Mashonaland
Mashonaland is a geographical and historical region in northeastern Zimbabwe, traditionally the homeland of the Shona people, and comprising the modern provinces of Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland East, Mashonaland West, and Harare.[1][2] The area features a savanna climate with average temperatures of 20-30°C and annual rainfall between 750-1000 mm, supporting subsistence agriculture, cattle rearing, and mining activities.[3] In 1890, the British South Africa Company, under Cecil Rhodes, dispatched a pioneer column of approximately 700 men into Mashonaland to prospect for gold and establish settlements, leading to the founding of Fort Salisbury (present-day Harare) and the administrative foundation of Southern Rhodesia.[4] This occupation, initially justified by mineral rights and treaties with local rulers, sparked resistance including the Shona uprisings of 1896-1897, known as the First Chimurenga, which were suppressed by company forces.[5] Post-independence in 1980, Mashonaland's provinces have remained central to Zimbabwe's economy, with Harare as the political and commercial hub, though challenged by land reform policies and economic decline in the early 2000s.Geography
Physical Features and Boundaries
Mashonaland occupies the northeastern sector of Zimbabwe's Highveld, a central plateau extending approximately 650 km in length and 80 km in width, with elevations generally exceeding 1,200 meters above sea level. The terrain consists of undulating hills, broad interfluves, and savanna woodlands dominated by miombo species, punctuated by granite outcrops and inselbergs. Deeply incised river valleys, such as those of the Sanyati and Manyame, dissect the landscape, contributing to its fertile character suitable for agriculture.[6][7] The region's northern boundary follows the Zambezi River, which forms Zimbabwe's international frontier with Zambia and includes the dramatic Zambezi Valley escarpment dropping to lower elevations. Eastern limits abut Mozambique, transitioning into the higher Eastern Highlands in adjacent areas. Southern and western boundaries interface with Midlands and Matabeleland North Provinces, often delineated by rivers like the Munyati (Sanyati), which drains westward into the Zambezi system. These hydrological features not only define administrative edges but also influence local drainage patterns and ecosystems.[6][7]Climate and Natural Resources
Mashonaland's climate is predominantly subtropical savanna, featuring hot, wet summers from November to March and cooler, dry winters from May to October. Average annual temperatures range from 20°C to 30°C across the provinces, with Mashonaland Central recording hottest monthly averages of 23°C in November and coolest of 14°C in July. Rainfall varies by province but generally falls between 750 and 1,000 mm annually, concentrated in the wet season, with December often the wettest month at over 180 mm in central areas. Higher elevations in Mashonaland East experience subtropical highland oceanic conditions (Köppen Cwb), while lower areas align with hot semi-arid (BSh) patterns, influencing agricultural viability.[3][8][9] The region supports diverse natural resources, particularly in mining and agriculture. Mashonaland East holds Africa's largest lithium deposits, ranking sixth globally, alongside gold and other minerals that drive economic activity. In Mashonaland West, exploitable commodities include gold, nickel, platinum, graphite, and asbestos, with active mining operations contributing to national output. Mashonaland Central features deposits of copper, nickel, chromium, cobalt, and gold, with 27 documented mining sites. Fertile soils and water bodies—over 240 in Mashonaland West—enable robust agriculture, including maize, tobacco, cotton, and horticultural crops like tea and coffee in frost-free zones. Wildlife and savanna ecosystems provide additional ecological resources, though deforestation rates, such as 434 hectares lost in Mashonaland East in 2024, pose sustainability challenges.[10][11][12][13][14][15]History
Pre-Colonial Era
The pre-colonial era in Mashonaland saw the gradual settlement of Bantu-speaking peoples, primarily ancestors of the modern Shona, who migrated into the region from the north and east starting around the 2nd century AD. Archaeological evidence from Early Iron Age sites reveals the Gokomere-Ziwa tradition, spanning approximately AD 200–1000, characterized by distinctive pottery with comb-stamped decorations, iron smelting furnaces, and small agricultural villages supported by millet cultivation, cattle herding, and hunting.[16] These communities utilized local iron ores for tools and weapons, fostering subsistence economies while maintaining trade networks for salt, copper, and beads, as evidenced by artifacts from sites across the Mashonaland plateau.[17] By the 11th century, socio-political complexity increased with the emergence of hierarchical chiefdoms under the broader Zimbabwe cultural tradition, marked by dry-stone walling, gold mining, and expanded trade in ivory and gold reaching the Indian Ocean coast via Swahili intermediaries. While monumental stone enclosures like Great Zimbabwe lay south of Mashonaland proper, smaller drystone ruins and hill forts in areas such as Mutoko and the Dande communal lands attest to similar architectural and economic patterns in the north, including ritual centers and defensive structures tied to spirit mediums and royal lineages.[18] Oral traditions and Portuguese accounts from the 16th century describe decentralized Shona polities with spirit-possessed rulers (mhondoro) overseeing tribute-based systems, where land was communally held under chiefly authority, and polygynous households dominated, with estimates suggesting 70–80% of married women in polygynous unions by the early 20th century reflecting enduring pre-colonial norms.[19] The most prominent polity encompassing Mashonaland was the Mutapa Empire (also known as Monomotapa), founded circa 1450 by Nyatsimba Mutota in the Dande region of northern Mashonaland after the decline of southern Zimbabwe states due to ecological pressures and overexploitation. Centered on the Mashonaland plateau with extensions into the Zambezi valley lowlands, the empire controlled gold fields, cattle wealth, and trade routes, extracting tribute from vassal chiefdoms like the Quiteve and Manyika while exporting up to 10 tons of gold annually in peak periods to coastal ports. Portuguese contact from 1560 introduced firearms and alliances but also precipitated decline through civil wars, slave raids, and economic disruption, fragmenting Mutapa control by the late 17th century into smaller Shona states vulnerable to incursions from the Rozvi in the southwest and Nguni groups during the Mfecane.[18] Throughout, Shona society emphasized matrilineal kinship in some subgroups, ancestor veneration, and rain-making rituals, underpinning social cohesion amid a population density of perhaps 5–10 persons per square kilometer in fertile highlands.[19]Colonial Period and Settlement
The British South Africa Company (BSAC), chartered by the British government in October 1889, organized the Pioneer Column—a force of approximately 700 armed settlers, including 200 Europeans, 500 police, and support personnel—to occupy Mashonaland in 1890, aiming to exploit anticipated gold resources and establish administrative control.[20] [21] The column departed from Macloutsie in Bechuanaland in July 1890, traversing roughly 400 miles northward while avoiding direct confrontation with Ndebele forces in Matabeleland, and reached the site of present-day Harare on September 12, 1890, where they founded Fort Salisbury as the administrative center.[22] [23] This occupation proceeded under the BSAC's interpretation of the 1888 Rudd Concession, which granted mineral rights in territories claimed by Ndebele king Lobengula, though Mashonaland was primarily Shona-inhabited and the concession's application to it was contested by local leaders.[24] Following the initial incursion, the BSAC promoted European settlement by allocating land grants and mining claims, with settlers establishing farms and prospecting operations centered around Salisbury and emerging townships like Marandellas (now Marondera).[25] In May 1891, the British government formalized a protectorate over Mashonaland, endorsing BSAC governance and enabling further infrastructure development, including roads and telegraph lines to support approximately 1,500 Europeans by the early 1890s.[20] Gold discoveries, such as at the Ancient Working on the Mazoe River, initially fueled optimism, but yields proved modest, shifting emphasis to agriculture and cattle ranching on alienated lands, where settlers imposed hut taxes and labor demands on Shona communities.[5] Shona resistance erupted in 1896 as the First Chimurenga, a decentralized uprising led by spirit mediums and chiefs against BSAC land expropriation, cattle seizures, and administrative impositions, beginning in eastern Mashonaland districts like Wedza and spreading westward.[26] [27] The rebellion, involving guerrilla tactics and alliances with Ndebele forces, resulted in the deaths of over 400 settlers and thousands of Africans before BSAC and imperial troops suppressed it by late 1897 through scorched-earth campaigns and machine-gun deployments.[28] Post-uprising stabilization facilitated expanded settlement, with European farms consolidating in fertile highveld areas, though ongoing native reserves limited large-scale displacement until after 1900.[20] By 1923, when BSAC rule ended and Southern Rhodesia gained self-government, Mashonaland hosted the bulk of the territory's 35,000 white settlers, primarily in commercial farming and urban centers.[29]Post-Independence Era
Following Zimbabwe's independence on April 18, 1980, Mashonaland experienced initial economic expansion driven by agricultural output and infrastructure investments, with the region contributing significantly to national maize production that reached peaks of over 2 million tons annually in the mid-1980s.[30] Government policies emphasized rural development, including the establishment of communal lands and resettlement schemes that allocated approximately 3.5 million hectares nationwide by 1990, much of it in Mashonaland's fertile provinces.[31] However, these early reforms maintained large-scale commercial farms, predominantly white-owned, which accounted for 70% of the region's export crops like tobacco and horticulture.[32] The fast-track land reform program launched in 2000 radically altered Mashonaland's agrarian landscape, seizing over 10 million hectares of prime farmland, including thousands of commercial operations in Mashonaland East, West, and Central, redistributing them to ZANU-PF loyalists, war veterans, and smallholders.[33] This led to a sharp decline in agricultural productivity; tobacco output in affected areas fell by up to 60% initially, and satellite imagery documented widespread farm abandonment and vegetation regrowth on former croplands by 2005.[33] [34] While some beneficiaries gained access to resources, overall household nutritional outcomes deteriorated, with minimum dietary diversity scores dropping in resettled communities due to reduced yields and input access.[35] Politically, Mashonaland solidified as a ZANU-PF stronghold post-1980, with the party securing over 80% of parliamentary seats in the region's provinces during elections from 1980 to 2000, reflecting ethnic Shona alignment and limited opposition penetration.[36] Electoral violence intensified around 2008, including farm invasions targeting perceived MDC supporters in Mashonaland, contributing to disputed outcomes that international observers noted as marred by intimidation.[37] Under Emmerson Mnangagwa's presidency after the 2017 coup, efforts to revive mining in Mashonaland Central, such as expanded lithium and gold operations, yielded mixed results, with exports rising to $1.2 billion nationally by 2020 but hampered by corruption and infrastructure deficits.[38] Economic challenges persisted, including hyperinflation peaking at 89.7 sextillion percent in 2008, which eroded livelihoods across the region despite some post-reform diversification into informal mining and subsistence farming.[39][40]Administrative Structure
Provincial Divisions
Mashonaland is administratively divided into three provinces: Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland East, and Mashonaland West, established after Zimbabwe's independence in 1980 to decentralize governance and align with ethnic and geographic considerations.[2] Mashonaland Central Province serves as the northern division, with Bindura as its capital. It spans 28,347 square kilometers and has an estimated population of 1,441,000.[41][42] The province is subdivided into eight districts: Bindura, Guruve, Mazowe, Mbire, Mount Darwin, Muzarabani, Rushinga, and Shamva.[43] Mashonaland East Province occupies the eastern portion, centered around Marondera as its administrative hub. Covering approximately 32,170 square kilometers, it supports a population of about 1,701,000.[44][42] This province consists of nine districts: Chikomba, Goromonzi, Hwedza, Marondera, Mudzi, Murehwa, Mutoko, Seke, and Uzumba-Maramba-Pfungwe.[45][46] Mashonaland West Province forms the western extent, with Chinhoyi as its capital. It is the largest of the three, encompassing 57,441 square kilometers and a population of roughly 1,919,000.[2][42] The province includes seven districts: Chegutu, Hurungwe, Kariba, Makonde, Mhondoro-Ngezi, Sanyati, and Zvimba.[13]Governance and Local Administration
Mashonaland's governance operates within Zimbabwe's unitary state framework, with administration devolved to its three provinces—Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland East, and Mashonaland West—each overseen by a provincial office of the President and Cabinet (OPC). These OPC structures coordinate national policies, facilitate devolution initiatives, and manage departments including finance, human resources, infrastructure planning, and environmental management.[47][1] The Ministry of Local Government and Public Works provides oversight, establishing rural district councils (RDCs) to address local issues efficiently and promoting socio-economic development through resource transfers and infrastructure support.[48] Each province is led by a Minister of State for Provincial Affairs and Devolution, appointed to align local efforts with national priorities such as rural electrification, agriculture, and welfare programs for traditional leaders. Districts within provinces are headed by appointed administrators who implement development plans alongside elected RDCs in rural areas, which consist of wards represented by councillors elected every five years. Urban centers, such as Chinhoyi in Mashonaland West, fall under municipal councils with similar elected structures but focused on urban services. Traditional leaders, including chiefs and headmen, collaborate with RDCs on customary matters and community welfare, supported by government vehicles and food distribution programs.[49][13][50] Mashonaland West comprises seven districts—Kariba, Sanyati, Zvimba, Chegutu, Makonde, Mhondoro Ngezi, and Hurungwe—with semi-autonomous urban authorities in towns like Chinhoyi, Kadoma, and Kariba managed by elected councillors and secretariats.[13] Mashonaland East includes nine districts, including Chikomba, Goromonzi, and Seke, emphasizing rural development coordination. Mashonaland Central features eight districts across its 28,347 km² area, with ten local authorities handling district-level governance. RDCs across Mashonaland's predominantly rural landscape serve as the primary democratic local entities, though central government influence persists through appointed roles and policy directives.[51][47]Demographics
Population Distribution
Mashonaland's population, encompassing its three provinces, stood at 5,009,648 according to Zimbabwe's 2022 Population and Housing Census conducted by the Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency (ZIMSTAT).[52] This represents roughly one-third of the national total of 15,178,979 as of April 20, 2022.[52] Distribution across the provinces is uneven, with Mashonaland West holding the largest share at 1,893,584 residents (12.5% of national population), followed by Mashonaland East at 1,731,173 (11.4%), and Mashonaland Central at 1,384,891 (9.1%).[52]| Province | Population (2022) | % of National | Area (km²) | Density (per km²) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mashonaland Central | 1,384,891 | 9.1 | 28,195 | 49.1 |
| Mashonaland East | 1,731,173 | 11.4 | 32,171 | 53.8 |
| Mashonaland West | 1,893,584 | 12.5 | 57,677 | 32.8 |
Ethnic and Linguistic Composition
The ethnic composition of Mashonaland is overwhelmingly dominated by the Shona people, a Bantu ethnic group that constitutes the primary inhabitants across its provinces. Shona subgroups include the Zezuru, prevalent in central and eastern areas around Harare; the Korekore, concentrated in northern Mashonaland Central; and smaller populations of Karanga and Rozwi in southern and western fringes.[55] [56] These groups trace their origins to pre-colonial kingdoms like Great Zimbabwe and Mutapa, with minimal significant presence of other major Zimbabwean ethnicities such as the Ndebele, who are largely confined to Matabeleland.[57] Minority non-African populations, including white Zimbabweans of European descent (primarily farmers and urban professionals) and small Asian communities, account for less than 1% regionally, reflecting national trends where Africans comprise 99.6% of the population.[58] Linguistically, Shona serves as the vernacular lingua franca, spoken by over 70% of Zimbabweans nationally and nearly universally in Mashonaland, with dialects aligning to ethnic subgroups—such as Zezuru dialect in urban centers and Korekore in rural north.[59] English functions as the official language for government, education, and commerce, while the 2013 Constitution recognizes 16 official languages, though only Shona and English predominate locally.[60] The 2022 census did not disaggregate linguistic data by tribe or province in public releases, but household surveys indicate Shona dialects as first languages for the vast majority, with urban migration introducing limited multilingualism including Ndebele or minority tongues like Tonga in Zambezi Valley pockets.[52] This composition underscores cultural homogeneity, though post-independence urbanization in Harare has fostered some linguistic diversity among migrant workers.Economy
Agricultural Sector and Land Use
Agriculture forms the backbone of Mashonaland's economy, with the sector encompassing Mashonaland East, West, and Central provinces contributing significantly to national crop output, particularly maize and tobacco.[61] In Mashonaland Central, agriculture accounts for 33% of provincial GDP as of 2025, driven by smallholder farming on communal and resettlement lands.[62] Land use is predominantly arable, with the region falling within Zimbabwe's Natural Regions II and III, characterized by reliable rainfall (750-1000 mm annually) suitable for intensive cropping of cereals, cash crops, and livestock grazing.[63] Primary Crops and Production: Maize remains the staple crop, with Mashonaland West leading national production at 393,058 tonnes in the 2024/25 season, representing 21.6% of Zimbabwe's total maize output.[64] Tobacco, a key export earner, has seen expanded smallholder involvement post-2000 fast-track land reform, increasing the number of producers and hectarage under cultivation, though overall productivity lags due to limited inputs and expertise.[65] Other significant crops include cotton, wheat, soybeans, and groundnuts; wheat yields in Mashonaland Central reached promising levels of 5 tonnes per hectare in early 2025 harvests.[66] Horticultural produce such as tomatoes and potatoes thrives in frost-free zones.[67] Land Use Patterns: Post-2000 land reforms redistributed commercial farms into A1 smallholder models (typically 5-20 hectares per household) and A2 medium-scale farms, shifting land use from large-scale mechanized operations to subsistence-oriented smallholdings.[68] In Mashonaland Central, A1 farms exhibit land utilization rates of around 53%, with communal areas showing higher but inefficient grazing and cropping overlaps.[68] Approximately 80% of agricultural land in the region supports smallholder activities, including 73.5% of communal households using certified maize seeds.[69] Irrigation infrastructure from pre-reform eras has largely deteriorated, reducing effective arable land and exacerbating vulnerability to droughts.[33] The fast-track land reform, implemented from 2000, disrupted established farming systems by evicting experienced commercial operators, leading to a collapse in output, export revenues, and infrastructure maintenance, with agricultural GDP shrinking by 50% in the ensuing years.[32] [39] While smallholders have increased tobacco volumes through sheer numbers, overall yields and diversification suffer from capital shortages, poor soil management, and elite capture of prime lands, hindering sustainable productivity gains.[34] Recent seasons show partial recovery aided by government inputs and favorable weather, but baseline surveys indicate many households remain below subsistence levels.[70]Mining and Industrial Activities
Mashonaland's mining sector centers on gold extraction, particularly in Mashonaland Central and West provinces, where operations have historically contributed significantly to Zimbabwe's output. The Shamva Mine, located in Shamva District, Mashonaland Central, opened in 1909 and produced 52 tonnes of gold by 1982; it remains active under Kuvimba Mining House, employing underground methods such as longhole stoping and underhand stoping (jackhammer).[71][72] Other commodities include copper, nickel, and chromium in Mashonaland Central, with 22 mines and 2 prospects documented, alongside arsenic, beryllium, cobalt, and copper in Mashonaland West.[12][73] Aquamarine mining occurs at Zimbaqua Mine in Karoi, Mashonaland West, established in 2019 and noted for promoting gender equality in operations.[74] Emerging projects include gold exploration in Selous, Mashonaland West, with Bravura Zimbabwe planning production from early 2023, and diverse opportunities in Hurungwe District encompassing precious metals and gemstones.[75][76] Industrial activities are predominantly concentrated in the Harare metropolitan area, which falls within Mashonaland East, encompassing manufacturing subsectors such as food processing, beverages, cement, clothing, footwear, and wood products.[77] The province hosts small and medium enterprises (SMEs) facing operational challenges from economic volatility, yet contributing to national manufacturing with around 4,552 firms employing at least 10 workers as of 2021 data.[78][79] Government initiatives position Mashonaland Central as a prospective industrial hub, with calls for investments in processing and value addition as of September 2024.[80] Recent national investments exceeding US$1.4 billion in manufacturing expansions, including in beverages (e.g., Delta Corporation) and food processing (e.g., National Foods), indirectly bolster regional capacity, though specific provincial breakdowns remain limited in public data.[81] Mashonaland West supports commercial and industrial centers tied to mining and agriculture, with rural industrialization efforts like those by West International Holdings in Hurungwe as of August 2025.[82][83]Economic Challenges and Policy Impacts
Mashonaland's economy, heavily reliant on subsistence and smallholder agriculture, has grappled with recurrent droughts and macroeconomic volatility, including hyperinflation peaking in 2008 and ongoing currency instability. These factors have exacerbated poverty and limited productivity, with structural issues like dependence on low-yield rain-fed farming constraining output in a region where agriculture employs over 70% of the rural population.[84] [85] Political and economic instability has further hindered small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in areas such as Mashonaland West, where operational obstacles include erratic exchange rates and inadequate infrastructure.[78] The Fast Track Land Reform Programme (FTLRP), launched in 2000, profoundly impacted Mashonaland by redistributing prime commercial farmlands from large-scale (predominantly white-owned) operations to smallholders, resulting in a 75% reduction in such farms nationwide but with acute effects in this agricultural core. Initial post-reform years saw maize yields plummet by over 50% from pre-2000 levels of around 2 million metric tons annually, driving food imports and economic contraction as new beneficiaries often lacked capital, equipment, and expertise for sustained commercial production.[34] [32] While tobacco cultivation expanded, with smallholder producers rising from near zero to over 60,000 by the mid-2010s and boosting exports to $900 million by 2020, overall agrarian efficiency remained below potential due to fragmented holdings and limited state support for irrigation or inputs.[65] [86] Contemporary policy measures, including indigenization laws and fiscal austerity under structural adjustment influences, have yielded mixed results, with mining output in Mashonaland Central hampered by energy shortages and high production costs amid global mineral price fluctuations. Droughts linked to El Niño in 2023-2024 reduced agricultural GDP contributions, though provincial economies like Mashonaland West accounted for 10.8% of national GDP (ZiG7.4 billion) in 2025 assessments despite these shocks.[30] [87] [88] Climate resilience policies, such as expanded irrigation targets under the National Development Strategy 1 (2021-2025), aim to mitigate weather vulnerabilities but face implementation gaps from funding shortfalls and corruption allegations in resource allocation.[89]Culture and Society
Traditional Shona Practices
Traditional Shona society is organized around patrilineal clans (madzinza), each identified by a totem (mutupo) derived from animals, plants, or natural phenomena, which serves as a symbol of ancestral lineage and enforces exogamy to prevent intra-clan marriage viewed as incestuous.[90] Clans form the basis of social identity, with sub-clans (mitupo) further delineating family groups, and individuals address each other using totem-based praise names (madetembo) to reinforce kinship ties and historical narratives.[91] This system promotes unity while regulating alliances, as evidenced in ethnographic accounts of Shona communities in northern Zimbabwe where clan structures influenced settlement patterns and resource sharing.[92] Religious practices center on ancestor veneration (kuziva vadzimu), where deceased family elders (mudzimu) are consulted for guidance on daily affairs, health, and fertility, acting as intermediaries to the distant high god Mwari, who is omnipotent but uninvolved in human matters.[93] Spirit mediums (masvikiro or mhondoro) channel these ancestral or territorial spirits during possession rituals, diagnosing illnesses, resolving disputes, and advising chiefs, a role documented in pre-colonial Shona polities where mediums legitimized authority through oracular pronouncements.[94] Such practices integrate with healing traditions, where n'anga (traditional healers) use herbal medicines and rituals to address afflictions attributed to spirit displeasure or witchcraft (muroyi), persisting alongside modern systems in rural Mashonaland areas.[95] Marriage customs involve roora, a bridewealth payment in cattle or cash from the groom's family to the bride's, compensating for the loss of her labor and affirming alliances between clans, typically negotiated after courtship and parental approval.[96] Totem compatibility is mandatory, prohibiting unions within the same mutupo to uphold exogamous norms, with violations requiring cleansing rituals; this custom, rooted in clan taboos, historically strengthened inter-group ties in Shona agrarian communities.[97] Family units are extended, with polygyny permitted for men of means, emphasizing patrilocality where wives join husbands' homesteads (musha), and inheritance passes through male lines to maintain clan continuity.[94]Social Issues and Development Indicators
Mashonaland provinces, predominantly rural and agrarian, face significant social challenges including high multidimensional deprivation, limited access to basic services, and persistent food insecurity, largely stemming from the economic disruptions following the Fast Track Land Reform Programme (FTLRP) implemented between 2000 and 2003, which dismantled commercial farming infrastructure and reduced agricultural productivity, leading to increased household vulnerability.[35] [98] The 2022 Population and Housing Census highlights these issues through the Spatial Deprivation Index (SDI), a composite measure of deprivations in education, health, and living standards, where higher values indicate greater disadvantage; Mashonaland Central scores the highest at 62.7 (national rank 10), followed by Mashonaland West at 57.1 (rank 8) and Mashonaland East at 50.4 (rank 3).[99] [100] [101]| Province | SDI (Higher = More Deprived) | Youth Literacy Rate (15-24 years) | Under-5 Mortality Rate (per 1,000) | Basic Drinking Water Access (%) | Basic Sanitation Access (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mashonaland Central | 62.7 | 95.9% | 41.6 | 67.4 | 38.8 |
| Mashonaland West | 57.1 | 96.5% | 36.3 | 71.5 | 37.3 |
| Mashonaland East | 50.4 | 97.3% | 47.5 | 80.7 | 52.4 |