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Commission
fiddles while Harare burns
Ray Matikinye/Augustine Mukaro, The Zimbabwe Independent
May
20, 2005
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/news/2005/May/Friday20/2351.html
DIRECTING strangers
in the capital’s Mabvuku and Tafara working class suburbs thus:
"Go past the smoldering heap of garbage, turn right when you
see women and children queuing up for water from a church water-cart,
skirt round three huge potholes and you won’t miss the house you
are looking for," no longer seems out of the ordinary.
It has become
a catch phrase for residents chagrined by commonplace heaps of uncollected
garbage that dot the city’s residential areas like unsightly landmarks
and acute water shortages in the suburbs. Ask any resident of the
two suburbs what they hanker after most and the answer:
"Reliable
water supplies" instinctively rolls out.
Ask residents
of any other suburb in the capital the same question and they will
tell you: "Regular garbage collection."
When President
Robert Mugabe endorsed the appointment of the first unelected commission
to run the affairs of the city, little did he suspect that this
would expose government to ridicule.
More importantly,
uncollected garbage signifies the failure of a system of political
patronage that has swung back into the ruling Zanu PF party’s face.
Government fired
its own appointed mayor the late Solomon Tawengwa for gross incompetence,
replacing his administration with the Elijah Chanakira-led commission.
When he tasked
Local Government minister Ignatious Chombo to fire an elected opposition
mayor Elias Mudzuri on allegations of incompetence and for failing
to reverse decades of maladministration in six short months to spite
the MDC urban electorate, Mugabe thought that would endear him with
the Zanu PF electorate. Instead, his miscalculation has only served
to disenchant both Zanu PF and MDC supporters who could no longer
put up with the daily tribulations, prompting them to take to the
streets in a spontaneous protest over shoddy service.
Spontaneous
two-day protests in Harare’s eastern suburbs of Tafara and Mabvuku
last week included residents of all political persuasions and members
of both the MDC and Zanu PF. They were an expression of frustration
by residents who have suffered from a lack of service delivery for
many months.
Over the past
six months, the residents have been forced into a daily scramble
for water and to live with reeking heaps of rubbish on their doorsteps.
Just last week,
government appointed additional commissioners to bolster the commission’s
performance up to next month when its tenure expires. But observers
view the appointments as a serious indictment of acting mayor and
commission chairperson Sekesai Makwavarara’s competence to run the
city.
Mike Davies,
the chairman of the Combined Harare Residents Association (CHRA),
says: "The new commissioners taken on board are a sign of desperation
by the Zanu PF regime to impose itself on residents of Harare."
Davies says
his association is "convinced that any solution to Harare’s
problems should be driven by residents first through being allowed
to choose their own representatives".
CHRA is preparing
court papers to compel the commission to set dates for both mayoral
and ward elections. "We are in consultation with stakeholders
on the way forward which might result in civil disobedience."
MP for Mabvuku
Timothy Mabhawu said the people in his constituency were fed up
with the commission’s rhetoric that something would be done to remedy
residents’ problems.
"Makwavarara
has betrayed the people of Mabvuku ward who elected her into office
in the first place. She has betrayed Local Government minister Chombo
who thrust her into a position she is dismally incapable of executing
too. The ineptness of the commission is worrisome," Mabhawu
says.
Davies complained
that the heavy-handed response by the police to residents’ legitimate
grievances was uncalled for.
CHRA says the
physical assaults were brutal and intimidatory. The charges laid
under Section 17(1) a of Posa against those arrested carry a prison
sentence of up to 10 years and are at odds with the gravity of the
alleged offences.
"For a
modern city like Harare to be unable to provide essential services
such as potable water and waste removal to its inhabitants is an
indictment of both the political appointees currently occupying
Town House and their political masters," Davies says.
He says besides
the current woes, Zesa had informed residents to brace themselves
for power blackouts until July following damage to a local transformer.
"It is intolerable for residents to endure fetching water from
contaminated streams, burning firewood for heating and cooking and
using candles for lighting," he adds.
Out of frustration,
CHRA is calling for the suspension of increased rates and charges;
an end to the imposed commission; the restoration of a democratically
elected mayor and council and dialogue between residents and municipal
officials to seek a way forward. And if ever there was truth to
the truism "fiddling while Rome burns", it fits well the
uncaring attitude of the commission running the city’s affairs whose
forte has been to allow service delivery to crumble right under
its nose.
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