NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

I will not resign: Coltart

- BY INNOCENT MAGONDO

BULAWAYO mayor David Coltart has said he will stay put in office and will not resign from the Citizens Coalition for Change despite the recent resignatio­n of the opposition party’s leader Nelson Chamisa.

Chamisa announced his resignatio­n as CCC president in a statement on January 25 this year with some CCC legislator­s subsequent­ly resigning from Parliament.

However, in a statement posted on social platform X, Coltart said he had consulted various stakeholde­rs who advised him to stay in office.

“The overwhelmi­ng response, particular­ly from the Bulawayo public, has been to remain in office. I have also been written to by people I deeply respect.

“Some of whom have been involved in the struggle to bring democracy and freedom to Zimbabwe for over 6 decades, asking me not to resign.

“These are people who have fought consistent­ly during their entire lives for freedom and I take their views seriously,” Coltart said.

He said he would see through his five-year tenure as the mayor of Bulawayo.

“I am conscious that I can be recalled at any time but so be it. I would rather be removed from office by unscrupulo­us politician­s than betray the trust and goodwill of innocent, hardworkin­g and principled residents of Bulawayo by resigning,” he said.

Coltart said resigning as mayor would be disastrous for the city as he was in the middle of initiative­s for the city’s developmen­t.

“Bulawayo faces unique challenges at the present time. Aside from being in a disastrous state after decades of neglect, it is running out of water and faces severe water shortages this coming year.

“While of course there is little that I as one person can do to remedy this, I have been involved in critically important initiative­s during the last few months to provide short, medium and long term solutions to the crisis.

“If I were to resign now some of these initiative­s may be undermined to the detriment of the city as a whole. While the resignatio­n of any MP is of course tragic, and a great loss to debate in Parliament, it does not have the same direct impact on citizens as would be the resignatio­n of the mayor of a city.”

He also revealed that Chamisa had told him about his intentions to resign.

“I asked him what his expectatio­ns were of me. His response was that I should keep on the work I have been doing. At no point has he asked me to resign,” Coltart said.

 ?? ?? Bulawayo mayor David Coltart
Bulawayo mayor David Coltart

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