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Residents' Voices - Issue 47
Bulawayo Progressive
Residents Association (BPRA)
March 14, 2011
Police
disrupt residents' training workshop
Bulawayo police
yesterday (Sunday 13 March 2011) disrupted a Residents' Leadership
Programme training workshop that had been organised by Bulawayo
Progressive Residents Association (BPRA) in Cowdray Park (ward 28).
The police claimed that the training was unlawful as they had not
been notified. Police have also summoned the BPRA Vice Chairperson
and the BPRA Programmes and Advocacy Manager who have since been
accompanied by lawyers from Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR).
The Officer in Charge of Luveve Police station cautioned the BPRA
officials not to hold any meetings without notifying local police.
Residents
query Ministry of Energy operations
Six hundred
Bulawayo residents last Friday got an opportunity to take representatives
from the Ministry of Energy and Power Development and the Zimbabwe
Electricity Supply Authority (ZESA) to task over failure to ease
the country's energy woes and poor service delivery by the
parastatal. Residents' grievances revolved around failure
by the ministry to ensure electrification of suburbs like Emganwini
and Cowdray Park. Residents also denounced load shedding and also
questioned how their bills are inflating despite that electricity
black outs are rampant across the city. They also queried the insurance
scheme that ZESA claims reimburses residents for property damaged
as a result of power inconsistencies. BPRA called the Ministry of
Energy and Power Development to address residents' concerns
because ZESA has been taken to task on numerous occasions with no
improvement being noted in service delivery. The association is
embarking on a campaign termed "Power to the People"
that will not stop until ZESA improves service delivery.
Residents
abhorred by government demeanour
Residents are abhorred
by the increase of ministers' salaries at a time when there
are other urgent matters that depend on government financial assistance.
Residents said that the fact that ministers' salaries are
pegged at $2 300 while other civil servants earn less than $200
is a clear indicator of how government ministers are paying attention
to personal gains at the expense of citizens' grievances.
The salary increase does not only reflect that the government is
capable of equitably improving civil servants' salaries but
can also inject the money on schemes that can also benefit vulnerable
community members through social welfare and other similar social
security systems.
Visit the Bulawayo
Progressive Residents Association fact
sheet
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