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Local government media tracker - Week ending 03 December 2012
Combined Harare
Residents Association (CHRA)
December 05, 2012
Zimbabwe:
City to carry audit on Mbare Hostels
AllAfrica.com
Harare City
Council is carrying an audit of the Mbare hostels to establish the
lease-holders of the close to 5 500 apartments. More than 50 000
people reside in the dilapidated structures that are ranked as part
of Harare's 37 slum settlements. The apartments were originally
built for migrant bachelor workers. Third parties now stay in the
apartments and pay rentals to individuals or their families who
were located in the apartments before independence or after independence.
According to the latest full council minutes, the city resolved
to embark on an exercise to establish registered tenants. The city
reiterated its call to have the hostels renovated. Previous efforts
to spruce up the hostel have been met with resistance by individuals
who do not stay in the apartments. Town Clerk Dr Tendai Mahachi
gave an update on the progress in enforcing the payment of bills
by the residents. Dr Mahachi said the residents agreed to make individual
arrangements to settle their outstanding bills. He said council
had temporarily shelved plans to install pre-paid water meters for
the apartments.
Harare City Council to charge fees for underground fibre
CET News
Zimbabwe's
mobile operators are expected to pay levies to Harare City Council,
which has imposed a charge on all telecommunication companies that
have laid fibre optic cables underground. The council resolved at
a recent full council meeting that the telecommunication firms would
pay a rental of USD0.10 per square metre, Biztech reported. The
companies would also have to sign lease agreements with the council.
It is said the rentals are payable from the date of issuance of
the trenching permits. The firms are also charged rental fees for
the erection of cellular infrastructure on tower lights.
Chombo doles out stands to ZANU PF
NewsDay
Local Government
Minister Ignatius Chombo ordered Mutare City Council to allocate
2 000 serviced residential stands to a private land developer believed
to be linked to Zanu PF Women's League boss Oppah Muchinguri.
The land developer operates a company known as NATAO Enterprises
(PVT) Ltd. Sources in the MDC-T dominated local authority said the
project was part of ZANU PF's campaign strategy. According
to a recent council report compiled by Town Clerk Obert Muzawazi,
the local authority has already started consultations in a bid to
fulfil Chombo's directive. "This is state land and as
a minister, I have the power to recommend this co-operative. These
councillors don't know what they are talking about. Allocations
are not based on possession of party cards. There is nothing wrong
with me giving ZANU PF members stands. The MDC councillors are also
entitled to do that to their members if they so wish," said
Chombo
Zimbabwe:
Govt admits failure to supply clean water
AllAfrica.com
Government has
admitted failing to supply adequate and clean water to Harare residents
prompting it to regularise the operations of bulk water companies
selling water to residents. Water Resources Development and Management
Minister Samuel Sipepa Nkomo said companies selling water to residents
were "filling a gap" and needed Government support.
He said this while addressing journalists in Harare on ground water
management and bulk water delivery in the city. This came after
residents demonstrated against the sale of water by the companies.
Some of the companies are charging US$60 for a 5 000 litre delivery
of water. "We cannot throw these companies away because they
are fulfilling a need," he said. "Government through
its agent, the City of Harare, is failing to provide the city with
sufficient clean water. I cannot stop water companies because if
I do so those buying the water will come and demand the water from
me and what will I give them?"
Probe team gobbles $100 000
Zimbabwe Situation
Local Government
Minister Ignatius Chombo instructed Harare City Council to fork
out $100 000 as payment for two probe teams he set up in a space
of four months. Harare, already battling to contend a Typhoid outbreak
in Glen View, will have to pay the Ellen Chivaviro- led investigating
team and that of Madzudzo Pawadyira from its dry coffers. Both teams
were set up by Chombo following a delivery of sodium cyanide to
Harare Water Department by a local chemical distribution company.
According to Masunda, Pawadyira received not less than $10 000 on
top of his monthly salary from government while other members of
the team pocketed not less than $8 000 each. The money paid to these
teams can at least buy a Borehole water pump to help residents access
water, or it can be used to renovate dilapidated public toilets
which have now become an eyesore. Some of the members on the second
team have previously featured in other investigating teams set up
by Chombo to other local authorities.
Government
should support local authorities
DailyNews
Central Government
is responsible for problems currently being faced by local government
entities in the country, because of an ineffective fiscal transfer
framework, a cabinet minister said. Addressing delegates at the
recently-ended Economic Empowerment Conference in the capital, Local
Government Minister Ignatius Chombo said there is need for central
government to provide financial support to local authorities. "For
local authorities to effectively execute their role, central government
needs to come up with an effective fiscal transfer framework for
local government and to provide necessary support, without which
councils would end up enjoying unfunded mandates," Chombo
said. He blamed lack of financial support from central government,
caused by the unprecedented economic challenges the country faced
in the last decade, for the collapse of municipal services. At the
conference, Chombo said his ministry with the United Nations Development
Programme, has conceived a local government capacity building and
service delivery programme intended to address the pathological
institutional incapacities of local authorities across Zimbabwe.
Harare typhoid outbreak alert
Daily News
Authorities
in Harare are on high alert after a typhoid
outbreak that has claimed four deaths so far and affected over
500 people. The High Glen districts of Glen View and Budiriro-the
epicentre of a devastating 2008 cholera outbreak that claimed over
4 000 lives-are once again under siege, according to the city's
department of Health Services director Prosper Chonzi. Chonzi said
they were concerted efforts from different departments of the city
to contain the outbreak. "The city has also embarked on an
exercise to rehabilitate boreholes. Although the water has been
said to be contaminated by sewerage, we are providing free aqua
tablets and urging residents to boil all water regardless of source,"
he said. Chonzi said the city is working on repairing pumps to make
sure residents have water all the time.
Harare council cracking on illegal car sales
NewZimbabwe.com
Harare city
council is moving to demolish 150 illegal car sales and billboards
after invoking its by-laws. In a published statement, town clerk
Tendai Mahachi said the cash-strapped municipality was now cracking
down on the illegal entities. "Following notices served on
illegal car sales owners and operators in terms of Regional, Town
and Country Planning Act, the City of Harare will now be proceeding
with the enforcement as provided for in the above cited Act and
statutory instrument with immediate effect," read Mahachi's
notice in the press. The Ellen-Chivaviro headed probe team claimed
that there are 200 car sales in Harare with only 47 of them having
lease agreements with council. Of the 47 car sales, only 3 have
met standards set out under the Regional Town Planning Act. Chombo
gave the local authority up to December 20 to have names of those
car sales operating legally known.
High Court blocks Chombo
NewsDay
Local Government
minister Ignatius Chombo was left with egg on his face after Bulawayo
High Court judge Justice Lawrence Kamocha interdicted him from conducting
a disciplinary hearing for suspended Gwanda mayor Lionel De Necker.
Three weeks ago Chombo appointed a disciplinary committee to conduct
a hearing for De Necker on charges of insubordination after he allegedly
refused to implement a ministerial directive to appoint a Zanu PF
sympathiser, Priscilla Nkala, as chamber secretary. Chombo then
accused De Necker of insubordination. However, De Necker approached
the High Court seeking an order stopping the hearing, which he described
as illegal.
Harare must create a win-win scenario
The Standard
The decision
by Harare City Council to return property seized from residents
who defaulted on paying rates shows officials are now listening
to people's concerns. Council three weeks ago instituted unprecedented
property seizures that mainly targeted the poorest of the poor in
a bid to recover debts. The property seizures in Rugare, Kuwadzana,
Dzivarasekwa, Mabvuku and Tafara caused much alarm and despondency
in the suburbs where residents were now living in fear of the Messenger
of Court. These property seizures showed insensitivity on the part
of city fathers who failed to show compassion and an appreciation
of the economic difficulties pensioners and other unemployed people
face. So far there is little incentive for residents to pay for
astronomical water and refuse bills when their taps are always dry
and bins are not collected. A win-win scenario in which council
provides a service that is satisfactory, with Harare residents paying
for it, is what is needed. Such an arrangement would go a long way
in addressing the challenges faced by the two parties without creating
unnecessary animosity between them.
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