CRY BELOVED LOMAHASHA
Sir,
If the devil could visit Lomahasha and offer to solve our developmental predicaments in return for friendship, we would have no alternative but to comply, regardless of the consequences.
Lomahasha has been neglected for a long time now in a manner that upon arrival, you are welcomed by old, depilated and underdeveloped structures.
Hence it is slowly becoming a ghost town notwithstanding the fact that it is strategically located to welcome visitors from the neighbouring Mozambique.
Potholes
The road infrastructure from the border gate to as far as Mpaka leaves a lot to be desired.
It is no longer potholes on the road but rather a road in potholes considering their quantity and size.
Moreover, the unattended overgrowth along the road is an increasing concern.
The Ministry of Public Works and Transport seems not too bothered about cutting the overgrowth for some time now, kumele kuze kufe bani kuze nisukume?
Having said that, Lomahasha has, since time immemorial, been engulfed by water shortages; a problem which has deterred potential business opportunities in the area.
So serious is the problem that our wives and children have to wake up as early as 2am in order to get water for the day.
Compromised
Local young men are, as a result of the water shortages, being compromised when trying to propose ladies from other parts of Eswatini, hence opting for the resistant Mozambican ladies.
One would wish to cordially extend an invitation to the honourable ministers for Urban Development, Public Works and Transport and that of Tourism to come explore the area so as to determine if their respective interventions will not change the fate of this community.
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