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Disappointed
as 'Sunshine City' loses shine
Dumisani M Dube
October 10, 2004
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/read.php?st_id=726
Dear Editor - Allow
me me space to express my disappointment at what has become of our Sunshine
City where the sun shines no more.
Harare is in a pathetic state to say the least. What worries me is what
the City Health Department is doing about it. Lately, I have been moving
around the city centre doing my errands, but when nature calls my trips
become a nightmare. The state of the public toilets is intolerable, and
to make matters worse, fruit and vegetable markets are situated next to
these dirty places.
Commuters bound for
Chitungwiza and Sunningdale who board their buses at the Charge Office
terminus are experiencing appalling conditions. One often finds exposed
human waste next to vendors selling juicy looking apples, bananas and
sometimes they (vendors) are busy cooking and selling food.
Those travelling to
Dzivarasekwa or Westage who catch buses at Chinhoyi Street terminus have
to contend not only with an infestation of street children but also the
unbearable stench emanating from a nearby public toilet. Walking around
the terminus one has to try and avoid stepping into puddles of dirty water
mixed with oil and bits of discarded food from the dishes being washed
nearby.
Kuwadzana and Warren
Park residents have to contend with urine flowing from the toilet situated
at the corner of Kwame Nkrumah and Chinhoyi Street. And piling up nearby
is a growing mountain of rubbish that appears to be cleared only once
a year. Right next to it is a fruit and vegetable market.
Does the city health
department have any idea what happens to people who buy edibles from these
dirty places? And what of those people who spend the whole day trying
to earn a living from these makeshift market places? One wonders whether
the City Health Department is worried or concerned about the health of
people in the city.
As if this is not
enough, theynow recruit their manpower from the Border Gezi national service
institutions where young man and women are turned into tools of violence.
My own feeling is
that they employ the these youths to harass people who are trying to earn
an honest living through vending fruits and vegetables. In as much as
I understand that vendors should be registered and pay a fee, it worries
me when they are treated so heartlessly.
Chasing and confiscating
goods from the vendors, most of them suffering individuals, is not only
unfair but also cruel. It is heart rending to appreciate the predicament
of the people being subjected to this sort of harassment. Many are poor
people who invest the little money they have so that they can earn a living
and support their families. It is sad that they are treated like criminals.
Under the supervision
of the municipality the police and the youths chase after these men and
women and take away their merchandise which they then share among themselves.
Perhaps this is because there is not enough food at the Border Gezi camps
so they have to steal from poor vendors. We may never know, but that is
not my point. They claim that they are trying to keep the city clean -
my foot!
Before they can clean
the city of poor people they should, instead, direct their energies to
situations that are a threat to the health of the public. They should,
for instance,train the youths in plumbing so they can fix public toilets
and clean the appalling streets of Harare than turning them into vicious,
violent and heartless young thugs.
Let us remember, it
is better to train the youths in what we would like them to become and
not make them cannon fodder for immediate political gain.
Dumisani M Dube
Harare
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