- A Lawyer’s practical guide to resolving mining conflicts before they destroy your business
The mining industry is never short of drama, to put it lightly. As of today, the 6th of July 2026, gold is selling at a price of USD125 000 [One Hundred and Twenty Five Thousand United States dollars] per kilogram. This is an unbelievably high-stakes industry. Only if it is done right. And only if disputes, which will occur anyway, are solved correctly and timeously.
It was a Tuesday morning when the call came through. A gold miner, let us call him Makova, was in a panic. His mining partner had locked him out of the operation. Security guards, hired by the partner, were preventing Makova from accessing the shaft. The equipment he had purchased sat idle. The ore they had blasted over the past months was being processed without his knowledge or consent. The ore, worth an estimated USD10 000 000 [Ten million United States dollars] would be life-changing for Makova, but evidently, all this would now come to nought.
“I want them arrested,” Makova said, his voice tight with anger. “I want a court order today. I want my mine back.”
I asked him a simple question: “How long do you think that will take?”
He paused. “A few weeks?”
I took a breath and delivered the hard truth: “Try two to five years and while you are waiting for the High Court to hear your case, your partner will be extracting your ore, your equipment will rust, and your investors will disappear.” Makova’s face fell. He had assumed the law would move quickly. He was wrong and that misunderstanding nearly cost him everything. Over sixteen years of legal practice, I have learned that the miners who survive disputes are not the ones who rush to court. They are the ones who understand that the courtroom is a last resort, not a first response. They are the ones who have a strategic dispute resolution plan in place before the conflict erupts. This article is about that strategy. It is about how to fight for your rights without sacrificing your mine.
Why litigation is a Miner’s nightmare
Let me be blunt, the High Court is not designed for mining disputes. It is designed for justice, which is a different thing entirely. When you file a case in the High Court, you are entering a legal minefield. The aura of the courtroom itself is intimidating and intense. Judges are mostly overwhelmed. Cases are postponed. Some court processes take time to mature and ultimately be heard. Your opponent’s lawyers will file every conceivable motion to delay. If the case is complex, and mining cases always are, you might wait eighteen months just to get a trial date. You may win at trial, but, if your opponent appeals, add another two to three years.
Meanwhile, what happens to your mine? It sits idle. Your equipment depreciates. Your investors lose confidence. Your employees find other work. The geological window for extraction might close. The market price for your commodity might collapse. Annual returns must be filed without fail lest you face a monster called forfeiture. By the time the court finally rules in your favour, the victory is hollow. If you are one of the few unlucky ones, your mine will be invaded by a few illegal miners, who will turn into an environmental hazard within the shortest possible time, thereby inviting the full wrath of the Environmental Management Agency [EMA].
I represented a miner once who was locked out of his claim by a former partner. We filed an urgent application for a spoliation order (a court order to restore possession). The application was granted within two weeks, a victory. However, by the time the full dispute was resolved in court, two years had passed. The miner had lost production, lost investors, and lost the momentum of the project. He won the legal battle but lost the mining war. The court cannot give you back those two years. It cannot restore your operational momentum. It cannot recover the capital you burned paying lawyers while your mine sat idle. This is why the smartest miners I know treat court as a weapon of last resort, not a first response.
What are your strategic options for dispute resolution?
Disputes under the Mines and Minerals Act [Chapter 21:05] in Zimbabwe are primarily resolved through a hierarchy of administrative reviews, specialised tribunals, and civil litigation, depending on the nature and complexity of the conflict.
The main mechanisms for resolving disputes include:
- Provincial Mining Directors (PMDs)
Formerly known as Mining Commissioners, the PMDs serve as the primary point of contact for local disputes (e.g., boundary conflicts, claim pegging, and miner-landholder disagreements). The PMD investigates the issue and makes an administrative determination, often mandating a cessation of mining operations if the situation requires it.
- Appeals to the Minister
If either party is dissatisfied with the PMD’s determination, they can appeal directly to the Ministry of Mines and Mining Development. The Minister has the authority to review the case and confirm, vary, or overturn the PMD’s decision.
- Civil Litigation and the High Court
The Act gives the High Court original jurisdiction over most civil disputes, including claim ownership and breach of contract. Parties can approach the courts directly for interdicts (such as halting illegal or disputed mining) or if the nature of the dispute falls outside the PMD’s statutory mandate.
- Arbitration
For commercial or contractual mining disputes (such as Tribute Agreements), parties may opt for private arbitration. This is governed by the Arbitration Act [Chapter 7:15] and provides a binding resolution process.
- Mining Affairs Board
Handles disputes around the granting, withdrawal, or cancellation of mining titles and certain land use agreements.
Options I would recommend as the most practical
While boundary and title disputes belong to the Provincial Mining Director, commercial conflicts, such as Tribute Agreements, joint venture breakdowns, or shareholder deadlocks, require a completely different battleground. For these, private commercial arbitration is your business’s ultimate shield.
Option 1: Negotiation and direct settlement
This is the fastest, cheapest, and most effective dispute resolution mechanism. It is also the one most miners skip because they are too angry to think straight. When a dispute arises, your first move should be to sit down with the other party. Not in a confrontational way, but as a business problem to be solved. Often, disputes arise from miscommunication, not malice. A direct conversation, sometimes facilitated by a neutral third party, can resolve the issue in days. The key is to approach negotiation strategically. Before you meet, define your walk-away position. What is the absolute minimum you will accept? What are you willing to give up? What is non-negotiable? If you go into negotiation without clarity on these points, you will either capitulate or deadlock.
I had a client in a dispute over royalty payments with a custom milling operator. The miner believed the operator was underpaying; the operator claimed the miner was overestimating production. Rather than litigate, we arranged a meeting with both parties and an independent metallurgist. The metallurgist reviewed the production data, clarified the discrepancy (a simple accounting error), and the dispute was resolved in one day. The cost: a few hours of my time and the metallurgist’s fee. The alternative: two years in court.
Option 2: Mediation, when Negotiation stalls
If direct negotiation fails, mediation is the next logical step. A mediator is a neutral professional who facilitates a structured conversation between the parties. The mediator does not impose a decision; they help the parties find their own solution. Mediation is remarkably effective in mining disputes because it allows both parties to vent their grievances, be heard, and then focus on solving the problem. Many disputes have an emotional component; a feeling of betrayal or disrespect that must be acknowledged before a rational solution can emerge. In Zimbabwe, mediation is governed by common law principles and is increasingly recognised as a professional service. The process typically works like this: each party meets with the mediator separately to explain their position. The mediator then shuttles between the parties, identifying common ground and exploring potential solutions. If both parties agree on a solution, the mediator drafts a settlement agreement.
Mediation is confidential, which means nothing said in mediation can be used against you in court if the process fails. This confidentiality is crucial, it allows parties to be candid and creative without fear of legal consequences.
Option 3: Arbitration, the Miner’s secret weapon
This is where the real power lies. Arbitration is a private, binding process where the parties present their case to an arbitrator (or a panel of Arbitrators) rather than a Judge. The Arbitrator makes a final decision, which is binding and extremely difficult to appeal.
For miners, arbitration is transformative. Here is why:
- Speed
Arbitration typically takes six to twelve months from start to finish. The parties control the schedule. There is no court congestion. No postponements because the judge is busy with other cases. You set the timeline, and the arbitrator works within it.
- Expertise
In arbitration, you can select an arbitrator who understands metallurgy, mining finance, and the realities of extraction. You are not wasting time educating the decision-maker on how a mine works.
- Confidentiality
Court proceedings are public. Your proprietary geological data, your financial records, your production figures, all become public record. In arbitration, everything is private. What is discussed stays confidential. This protects your competitive advantage and your investor relationships.
- Finality
Once an arbitral award is issued, it is final. Under Zimbabwe’s Arbitration Act, the High Court will only overturn an award on very narrow grounds, essentially, if the arbitrator violated public policy or acted with gross misconduct. This finality is powerful. You get a decision, and you move on. No endless appeals.
- Enforceability
Zimbabwe is a signatory to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. This means an arbitral award issued in Zimbabwe can be enforced in virtually any country in the world. If your opponent has assets abroad, you can pursue them. This is far more powerful than a court judgment, which may not be recognized internationally.
How to build a Dispute Resolution plan before you need it
The miners who survive disputes are the ones who plan for them before they happen. Here is a practical roadmap:
Step 1: Draft a tiered Dispute Resolution clause in every Contract
Every mining agreement, whether it is a joint venture agreement, a partnership agreement, a supply contract, or an equipment lease, must contain a dispute resolution clause. This clause should specify a tiered approach. If a dispute arises, the parties will attempt to resolve it through direct negotiation within 30 days. If negotiation fails, the parties will submit to mediation for a further 30 days. If mediation fails, the dispute will be submitted to binding arbitration in Harare under the rules of the Commercial Arbitration Centre. By inserting this clause, you are not anticipating failure; you are engineering a process that keeps disputes private, swift, and manageable.
Step 2: Choose your Arbitrator in advance [provided the other party mutually agrees]
Some sophisticated mining companies identify potential Arbitrators before they are needed. They research arbitrators with mining experience, check their track records, and even have preliminary conversations. When a dispute arises, they already know who they want to arbitrate it. This sounds excessive, but it is not. It saves time and ensures you have an Arbitrator you trust.
Step 3: Document everything
The best defense in any dispute is clear documentation. Every agreement should be in writing. Every significant conversation should be followed by an email confirming what was discussed. Every payment should be documented. Every production figure should be recorded. When a dispute arises and you go to Arbitration, the Arbitrator will want to see the documentary evidence. If you have it, you are in a strong position. If you do not, you are vulnerable.
Step 4: Preserve evidence
If a dispute erupts, your first instinct might be to retaliate. Resist that instinct. Instead, preserve evidence. Take photographs. Record production figures. Preserve emails and WhatsApp messages. Document any breaches or violations. This evidence will be crucial if the dispute goes to arbitration and because arbitration is confidential, you can present sensitive evidence without fear of public exposure.
Step 5: Act quickly, but strategically
If a dispute arises, do not delay. Contact a lawyer immediately. But do not rush to court. Instead, work with your lawyer to develop a dispute resolution strategy. Should you attempt negotiation first? Is mediation appropriate? Should you go straight to arbitration? The right strategy depends on the specific dispute, the relationship with the other party, and your business objectives. A good lawyer will help you navigate these choices.
In conclusion
As a lawyer, I have seen disputes destroy mining operations that had excellent geology, solid capital and experienced management. The difference between those that survived and those that did not was not the strength of their legal case, it was their dispute resolution strategy.
Here is what I tell every miner I advise:
The first thing is to build dispute resolution clauses into every contract you sign. Make Arbitration your default mechanism for resolving disputes. Secondly, when a dispute arises, resist the urge to rush to court. Instead, follow a tiered approach: negotiate first, mediate second, arbitrate third. The court should be your last resort. Thirdly, choose your Arbitrator carefully. Invest in someone with mining experience who understands the realities of your operation. Fourth, document everything. Your documentary evidence is your best defence. Last but not least, act quickly, but strategically. Get legal advice immediately, but do not let anger drive your decisions.
The miners who thrive are not the ones who win the most legal battles. They are the ones who avoid legal battles altogether by resolving disputes swiftly, privately, and strategically. They keep their mines operating, their investors confident, and their focus on extraction rather than litigation.
Your next dispute is coming. It is not a question of if, but when. The question is: will you be ready?
About the Author:
Namatirai Ruzvidzo is a registered Legal Practitioner, Conveyancer and Notary Public. She possesses over 15 years of experience specialising in Commercial law, Mining law and Property law. She practices in Avondale, Harare, under the Law Firm, Ruzvidzo Legal Counsel. She can be reached on +263 784 228 534 or email [email protected], copying [email protected]




