Solar-Irrigated Farms Face Unexpected Threat in Zimbabwe: Hungry Elephants – The Zimbabwean

Cheap, clean power ran irrigation pumps that kept the community’s wheat, maize and vegetable fields a sea of green even as climate change-fueled droughts parched the surrounding landscape.

But the verdant fields have attracted a new problem to Mashaba: herds of hungry elephants.

As drought makes grass and other fodder harder to find, elephants have begun invading the village’s tempting irrigated fields, destroying crops and irrigation canals and exasperating farmers.

“We have to stand guard in our fields all night from 6:30 pm till 3:30 in the morning. We beat pots, tins, pans, drums or anything that makes noise to chase away elephants,” Daniel Nyathi, a farmer in Mashaba, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

As well, “every night we make bonfires on the edge of our fields, shine torches and rev a tractor all night, hoping that might scare the elephants,” said Nyathi who heads the 42-hectare (104-acre) Rustlers Gorge irrigation project, which serves 2,800 local households.

According to Mashaba residents, up to 60 elephants now appear to see the village’s irrigated fields as one of their main sources of food.

Elephants have been an occasional problem in the village’s fields, especially since 2017, as conditions have grown drier, they said. But the invasions have intensified dramatically as the solar irrigation project has taken off, they said.

Win Sibanda, one of the Mashaba village leaders, said he feared the near-daily elephant invasions into the community’s fields mean farmers won’t get much of a harvest next month if the problem isn’t addressed.

Right now, “the only practical solution is for the farmers to keep guard and chase them out,” he said.

“If the elephants number less than five, villagers can easily deal with them. But the challenge is when the whole herd enters the field. No one dares provoke them because that is more dangerous,” he said.

Less rain, more fights

As worsening droughts lead to more challenging conditions for farmers and wildlife in southern Africa, such confrontations are expected to become more problematic as irrigation projects pop up to help communities adapt to drier conditions.

Sithokozile Nyathi, 36, whose farm with her husband Daniel lies within the Rustlers Gorge irrigation project, said the village had been transformed into a “green belt” with the introduction of the solar mini-grid.

The $3.2 million solar project was funded by the European Union in conjunction with the OPEC Fund for International Development and Global Environment Facility as part of efforts to promote universal access to modern energy in rural areas.

The grid’s 400 solar panels power several irrigation projects, Mashaba’s primary school, a local clinic and a small business center with four shops and an energy kiosk, said Shepherd Masuka, a project officer with Practical Action, a development charity that supervised the project’s construction.

Sithokozile Nyathi said the system has allowed farmers to earn a steady income from their crops, rather than simply depending on increasingly unreliable rainfall.

“Each morning we walk 2 miles from our homesteads to the irrigation scheme to work the whole day in the fields,” she said.

But now farmers are having to work nights as well, just to try to keep elephants away, she said.

Looking for solutions

To try to find a solution, residents are working with the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (ZimParks), which oversees the country’s wildlife.

Kwanele Manungo, who helps manage work by the authority in southern Zimbabwe, said a team of game rangers were dispatched to Mashaba in July to address the elephant problem.

The rangers advised digging one-meter-deep trenches around the irrigated fields and using a traditional technique of putting piles of smoldering cow dung along their perimeter.

Manungo said the team, which was in the area for a month, “ended up leaving the place because elephants did not come back.” Community members were advised to call again if they had further problems.

“In the worst scenario, we shoot down a leader of the menacing elephants or scare them off using firecrackers,” she said.

But Practical  Action officials said more “lasting solutions” to elephant invasions of irrigated farmland needed to be worked out.

Tinashe Farawo, a spokesman for the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority, said the authority sometimes runs short of government funding for its wildlife management programs and is forced to self-fund.

That can mean farmers seeking help have to spend their own money to transport and feed game rangers, he confirmed.

Zimbabwe made $2.7 million selling 90 elephants to China and Dubai between 2012 and 2018, in an effort to reduce the numbers and earn income, Farawo said.

“We believe in sustainable utilization of our resources, and these elephants must pay for their upkeep,” he said in a telephone interview with the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

According to ZimParks data, the country can accommodate about 55,000 elephants but now has about 85,000. The rising numbers are likely one driver of the increasing farm invasions, officials said.

Farawo said conflicts between people and animals had led to 200 people losing their lives in Zimbabwe over the past five years.

At a May elephant summit in Botswana, southern African countries whose land is part of the Kavango-Zambezi transfrontier conservation area – which includes parts of Botswana, Zimbabwe, Namibia and Zambia – said their countries are home to the largest population of African elephants.

Officials at the summit said they would coordinate efforts to survey elephant populations to monitor them.

They noted that as elephant numbers grow in the region, conflicts between the animals and people are increasing as a result of climate change pressures and increasing competition for limited resources.

Zimbabwe bails senior opposition official arrested over protest – The Zimbabwean

A guard looks on as main opposition party, Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)’s national organising secretary Amos Chibaya arrives at the Harare Magistrates court in Harare, Zimbabwe, August 26, 2019. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo

Amos Chibaya, national organizing secretary for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), was an organizer of a street demonstration the party convened in Harare on Aug. 16 to launch a national protest movement.

The MDC accuses President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government of political repression and mismanaging an economy that is mired in its worst crisis in a decade.

Police banned the Harare demonstration as well as similar protests the MDC planned to hold in other cities. Some opposition supporters still turned up in Harare and were dispersed by police using batons, tear gas and water cannon.

Chibaya was released on bail of 400 Zimbabwe dollars (about $39) on condition that he not interfere with witnesses, his lawyer, Obey Shava, told Reuters. He had already surrendered his passport.

Chibaya is due back in court on Sept. 12, and again on Oct. 4 to face a separate charge of subversion over a January protest against a steep fuel price hike.

Fuel prices rose 10 percent on Monday, the Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority said. They have increased more than 600% since the start of the year.

Mnangagwa replaced longtime ruler Robert Mugabe in a November 2017 coup, winning a national election in July 2018 after pledging political and economic reforms.

Solar-Irrigated Farms Face Unexpected Threat in Zimbabwe: Hungry Elephants
Zimbabwe state doctors threaten strike over pay

Post published in: Featured

Morning Docket: 08.27.19

* If you’re following the Spider-Man movie rights kerfuffle, it’s worth remembering that this was entirely Disney’s fault for screwing up copyright law in the 1990s. [Screen Rant]

* Johnson & Johnson plan to appeal verdict suggesting that handing out heroin like candy might be a bad thing. [Law.com]

* Leonard Leo got himself a mansion in Maine apparently so he could raise money for Susan Collins (R-Federalist Society). Her https://screenrant.com/spiderman-copyright-mcu-disney-lobbying-fault/

campaign spokesperson declared that “The fact is, Senator Collins’ votes are not for sale” by which he means “they’ve already been bought.” [Central Maine]

* At the Greg Craig trial, Skadden folks are testifying that Craig had a “very passionate” aversion to foreign agent registration. In his defense just about every lobbyist will do anything in their power to avoid actually registering as a lobbyist. [National Law Journal]

* Explaining how the Brazilian rainforest fires link back to the trade war with China. [Huffington Post]

* Dallas has a new mayor and Locke Lord has a new partner and they are the same guy. [Dallas Morning News]

Zimbabwe state doctors threaten strike over pay – The Zimbabwean

The government on Friday proposed a 60% pay increase for doctors, while offering a 76% raise for the rest of the civil service, in a bid to avert crippling strikes by state workers.

But in separate statements, the main unions representing the doctors and the teachers said they rejected the government offers, which would see the lowest-paid worker earning 1,023 Zimbabwe dollars ($98.75) a month.

The Apex Council, which is an umbrella group for public sector unions, has demanded the equivalent of $475 for the lowest-paid government worker.

In a letter sent to the government on Monday, the Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors Association (ZHDA) said its members could no longer afford to report for duty amid surging inflation and continued deterioration of Zimbabwe’s economy.

“We maintain our request to have our earnings, which were previously pegged in United States dollars, be paid at the prevailing inter-bank rate,” the ZHDA said. adding that they would strike on September 3 if their demands were not met.

The Zimbabwe Teachers Association (Zimta), the biggest single union of public workers with about 44,000 members, also said the government’s wage offer was unacceptable, but committed to further negotiations.

Hope that the economy could recover under President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who replaced the long-ruling Robert Mugabe in a November 2017 coup, has made way for widespread anger over the slow pace of reforms and recovery.

Last week, the police banned a series of protests called by the opposition in the country’s major cities. They used teargas, baton sticks and water cannon to disperse demonstrators and arresting scores of protesters.

Ten leaders of a smaller teachers’ union were arrested on Friday along with their lawyer when they tried to petition the minister of finance for higher wages. The police on Thursday also arrested Amos Chibaya, a senior MDC official, on charges that he failed to stop the banned Harare protests.

Chibaya was released on 400 Zimbabwe dollar bail by a Harare magistrate on Monday. He also faces a separate subversion charge over protests staged in January 2019 over a sharp fuel price increase.

Zimbabwe scoops Bronze medal

Post published in: Featured

Why don’t citizens trust the government – The Zimbabwean

In two recent reports, RAU has looked at the issues around political trust, trustworthiness, social capital and political participation.

We carried out two different exercises. The first was to examine political trust over time, with the notion that political trust (and trustworthiness) should be sensitive to the political and economic context at any one time.

The second was to examine in the most recent data, Round 7 (2017) of Afrobarometer, the relationships between all the variables of the political trust, social trust, social capital, etc. We did this in order to understand the more subtle relationships involved in the approval and support of the government.

Of Course Our First Space Hack Is So Banal And Human

[image via Getty]

Obviously, when I think of space hacking, I think like a full on James Bond villain. I imagine an evil genius circumventing all Earthly firewalls to manipulate global currencies. I imagine a megalomaniac reprogramming the world’s nuclear arsenal to give themselves full control from their space lair on the dark side of the Moon.

I do not imagine a spurned lover checking in on her spouse’s bank accounts during a bitter divorce. But, of course, our weak and petty species would use the God-like power of space habitation to check in on whether their ex bought a new car. That’s humanity: a species not ready to join the intergalactic community (if there is one) because we are still easily consumed by our own materialistic problems.

From the New York Times:

Summer Worden, a former Air Force intelligence officer living in Kansas, has been in the midst of a bitter separation and parenting dispute for much of the past year. So she was surprised when she noticed that her estranged spouse still seemed to know things about her spending. Had she bought a car? How could she afford that?

Ms. Worden put her intelligence background to work, asking her bank about the locations of computers that had recently accessed her bank account using her login credentials. The bank got back to her with an answer: One was a computer network registered to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Ms. Worden’s spouse, Anne McClain, was a decorated NASA astronaut on a six-month mission aboard the International Space Station. She was about to be part of NASA’s first all-female spacewalk. But the couple’s domestic troubles on Earth, it seemed, had extended into outer space.

Ms. McClain acknowledged that she had accessed the bank account from space, insisting through a lawyer that she was merely shepherding the couple’s still-intertwined finances. Ms. Worden felt differently. She filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission and her family lodged one with NASA’s Office of Inspector General, accusing Ms. McClain of identity theft and improper access to Ms. Worden’s private financial records.

Goddamnit. It’s not even an interesting jurisdictional issue. If McClain had hijacked a Star Destroyer and laid waste to Worden’s new Camry from space, like that would at least be a thing. Does GEICO cover that or do death beams from low Earth orbit constitute an act of God? This is just boring-ass alleged invasion of privacy. It doesn’t matter that McClain is accused of doing it from space, you could get busted for invasion of privacy is you do it from Phuket, once you are back in U.S. jurisdiction.

The Times does raise a potential issue with discovery, because it’s likely that NASA’s email protocols on the International Space Station are subject to highly classified security that far surpass the kinds of protections your bank offers you for online banking. But even there, I mean this case is not what a kid has in mind when she dreams of “space discovery.”

We’ll get there. More people are going into space, and that means more stupid things will happen in space, and eventually something will happen that will be both interesting and totally illegal, but for the fact that it happen in space.

NASA Astronaut Anne McClain Accused by Spouse of Crime in Space [New York Times]


Elie Mystal is the Executive Editor of Above the Law and a contributor at The Nation. He can be reached @ElieNYC on Twitter, or at elie@abovethelaw.com. He will resist.

David Einhorn Evincing Signs Of Late-Stage Ackmania

D-Hornz -who is shorting Tesla- is demanding Elon Musk resign from Tesla, which we’re pretty sure is cheating.

Lawyer Says Mercedes Struck By Golf Ball, Prosecutors Say That’s When He Murdered The Victim

Bryan Schmitt, associate corporate counsel and director of contracts for Manhattan Associates, says “he saw a man on the side of the road next to a trash can making “a throwing motion with his arm” before he ‘saw a white object’ strike his car.” At that point, Schmitt told investigators that he confronted the guy who threw a trash can and in the process of swerving to avoid that, the guy was struck — receiving injuries that led to his death.

Prosecutors charged Schmitt with murder, felony murder and aggravated assault because the rest of the evidence suggests to law enforcement that Schmitt was much more direct in using his car as a weapon:

However, surveillance footage and witness statements contradicted Schmitt’s account, the criminal complaint states. One neighbor, a nurse, allegedly witnessed Schmitt attempting to pull Jahangard’s body from underneath his car and told him to stop and wait for paramedics to arrive, stating that Schmitt “ran him over” rather than knocked him down, according to WSB-TV.

In either case, it’s a reminder that a car is a deadly weapon even if law professors get to joke about vehicular homicide.

Atlanta lawyer killed victim with Mercedes after car was struck with golf ball, prosecutors say [ABC News]


HeadshotJoe Patrice is a senior editor at Above the Law and co-host of Thinking Like A Lawyer. Feel free to email any tips, questions, or comments. Follow him on Twitter if you’re interested in law, politics, and a healthy dose of college sports news. Joe also serves as a Managing Director at RPN Executive Search.