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Rebuilding Harare will be exciting - Gutu
Veneranda
Langa, NewsDay
August 29, 2013
https://www.newsday.co.zw/2013/08/29/rebuilding-harare-will-exciting-gutu/
MDC-T this week
recommended former deputy Justice and Legal Affairs minister Obert
Gutu for the post of Harare mayor. Gutu told NewsDay Senior Parliamentary
Reporter Veneranda Langa in a wide ranging interview on Tuesday
that he had already started mobilising resources to improve water,
road and other infrastructure in the city of Harare as he waited
to be confirmed as mayor.
The following
are excerpts of the interview between Langa (ND) and Gutu (OG).
ND:
Congratulations for being nominated for the mayoral position by
the MDC-T. If you get the position, what is your vision for the
City of Harare?
OG:
My vision for Harare is actually multi-faceted. As you know, Harare
used to be called the “Sunshine City” during the ’70s
to the ’90s as it was beautiful, clean and had good water
and transport infrastructure, as well as a clean environment. The
first thing that I will do if I get elected mayor is to ensure councillors
and other stakeholders make sure the water supply is normalised
and that Harare has clean and safe piped water 24 hours daily. There
are some suburbs that have gone for more than five years without
water and this is not a sustainable state of affairs. There is need
for major infrastructure refurbishment at Morton Jaffray and at
Kunzvi Dam. I want to ensure that the Kunzvi Dam project is completed.
Once it is completed, each Harare resident will have access to clean,
safe water around the clock.
ND:
How are you going to be able to do that because the outgoing mayor
Muchadeyi Masunda also wanted, but failed to have those projects
completed?
OG:
I am not one to shy away from challenges. The bigger the challenge,
the more exciting the mayoral position becomes. As a new council,
we will have to do massive resource mobilisation as soon as possible.
Right now, I was already discussing with the Zimbabwe ambassador
to Germany Hebson Makuvise to help us as the incoming Harare City
Council to ensure we partner with four major cities in Germany.
This will help us in our vision to refurbish water infrastructure,
the road network, refuse collection and other service delivery issues.
We also want to ensure there is an online billing and payment system
so that people do not have to spend a lot of their time in queues.
We want to use information technology systems with the help of these
cities.
I am happy that
Makuvise has already twinned the City of Harare to Munich. My focus
is that twinning Harare with four other cities will result in a
situation whereby one city helps us with refurbishing roads, the
other focuses on waterworks, and so forth, so that potholes and
other problems become a thing of the past.
ND:
How do you feel about MDC-T’s recommendation to support your
candidature as mayor ahead of elected councillors — some of
whom had expressed their wish to become mayor?
OG:
I am confident that those councillors will vote for me because the
MDC-T is made up of disciplined cadres. It is the party that deploys
its cadres and that they saw it fit to deploy Gutu as mayor is an
honour. As an honest cadre, whatever the party says I should do
I will do it enthusiastically. I do not see any reason why MDC-T
councillor elects will not obey the instructions by the party.
ND:
Are you not scared that you might become mayor of a city that has
financial difficulties after cancellation of debts owed in water
bills and rates?
OG:
On the cancellation of debts, I understand it was only for individuals
and not for companies. Those big corporations and government departments
that owe local authorities should pay because they owe a lot of
money. My law firm, Gutu and Chikowore, was mandated by the City
of Harare to collect thousands of dollars owed by banks, big estate
agents, companies and private individuals and if they pay, we will
have enough resource mobilisation and debt recovery. Government
should pay the debts it owes councils.
ND:
What about the recent utterances by President Robert Mugabe that
he will deal severely with Harare and Bulawayo residents for voting
MDC-T? Are you scared of the threats?
OG:
It does not scare me at all because we are supposed to be a constitutional
democracy and that is why we have a multi-party system in this country
where people are supposed to vote for a party of their choice. Once
one is elected as President, they are President of any political
party and every Zimbabwean. Some of these statements are just politicking
and I do not want to read too much into them. If one took an oath
to obey the laws of Zimbabwe, which Mugabe did during his inauguration,
I do not see why one should be carrying out such threats.
ND:
As a former deputy minister, would you say the mayoral position
is a climbdown?
OG:
I feel this is a promotion because over and above being
a mayor, I will be chairing the Harare Metropolitan Council, which
means I will be chairing all MPs in Harare. Obviously this is not
a demotion, but a promotion.
ND:
How much knowledge do you have of local government issues?
OG:
To start with, I have been a resident of Harare for 33 years. I
have properties and businesses ranging from the law firm Gutu and
Chikowero which I have been running for 33 years. I have a satellite
installation company, a security company and I am also into the
hospitality industry. I am not only a lawyer, but a businessman
as well and I see myself as having the capability to solve the problems
of Harare so that it regains its status as the sunshine city. I
have experience in Parliament
and government and as someone who has been living in Harare for
many years, I want to make it vibrant again.
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