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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Chombo's
urban 'purge' goes unchecked
Kumbirai
Mafunda,The Financial Gazette
Janaury 11, 2006
http://www.fingaz.co.zw/story.aspx?stid=504
TO some Zimbabweans
Local Government, Public Works and Urban Development Minister Ignatius
Chombo never ceases to amaze but to others he has long become an
agent of a serious war of attrition through his brazen crusade against
opposition-run municipalities.
If stricken Israeli leader Ariel Sharon could be described as "the
bulldozer" for razing Palestinian homes, then Chombo may not be
far from qualifying for the same label, not only for commanding
the demolition of people’s dwellings after the March elections,
but for a great deal more.
Last year’s razing of urban dwellings and informal traders’ stalls
— which left close to 700 000 people without a roof over their heads
and has unnecessarily attracted international concern — provoked
the inference. Chombo’s ministry headed the clean-up campaign, dubbed
Operation Murambatsvina, which the government tried to sell as a
beautification campaign.
But the chaotic exercise has cost many Zimbabweans a decent living.
And just before Zimbabweans could come out of the shock of the demolitions
and before they could finish picking up the pieces, the local government
minister is once again jarring nerves in major cities dominated
by the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in Harare, Bulawayo,
Mutare and Chitungwiza.
"It is a very
clear sign that Chombo is out to drive the MDC out of local governance
be it in urban or rural areas," says John Makumbe, a political science
lecturer at the University of Zimbabwe.
"His objective
is to have nothing under MDC governance and therefore, reduce the
space under the jurisdiction of the MDC," he adds.
Just four days after Christmas, Chombo dismantled the MDC-dominated
Mutare City Council by suspending executive mayor Misheck Kagurabadza
and all the councillors. Almost at the same time, he suspended Chitungwiza
executive mayor Misheck Shoko.
Their offence was "non-compliance with orders and ill discipline."
This effectively means that all the time and resources committed
by the residents of Chitungwiza and Mutare towards choosing their
own representatives have gone to waste.
Chombo considers the voters to have made an erroneous selection.
Observers say whoever coined the adage "make hay while the sun shines"
could have had the minister in mind, as he appears to be exploiting
the current infighting that is rocking the country’s main opposition
party.
The MDC leadership is currently preoccupied with retaining control
of the once formidable party after a camp led by secretary-general
Welshman Ncube broke ranks with the party’s popular leader, Morgan
Tsvangirai, over last year’s senate elections.
This, critics say, has emboldened Chombo to wield his axe on the
remaining vestiges of MDC local authorities while the bickering,
which has significantly weakened the party, rages on.
"Chombo knows that neither of the two factions has either the will
or the time and resources to challenge him," observes Makumbe.
"They (the MDC) are busy with frivolous issues and they are actually
seeing each other as enemies rather than seeing Chombo as a destroyer
of civil administration. They are waking up everyday to find out
what Tsvangirai or Ncube has said," he says.
Although Chombo, who argues that he is trying to regularise service
delivery in municipalities, has replaced the MDC-controlled councils
with handpicked commissions, critics point out that the government
is attempting to bring on board "obedient" people who are easy to
manipulate as the commissioners are mainly ruling party activists.
"The existence of mayors in urban areas is a plus for MDC in terms
of it being able to engage with the masses and prove its ability
to govern," says Ernest Mudzengi.
"So the appointment of pliable officers could be a process through
which ZANU PF wants to neutralise what could be an MDC power-base."
In Mutare the commission now running the affairs of the city is
chaired by Kenneth Saruchera, the ruling party’s spokesperson for
Manicaland Province and other failed politicians like Ellen Gwaradzimba.
A senior member of the party’s women’s league in the province, she
was trounced by Kagurabadza in the 2003 mayoral elections.
Irene Zindi, a former ZANU PF MP for Hatfield trounced by MDC spokesperson
for finance and economics Tapiwa Mashakada, who has fruitlessly
sought to stand for parliamentary elections in the province is another
appointee. The other commissioners include Ronald Chayambuka, Abbiot
Maronge, Didymus Matongo and ZANU PF central committee member Esau
Mupfumi who served in a team that probed Kagurabadza.
"These are coups on democratically elected institutions," said Nelson
Chamisa, the opposition MDC’s spokesperson who blames the government-induced
shortages of fuel and foreign currency for the sub-standard service
delivery in local government.
"They have realised that their people are not electable and they
now want to get into office through the back door," he added.
After subverting the people’s will by hounding Harare’s first opposition
mayor, Elias Mudzuri, out of office in 2003 and replacing him with
a commission chaired by Sekesai Makwavarara, a former MDC councillor,
Chombo craftily targeted Mutare Mayor Kagurabadza and Chitungwiza’s
Shoko.
But critics say Kagura-badza’s suspension was a retributive act
for his unmasking of the government in the eyes of United Nations
secretary-general Kofi Annan’s special envoy Anna Kajumulo Tibaijuka
who visited Zimbabwe last year to assess the effects of the demolition
blitz.
"They are rejected and recycled politicians," says Kagurabadza.
"These are people who have totally failed in their political careers.
They are not using the back door to come back into politics but
they are finding their way under the door," he adds.
While Zimbabweans could be pondering on Chombo’s next target now
that he has "successfully" wrested control of three MDC-led municipalities,
the minister is making the few remaining MDC councils quake with
fear. Chombo has also tormented and frustrated opposition-led councils
in Chegutu, Kariba and Bulawayo, which analysts predict is his next
target because Executive Mayor Japhet Ndabeni-Ncube has previously
clashed with the government over malnutrition deaths in the city.
When will it all end?
"Not until he has driven every MDC council out of office," Makumbe
says. He states that Chombo would want to wipe out all urban councils
under MDC rule before 2008 when presidential elections are scheduled
to take place.
"He now wants a clean plate to serve either Mugabe or his successor
to whom he will say ‘there are no flies or maggots in the ointment’,"
said Makumbe.
Nonetheless, the opposition party, long accused of being ineffective,
warns it will not fold its hands in the face of Chombo’s crusade.
"We are going to confront the government," declares Chamisa.
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