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Outcry
over hikes in rates for city flats dwellers
Combined Harare
Residents Association (CHRA)
August 23, 2007
About 700 residents
of Harare living in City-owned flats are outraged at the sudden
rise in their monthly rentals, a situation that has driven some
of the affected tenants to the offices of the Rent Board at Makombe
Building for intervention.
They were neither consulted
nor informed of the imminent increases until they started receiving
their monthly bills this week. This issue comes at the back of planned
meetings between a Mr Sibanda, a director at the Rent Board and
representatives of the various City-owned flats, who are mostly
municipal employees.
One of the affected tenants,
Martin Prosper Dzvanga who resides at Glen Norah A' Flats,
a retired employee of the City of Harare told CHRA that his August
bill was beyond his apprehension and he would seek legal remedy
until justice prevails.
In monthly bills
from the City of Harare shown to CHRA for the month of June, July
and August, Mr Dzvanga has to pay $4 991 552 in August, with $2
216 622 for 30-day debt and the current debt being $2 774 900. He
is unable to explain how his debt rose so drastically from the July
figure of $2 629 322. As far as CHRA is concerned the residents
objected to both the 2007 City of Harare and the Supplementary Budget.
How the rates increased
from a modest $44 983 in June to about $4, 5 million boggles the
mind as nothing has been officially communicated either to the residents
of Harare or through the media from Town House.
Most surprisingly, most
residents in those flats are City employees but still they were
not informed of the increases until the Municipality's Salaries
Department simply deducted amounts in excess of $3 million from
some of the City of Harare employees.
According to insiders
at Town House, this has created acrimony among City employees who
feel that they have been short-changed by the illegal commission
that authorised the increases and subsequent salary deductions.
The insiders said they
received bills indicating that they had arrears for the month of
July and their salaries were deducted without their consent. Some
junior employees at Trafalgar Court were severely affected as they
found themselves taking home nothing in salary, except an overdraft
on their monthly pay. There are about 120 housing units at Trafalgar.
At the same time this
move has also affected tenants living in Nenyere, Annex, Matapi,
Mashawasha, Glen Norah B' and Charles Bricks Flats in Mbare.
CHRA has since
started documenting the issues of the affected tenants with a view
of taking up a legal challenge against the City of Harare on behalf
of the tenants.
Visit the CHRA
fact
sheet
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