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Residents Voices - Issue 70
Bulawayo Progressive
Residents Association (BPRA)
February 09, 2012
Residents of
Pumula, St Peters, Robert Sinyoka and Methodist communities in Bulawayo
on Wednesday 8 February 2012 rejected a project proposed by the
Bulawayo City Council (BCC) in conjunction with the International
Organisation of Migration (IOM) that aims to resettle squatters
from Killarney and Trenance in the area. The project aims to provide
a total of 197 housing stands, with 182 meant for squatters and
15 set aside for the residents of Pumula, St Peters, Robert Sinyoka
and Methodist.
The residents rejected the proposed project primarily because they
have been lobbying to be given the piece of land in question for
housing stands since 1998. According to the residents, representatives
from St Peters, Robert Sinyoka and Methodist have been requesting
to be allocated the piece of land for housing on the basis that
houses in the area are overcrowded. They said they were dismayed
that they had been denied access to the land for fourteen years,
only to be informed that the same piece of land was going to be
given to people who are not even in Bulawayo's housing waitlist.
The residents also said they felt that the allocation of 15 stands
out of the available 197 to them was a ploy to get them to accede
to the project. They also raised concerns that the project could
lead to a high crime rate and conflict in the area as most people
in squatter camps are unemployed and not registered at the Registrar's
Office.
However, addressing the residents of the area, the City Council
Director of Housing and Community Services, Mr Isaiah Magagula said
there was abundant space in the area and promised the residents
that land would be allocated to them in the future. He also assured
residents that the people to be resettled in the area had been vetted
and would pose no problem.
It is not clear what course of action the city council will take
as indications are that the project was approved by councillors,
who failed to consult the residents. However the city council delegation,
headed by Mr Magagula told the residents that the project would
be reviewed to see what changes could be made to make it more acceptable
to the residents of Pumula, St Peters, Robert Sinyoka and Methodist.
While Bulawayo Progressive Residents Association (BPRA) acknowledges
the effort by the local authority to resettle squatters and commends
its strategic partnerships with donor organisations in the quest
to improve service provision in the city, the association believes
that there should be more consultation with residents. The association
believes that it is only through consultation and engagement that
service delivery can be improved.
Visit the Bulawayo
Progressive Residents Association fact
sheet
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