
This Thursday, Kwekwe will host a landmark event that will redefine the intellectual and economic fabric of the Midlands province, as the Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa Law School is officially commissioned. Coinciding with the Midlands State University graduation ceremony, the commissioning is more than a ceremonial ribbon-cutting, it is the birth of a new academic powerhouse and a symbol of Zimbabwe’s unfolding development trajectory.
The anticipation is palpable across Kwekwe. From real estate agents predicting a boom in housing demand, to parents excited about their children studying law within reach, the local community already sees the institution as a magnet for both opportunity and growth. For a city long defined by mining, this event will diversify its identity, blending intellectual prestige with industrial heritage.
On Thursday, the commissioning will serve as evidence of the Second Republic’s commitment under the National Development Strategy 1 to expand access to quality education and to anchor development in all provinces. By decentralising legal education from Harare to Kwekwe, the government is placing opportunity closer to the people, dismantling historical barriers tied to geography and centralisation.
The symbolism of naming the school after His Excellency, President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa, is not lost. It situates the institution within the story of a lawyer who rose to national leadership, reminding students that legal education is not simply about law, but about the ability to shape the destiny of a nation.
Thursday’s event will therefore be more than a commissioning. It will be a declaration that Zimbabwe’s future is built on both knowledge and infrastructure, and that Kwekwe stands at the frontier of that transformation. For the Midlands province, it is a new dawn, and for Zimbabwe, a milestone in the journey toward Vision 2030.