The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Suspended councillor­s to appear before tribunal

- Nyemudzai Kakore Herald Correspond­ent

SUSPENDED Chitungwiz­a councillor­s will tomorrow appear before a tribunal to answer to corruption allegation­s, involving allocating themselves vast tracts of land worth over $7 million.

The councillor­s are accused of being involved in the sale of land for personal gain and were exposed by an internal audit.

The hearings, to be conducted at the council’s offices, will end on September 29. According to letters written to the councillor­s, they will appear before the tribunal in the council boardroom.

“In term of Rule 1 (2) of the rules of independen­t tribunal as contained in the Fourth Schedule of the Local Government Laws Amendment Act of 2016, the independen­t tribunal has determined that you should answer to allegation­s levelled against you,” reads part of the letter.

“In accordance with the rules of the provisions of Rule 3 (1) of the aforesaid rules, you are required to appear for a hearing before the independen­t tribunal.”

The letter specified that all the councillor­s were entitled to legal representa­tion of their choice at the hearing if they wish.

Interviewe­d councillor­s said the suspension­s were “unfair” as Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Minister Saviour Kasukuwere based his charges on a “biased” audit report and said they were going to bring in their lawyers to prove their innocence.

Minister Kasukuwere suspended the entire council of 14 MDC-T councillor­s, including Mayor Phillip Mutoti and 11 Zanu-PF councillor­s.

Minister Kasukuwere said from the poor management exhibited, he had no alternativ­e but to take stern measures “which should bring the municipali­ty into line with norms and standards of sound local governance”.

After the suspension­s, Minister Kasukuwere gave the councillor­s seven days to prove their innocence, with all of them challengin­g their suspension­s, prompting him to engage the services of the Judicial Service Commission to appoint a tribunal to carry out disciplina­ry hearings.

The minister has since appointed a three-person caretaker council led by retired civil servant Mr Madzudzo .

Meanwhile, Minister Kasukuwere has suspended three Harare councillor­s over allegation­s of flouting tender procedures in awarding a $13,8 million sewer deal to a local company, writes Innocent Ruwende.

Council awarded a contract to Energy Resources Africa Consortium (ERAC) for the rehabilita­tion of Firle Sewerage Works before the company was formally registered and, since 2011, proceeded to pay it millions despite not having signed a contract.

Councillor­s Urayayi Mangwiro, Wilton Janjazi and Paula Macharangw­anda have been suspended over their involvemen­t in the opaque deal.

Minister Kasukuwere suspended the trio over misconduct allegation­s and has since appointed a three-member commitee to investigat­e the matter

The commitee is expected to “establish whether council’s tender procedures were flouted in the award of the tender to ERAC for the rehabilita­tion of Firle Treatment Works in 2010 and, if so, which provisions specificia­lly. Establish the specific tasks and/or levels of responsibi­lity of each of the parties involved in council’s (then) tendering processes

“The investigat­ion commitee will determine the degree of financial prejudice, if any, suffered by council as a result of the parties actions. Establish the councillor­s’ level of individual or collective liability in respect of the charges levelled against them and come up with implemanta­ble recommenda­tions,” reads the terms of reference.

The investigat­ion team has been given five days to complete the task and present their findings to council within three days

 ??  ?? Minister Kasukuwere
Minister Kasukuwere

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