Rivers swelled, warnings got ignored, and nine people, a newborn included, paid the ultimate price in a disaster Zimbabwe has sadly memorized.
What happened in Insiza
What happened in Insiza
- Thursday night went sideways in Insiza District when a vehicle tried its luck on a low bridge.
- The flooded Tshangamutophe River in Mulula tore the car away like it weighed nothing.
- Nine people died, one of them a newborn who barely got a start.
- This was not a freak accident; it followed a script everyone already knows.
- Days before this crash, the Civil Protection Unit laid out grim stats.
- Since October, floods have killed at least 74 people nationwide.
- Damage to infrastructure sits at US$107,402.
- The rains have been ruthless, but the patterns are familiar.
- Manicaland leads the toll with 32 deaths.
- Mashonaland West follows at 19, Midlands at 13.
- Mashonaland Central and Matabeleland South recorded three each.
- Mashonaland East lost two people, while Matabeleland North and Bulawayo each lost one.
- Injuries total 55, with Manicaland accounting for most of them.
- Not every story ended in mourning this week.
- Near Maphisa in Matobo District, a flooded Mwewe River nearly claimed an Isuzu single-cab.
- The vehicle missed the bridge around 10:30 am and got dragged into the current.
- The two occupants climbed onto the roof and waited it out.
- Bulawayo Chief Fire Officer Mhlangano Moyo confirmed the details.
- Fire brigades from Maphisa and Bulawayo worked together.
- Firefighters used throw lines and rescue gear to pull both people to safety.
- It was a rare win in an ugly season.
- Despite constant warnings, flooded bridges keep turning into social media daredevil stages.
- Motorists and pedestrians are still attempting crossings.
- The CPU says this behavior is deeply worrying.
- CPU chief director Nathan Nkomo did not hide his concern.
- He said the Insiza deaths might have been avoided.
- Alerts keep going out, yet people keep ignoring them.
- Government help comes after the fact, but prevention keeps getting brushed aside.
- The Zimbabwe Republic Police released the official account.
- National spokesperson Paul Nyathi said the crash happened around 10 pm.
- A Toyota Noah tried to cross the flooded Tshangamutophe River in Mulula, Filabusi.
- The driver checked the water, left the keys inside, and stepped away.
- Another passenger took the wheel and drove onto the submerged bridge.
- The vehicle went under, trapping everyone inside.
- Community members helped recover the bodies the next morning.
- Victims were taken to Filabusi District Hospital mortuary.
- Those lost were five women, two men, a young girl, and a male toddler.
- Only two have been formally identified.
- A circulating voice note blamed a dispute inside the vehicle.
- It claimed the owner, Njabulo, refused to cross.
- Another passenger, named Mthandazo in the recording, allegedly insisted and drove.
- Police say people should wait for verified findings.
- Rivers keep rising, and the lessons keep repeating.
- Floodwater can look calm, familiar, even manageable.
- Every rainy season ends the same way when warnings get ignored.
- No journey is worth a life, no matter how urgent it feels.