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Vendors resist council's arrest threats
Loyce Murengami,Community Radio Harare (CORAH)
January 24, 2013
Vendors, who
operate in the Central Business District (CBD) and high density
suburbs, have vowed to resist Harare City Council's decision
to stop them from their activities.
Council recently
announced that it was going to set up teams at district level and
give them powers to arrest illegal vendors.
'Hapana
apa. Ini ndichangoramba ndichitengesera pano nekuti ndipo panototengwa
manje. Munoti ndikaenda kumusika ndiani anouya achida airtime kumusika,
pane kungoitora pakona pano (I will continue selling my wares here
because my customers easily access this place rather than using
council vending sites that are isolated from the public)'
said a vendor who sells green mealies at the corner of Fourth Street
and Jason Moyo Avenue.
Rueben Madziva
who sells roasted maize along Samora Machel Avenue says, 'We
are not opposed to council by-laws, but where are the market places
which they want us to operate from? They have been saying this since
time immemorial but we have not yet seen the places which they want
us to work from,' he questioned.
Memory Muchineripi
who trades in fresh fish at an open space in Glen View 3 says she
is not going to be deterred by council's decentralisation
of anti-illegal vending crusades. 'We are used to being chased
away by the council and this is not new. Let them come here and
we will find ways of evading them, but what I want to assure you
is that I am not going to stop doing business, because this is what
is making me survive,' she said.
When asked to
speak on the issue, Harare Town Clerk Tendai Mahachi refused to
comment claiming he does not speak to 'people he doesn't
know' over the phone.
'I do
not speak to someone I have not seen. Make an appointment with my
office if you are interested in talking to me,' Mahachi responded
before hanging his phone.
However, Head
of the Environmental Management Committee in the Harare City Council,
Stewart Mtizwa said council hopes an intensified process to apprehend
illegal vendors will benefit both residents and the local authority.
'We are
encouraging them (illegal vendors) to apply for vending places and
operate legally. This will see a reduction in disease outbreaks.
The revenue which the council will raise will go a long way in improving
service delivery,' said councillor Mtizwa who however admitted
that some of the designated vending points are not suitable for
certain wares and foodstuffs.
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