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Death of a River: My Journey into the Heart of Makaha’s Gold Frenzy

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The map is a lie. It shows the Manyuchi River as a graceful blue vein curling through the belly of Makaha. But the map doesn’t show the pits. It doesn’t show the mountains of discarded rubble. It doesn’t show the Chinese excavators—metallic insects chewing at the riverbed until the earth itself is reshaped.

By Rudairo Mapuranga

I had heard the whispers—of a river vanishing, of a landscape being rewritten by force. So I went to see the corpse for myself. My journey from Mutondo, through Chipangure and Kambanje, was a funeral procession. The air, once carrying the scent of water and wild mint, is now a gritty cocktail of diesel and dust. The soundscape is no longer of birds and breeze, but a relentless, industrial dissonance—the grinding of machinery, the shouts of men, the sickening crunch of earth being torn apart.

I stood on the bank, looking down into the trench that was once a river. A young man, his face and clothes painted the same dull grey as the earth, saw my disbelief. He climbed up to meet me, his boots kicking loose a cascade of pebbles into the abyss below.

“You are looking for the river?” he asked, not unkindly. “It’s gone. To call this a river is to tell a story about a man who is already dead.” He pointed a dusty finger at the chaotic scene. “This? This is just a mine now. The water comes only with the angry rains, and when it does, it struggles to find its path. But for now, this dust is what feeds our children.”

His name was Tafara, and for the last eight months, he has worked here, in the belly of the dead river. He is one of hundreds—a chaotic mix of local artisanal miners and organized Chinese operations—who have descended upon Manyuchi in a frantic rush for lithium and gold.

“When the Chinese machines came, everything changed,” he explained, his voice dropping. “Before, we would dig with shovels. It was hard, but the river could recover. Now, these machines work day and night. They go deeper than any man can. They change the very bones of the land. They are not just digging in the river; they are digging out its soul.”

I followed him down into the trench. The scale of destruction was breathtaking. It wasn’t just mining; it was systematic erasure. The riverbed was carved into a labyrinth of deep pits and precarious ledges. Most strikingly, I saw it with my own eyes: Chinese-operated excavators were systematically dumping loads of waste rock and rubble directly back into the river channel. They were not just taking from the river; they were using its ancient course as a landfill for their spoil, burying the riverbed under metres of sterile rock.

The community’s mood is a complex, bitter brew. I spoke to an elderly woman, Mai Tsitsi, who remembers the river of her youth. “We used to fetch water here. Children played here. Now, look,” she said, her eyes filled with a deep, weary sadness as she gestured towards the monstrous piles of rubble. “They are filling it with stones. They are burying it. When the rains come, where will the water go? It will flood. It will destroy what is left. These miners, they bring money for some, but they leave us with a grave where our river used to be.”

The environmental crime here is one of physical suffocation. By dumping vast quantities of mining waste directly into the river, the operations are fundamentally altering its hydrology. The river’s natural channel and flow are being obliterated. When the rains do come, the water will not flow; it will pool unpredictably, flood surrounding areas, and struggle to navigate the man-made obstacles, causing erosion and further devastation downstream towards the Manyuchi Dam.

The most haunting words came from a site supervisor for a Chinese operation, who spoke to me on condition of anonymity. Through a translator, he told me, “We are here because the minerals are here. The land is rich. We must move the earth to get to it. Where else should we put the waste rock but in the empty space? The river is dry now. It is a practical solution.”

It is a practical solution. That single sentence, delivered with chilling pragmatism, encapsulates the entire tragedy. The Manyuchi River is not a lifeblood to be preserved; it is a convenient dumping ground. Its future is not a consideration; it is an obstacle to be overcome.

As I left Makaha, the dust coated my skin and the back of my throat. I carried the taste of the dying river with me. The map may still show a blue line, but on the ground, there is only a scar being filled with rubble. The frantic mining continues—a race for riches in a graveyard of their own making. When the rains finally come, they will not bring renewal, but chaos—the confused, angry backlash of a natural order that has been ruthlessly dismantled, stone by stone.

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