I am sure more than a few of you have heard about this but its fun!
Water Resources Minister Sam Sipepa Nkomo 
told a senate committee that traditional chiefs will perform rituals to 
exorcise mermaids believed to inhabit reservoirs where workers are now 
afraid to tread
Some strange things have been happening lately in various parts of Zimbabwe.
Last month a man was hounded from a Bulawayo 
neighborhood over claims he possessed goblins that were raping his wife 
and his neighbors’ wives, and otherwise wreaking havoc in the suburban 
community.
This week Water Resources Minister Sam Sipepa 
Nkomo told a senate committee that mermaids have been hounding 
government workers off dam sites in Mutare, Manicaland, and Gokwe, 
Midlands.
The minister’s stunning revelations add to the 
many sensational stories that Zimbabweans have over the years passed on 
about supernatural manifestations in their communities.
Though many are skeptical, some do firmly believe that mermaids exist in Zimbabwe.
Nkomo told a senate oversight committee that 
traditional chiefs are going to perform rituals to exorcise mermaids 
believed to inhabit reservoirs in Gokwe and Mutare where workers are 
afraid to tread.
Mermaids are supposedly mythological water 
creatures with a female body and the tail of a fish. Those tales were 
mostly in circulation hundreds of years ago – but stories continue to 
make their rounds in Zimbabwe.
One version says mermaids carry humans 
underwater and if there is a public outcry their relatives might never 
see them again. But it is also said that victims can return as spirit 
mediums if their disappearance is not mourned.
Such creatures are said to be terrifying workers at the Gokwe dam in Midlands and the Osborne dam in Manicaland.
Nkomo said all the workers he sent to work on 
the dam sites to install water pumps had dumped the project vowing not 
to return to the areas because of the mythical water creatures.
Local Government, Rural and Urban Development 
Minister Ignatius Chombo, who also appeared before the senate committee,
 backed the call for traditional rites to be performed at the dams to 
allay workers’ fears.
Nkomo said the government is prepared to give 
the population the water it needs, but is unable to do so until the 
rituals are performed and necessary repairs can be carried out.
He said he tried to hire white personnel to do 
the work at Osborne dam, supposedly because they had not been exposed to
 the mermaids reports, but they too refused to undertake the project 
alleging they had seen suspicious creatures.
According to the minister, workers report that 
people have disappeared mysteriously while some have been chased away by
 the legendary creatures.
Traditional leader chief Edison Chihota of Mashonaland East said there
 is no dispute about the existence of mermaids.
“As a custodian of the traditional I have no 
doubt," chief Chihota said. "For anyone to dispute this is also 
disputing him or herself.”
Cultural activist Prince Peter Zwide Khumalo, a 
descendant of King Lobengula, said mermaids play a central role in 
spiritual beliefs and they are thought to mainly inhabit the largest 
dams, such as Lake Kariba.
“They are said to exist in water particularly in big dams like Kariba. I haven’t heard of mermaids in small dams.”
But Khumalo said it is important to weigh 
reality against what people believe because development can be delayed 
wielding traditional beliefs that cannot easily be disproved.
“I do not believe that they need to be used to 
hinder development. This needs to be looked into very seriously by the 
minister because they might go and do cultural rituals but find that 
people still do not continue to work,” Khumalo added.
Minister Nkomo, a Seventh Day Adventist 
Christian, said that while he does not believe in mermaids in this part 
of the world, he would not meddle in the traditional beliefs of others, 
including witchcraft.
Witchcraft is a controversial subject in Zimbabwe: Some see it as a source of trouble, others believe it can bring good fortune.
It is so widespread that it is recognized by the
 law – for instance the Bulawayo goblin man sought police assistance 
after he admitted that the goblins he bought from a n’anga to bring him 
riches were allegedly raping his wife and those of neighbors.
Cultural experts and traditionalists note 
economic basis of some beliefs - poverty turns many to turn to 
witchcraft to gain riches or to hurt enemies.
Chief Chihota said he believes political 
opponents were killed and thrown into the reservoirs said to be 
inhabited by mermaids, hence the need to appease the spirits.
The traditional leader said: “I think let’s go 
back to the late 70s when the struggle was being waged and I understand a
 number of people were thrown in those dams and nothing was done and a 
continuation has been happening. So we have to start from somewhere.”
But Nkomo offered another theory: He suggested 
that unusual water pressures in the reservoirs could be creating 
hazardous currents and perhaps illusions.
“In Mutare what I think is happening is that 
there must be a sanction underneath there which creates a hole and the 
water will actually be swirling violently that if you fell in you will 
not come out, even if you had an oxygen mask.”
Nonetheless, the minister said this is no 
laughing matter so traditional rites will be performed to comfort some 
powerful African beliefs.
 
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