, left), Mines Minister Dr Polite Kambamura (standing, third from left), Women Affairs Minister Monica Mutsvangwa (standing, centre), Permanent Secretary for Mines Mr Pfungwa Kunaka (standing, third from right) and the families of the deputy ministers. — Picture: Believe Nyakudjara

On his part, Deputy Minister Mutimbanyoka began by expressing gratitude to President Mnangagwa for the recognition, saying it came as a surprise.

“I really want to thank His Excellency for this very opportunity to actually serve Zimbabwe and I am going to deliver on the mandate as given by His Excellency.

“I am so thrilled, I am so thankful and I really want to thank His Excellency for the confidence that he has actually shown in me and for appointing me to this auspicious position of being the Deputy Minister of Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprise Development,” he  said.

Deputy Minister Mutimbanyoka narrated how he had come from working in the retail sector to serving in the Second Republic.

“When I left school, I went into retail. I worked for a leading retailer for 10 years, I was the general manager, and thereafter I resigned. I have since set up my own,” he said.

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