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Residents' Voices - Issue 27
Bulawayo Progressive
Residents Association (BPRA)
August 13, 2010
Residents
demand their money's worth
Bulawayo residents
are calling on the resolution of tariffs levied at services. This
call comes at a time when service delivery has been crippled not
only because of lack of money but also because of incompetence and
corruption within parastatals and service providers. For a long
time now, residents have complained about the imbalances between
services delivered or rather not delivered and imposed tariffs.
For instance, the fixed electricity charges of US$30 to US$40 are
not equivalent to electricity consumption. The hard earned cash
that residents fork out should, in turn, be worth the services they
receive. When residents need service providers to attend to faults
they are given excuses such as lack of fuel, and shortage of personnel.
This has raised eyebrows and called for scrutiny as the management
within parastatals are awarding themselves hefty salaries yet complain
that there are no workers. Residents are weary of the excuses given
by these parastatals and generally unhappy at the treatment by the
parastatals and have called on the respective authorities to look
into the issue of tariffs.
City Council should deliver
Pumula residents
have stated that burst sewer overflows, the characteristic feature
of the yester years, are still continuing despite the presence of
inclusive government and the uncontrolled spending by the municipality.
The burst sewers have been left unattended regardless of the hazards
that they pose to residents. Streams of sewer flow near households
and churches and it seems this has become 'normal',
yet the government continuously states that it is committed to enhancing
the livelihoods of its residents. It also seems that the council
is also slack in attending to these cases as it views them as normal
inconsistencies of modern day urban life. Gone are the days when
residents would rely on the Bulawayo City Council to attend to such
cases in less than 24 hours. Even initiatives taken by residents
such as constructing lee ways for sewer flows do not necessarily
yield to any help as the stench that communities have to live with
is dreadful. Residents have called upon the council to rise up and
be what it was once known for.
Spate of robberies lay bare the prospects of residents'
security
It has been
said a countless number of times that law enforcers are not very
strict on robbers and this is one of the factors that has led to
an increase in the number of thefts in local shops and loss of lives.
Residents from Pumula high density suburb have said it is crucial
for residents to engage themselves in community initiatives such
as forming and joining neighbourhood committee watches to curb the
spate of organised crime. Residents stated this at a constituency
assembly meeting organised by Bulawayo Progressive Residents Association
in Pumula. The meeting was a platform for community leaders of various
sectorial interests to build social networks as a basis for advocacy.
Representatives from the business sector indicated that to try and
curb incidences of shop lifting and petty theft, shop owners have
been forced to come up with strategies that can reduce thefts, though
most some of them have been said to be consumer unfriendly. For
instance in some shops wooden blocks are placed at the entrance
so that anyone who would have hidden stolen items in their undergarments
cannot easily pass through as the stolen items will drop. Business
people said that the law is unfair to them as they are charged if
they punish the shoplifters. Due to the fact that the law is not
strict on these offenders business people are forced to take the
law into their own hands.
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