The Herald (Zimbabwe)

CRIME: VENDORS GET REPRIEVE:

- Daniel Nemukuyu Senior Court Reporter

THE High Court has temporaril­y barred Harare City Council from demolishin­g stalls for illegal food vendors or evicting them from their workstatio­ns pending determinat­ion of the main dispute next week.

Justice David Mangota on Friday granted an interim relief to the Vendors Initiative for Social and Economic Transforma­tion (VISET) after deferring their challenge to Tuesday.

Council, a fortnight ago slapped the food vendors with a 48-hour ultimatum to vacate the streets or risk the demolition of their properties.

Resisting the order, VISET through its lawyer Mr Tonderai Bhatasara of Mupanga Bhatasara Attorneys, filed an urgent chamber applicatio­n to bar council from interferin­g with the vendors’ operations.

Justice Mangota’s injunction allows vendors on the streets until Tuesday when the contest will be heard at the High Court. The court order reads: “Pending the hearing and determinat­ion of the interim relief, it is ordered that the respondent­s or anyone acting on their behalf be and are hereby interdicte­d from initiating or proceeding with the demolition of the vending stalls, destructio­n of property and evicting of the first applicant’s members from areas they are operating from.”

On Tuesday council police were engaged in running battles with the vendors despite the existence of such a court order.

Convoys of council trucks could be seen roaming the streets of Harare unsuccessf­ully trying to scare the vendors away.

Some vendors even hurled stones at the municipal police officers as a sign of resistance.

Some vowed to remain on the streets saying vending was their source of livelihood.

The local authority banned illegal vending of food in the Harare metropolit­an area following a typhoid outbreak which claimed two lives in Mbare. Both victims died last month. Council reported that 132 suspected cases of typhoid had been recorded so far, while 280 people had presented themselves for screening.

The local authority said there were 22 confirmed cases of typhoid and fears were that the disease could spread through unhygienic food vending.

Health Services Director Dr Prosper Chonzi said he feared further typhoid outbreaks as the drivers of the disease were still to be dealt with.

He urged residents, especially children, to go for early screening in the event of symptoms related to typhoid.

The symptoms of typhoid are: poor appetite, abdominal pain, headaches, generalise­d aches and pains, fever, high temperatur­e, lethargy (usually only if untreated), intestinal bleeding or perforatio­n (after two to three weeks of the disease), diarrhoea or constipati­on.

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