A controversial “regularization” drive by Freda Rebecca Gold Mine has sparked serious allegations of corporate overreach and governance failures in Bindura. At the heart of the dispute is a strategic attempt by Freda to assert control over the ML21 mining area—a territory that has operated under the structured management of Botha Gold Mine for over a decade.
Critics argue that Freda has deliberately reframed a corporate land dispute as a crackdown on “illegal miners” to bypass due process.
The strategy, implemented in late January 2026, reportedly relies on legal leverage and psychological pressure. By issuing public notices citing the Mines and Minerals Act and threatening criminal arrest, Freda compelled local contractors to undergo a rushed registration process.
These “regularization” forms have been slammed by legal analysts as coercive; they lack specific shaft allocations or binding terms, instead requiring miners to provide blanket consent to future, undisclosed rules.
For many artisanal miners, the choice was simple: sign away their rights or face immediate incarceration.
Central to the controversy is the appointment of Mrs. Angela Mpofu-Chisvo as Project Manager for ML21.
As a former figure within the Botha contractor ecosystem, her new role as the sole gatekeeper for verification and payment redirection has raised significant conflict-of-interest alarms. Industry experts suggest that by instructing miners to remit production percentages exclusively to Freda, the company is attempting to establish de facto control through cash flow management before any court has ruled on the legality of their claim.
This aggressive maneuvering ignores the established compliance systems and historical presence of Botha Gold Mine. By prioritizing control over due process, Freda Rebecca Gold Mine faces mounting scrutiny regarding its transparency and ethical conduct.
As the dispute intensifies, the primary victims remain the local miners whose livelihoods are being used as pawns in a high-stakes corporate power play. Whether this strategy constitutes a legitimate mining reclamation or a calculated governance failure is a question that now sits squarely before Zimbabwe’s regulators.
