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Chombo
takes aim at Byo mayor
Financial Gazette (Zimbabwe)
June
24, 2004
http://www.fingaz.co.zw/fingaz/2004/June/June24/5789.shtml
BULAWAYO
- Local Government Minister Ignatius Chombo, whose interference with the
operations of the Harare City Council has almost crippled the capital,
seems to be heading for another showdown with the Bulawayo City Council.
Chombo, who was here last week ostensibly to commission Zimbabwe United
Passenger Company (Zupco) minibuses and to introduce the governor and
resident minister of Bulawayo, Cain Mathema, told residents that the man
in charge of the city was Mathema and not the mayor, Japhet Ndabeni-Ncube.
He also told the residents that the government was freezing rates and
levy increases that were to be effected from July 1 until next year. The
mayor did not attend the meeting. Local media reports said this was an
indication that he did not care about the welfare of the residents.
Ndabeni-Ncube, who was elected executive mayor in 2001 on a Movement for
Democratic Change ticket after beating ZANU PF candidate George Mlilo
by 60 988 against 12 783 votes, said he was not disturbed by the minister's
sentiments that Mathema was in charge of Bulawayo because that was inconsequential.
"I didn't even think about it," he said.
He, however, said the council was going ahead with the rate increases
because it had not received any directive from the government to freeze
them.
"As far as I am concerned, this is just a rumour. Those rate increases
were gazetted by the government. We stand by that law. The minister has
not told us anything to the contrary," Ndabeni-Ncube said.
The council's $180 billion budget was approved by the government in April
after a four-month delay. City treasurer Middleton Nyoni said the delay
had cost the council $3.6 billion in lost revenue. The government also
owed the council $4 billion in unpaid rates at the end of March.
Asked whether the council's refusal to freeze the rate increases would
not be construed as defying the minister, the mayor said: "I am operating
within the provisions of the Urban Councils Act. I work for the government,
but there is a framework in which we operate. The minister is an overseer.
He is my minister and if he issues a directive I will comply, but I don't
act on hearsay."
Town Clerk Moffat Ndlovu also said the council was not going to take any
action because the minister had not officially communicated with the council.
"We read about the so-called freeze in the paper. We cannot act on press
reports," he said.
Ndabeni-Ncube denied reports that he had boycotted the residents' meeting
at which Chombo announced the freeze. He said he had not even been invited
to the meeting as it was a ZANU PF gathering. All 29 councillors in Bulawayo
belong to the MDC.
"I did not attend because this was a ZANU PF meeting. On Thursday, we
had a small meeting to commission Zupco buses. I attended that meeting
because it was an official local government meeting," he said.
"On Friday, the minister attended a meeting with residents organised by
Bura (Bulawayo United Residents Association). I did not attend this meeting
because it was a ZANU PF gathering," he said.
Ironically, Harare provincial governor Witness Mangwende, who accompanied
Chombo, told the residents that he was in the city to learn "from the
best practices in management that have been synonymous with the City of
Bulawayo".
Observers also questioned why Chombo was in the city because the Zupco
buses had already been commissioned in Harare, while Mathema was appointed
governor in February.
"He probably just wants a travel and subsistence allowance," quipped an
observer at a function, which Mathema was supposed to officially open
but had to cancel because he was taking Chombo around.
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