Abu Dhabi oil model Abu Dhabi tax and royalties on oil exports ADNOC state ownership Africa resource control Foreign company canโt extract oil from Abu Dhabi unless it partners state owned ADNOC foreign mining companies Zimbabwe Foreigners mining and exploiting Zimbabwean minerals gold royalties Zimbabwe Great Dyke minerals Zimbabwe How much do Zimbabweans benefit from the mining and export of their minerals How much tax and royalties do people pay to export Zimbabwean minerals mineral wealth Africa mining taxation Zimbabwe Mutapa Investment Fund should control our mineral reserves natural resource governance platinum mining Zimbabwe resource exploitation debate Royalties for gold exports in Zimbabwe Written by Rutendo Matinyarare Zimbabwe economic policy Zimbabwe mineral policy Zimbabwe minerals Zimbabwe mining royalties Zimbabwe resource nationalism Zimbabwe sovereign wealth fund
Zimbabwe stands at a critical geopolitical crossroads as the global race for strategic minerals intensifies in the age of artificial intelligence, green energy, and advanced military technologies. With the West and China competing for control of rare earth minerals, lithium, cobalt, and copper, resource-rich regions like Southern Africa are becoming central to global power struggles. This analysis examines how the new geopolitical scramble for minerals could reshape international relations and why Zimbabwe must carefully navigate the emerging era of resource-driven global competition.
An analysis of foreign exploitation in Africa, examining Chinese and Western mining practices in Zimbabwe. The article explores allegations of gold smuggling, environmental damage from heap leaching, lack of local value addition, and the dominance of foreign-controlled mineral value chains. It questions whether current investment models promote development or perpetuate neo-colonial extraction that undermines economic sovereignty and long-term industrial growth.
Since 2000, U.S. and Western sanctions have played a decisive role in toppling governments across the Global South, from Iraq and Libya to Syria, Venezuela, and Afghanistan. This article examines the clear pattern: prolonged sanctions collapse economies, fuel unrest, trigger disputed elections, invite foreign intervention, and ultimately result in regime change. Zimbabwe narrowly escaped the same fate. Through a politically conscious and legally grounded anti-sanctions strategy led by civil society organisations such as ZASM, the struggle was shifted from a bilateral confrontation with the United States to a multilateral challenge involving the UN, SADC, and South Africa. This pressure led to the removal of sanctions, stabilised the economy, and averted invasion or regime change. The piece also explores how similar tactics are now being applied against Russia and China to preserve Western economic dominance.


