The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Kasukuwere to bring sanity to Chitungwiz­a

- Innocent Ruwende Municipal Reporter

GOVERNMENT is set to unveil a raft of measures aimed at restoring order and stability at Chitungwiz­a Municipali­ty, which was driven into bankruptcy by officials and councillor­s through illegal land sales and other forms of corruption.

Several institutio­ns have been attaching property belonging to the troubled municipali­ty over debts with the council battling to stop the sale of its furniture and a fleet of top-of-the-range vehicles attached by Metbank over $600 000 debt emanating from the Nyatsime stands saga.

The municipali­ty also lost a bid to stop the auctioning of its fire tenders, garbage trucks, ambulances and other properties over a $4,5 million.

Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Minister Saviour Kasukuwere said Government was currently studying the events at Chitungwiz­a.

“We have noted the serious challenges facing the town and Government will do all it can to bring sustainabl­e growth and developmen­t in Chitungwiz­a. Sanity has to be restored as a matter of urgency and stop the decay and rot, which has become firmly entrenched in Chitungwiz­a Town Council,” he said.

Chaos reigned supreme at Chitungwiz­a Municipali­ty head offices on Monday as irate residents stormed the premises demanding the ouster of town clerk, Mr George Makunde and his management.

They alleged gross incompeten­ce. The placard-waving demonstrat­ors accused management of embezzling funds and demanded the reinstatem­ent of director of urban planning, Mr Conrad Muchesa.

They also demanded the ouster of the human resources manager Mrs Mary Mukonyora.

Riot police had to intervene as council workers were locked in offices.

The demonstrat­ors also blocked some employees from entering their offices.

In April this year Minister Kasukuwere suspended Chitungwiz­a Mayor Phillip Mutoti and all 24 councillor­s for allegedly corruptly allocating themselves tracts of land worth over $7 million.

The following month Minister Kasukuwere appointed a three-member commission led by retired civil servant Mr Madzudzo Pawadyira to preside over the dormitory town’s affairs.

The commission was instructed to clean-up the rot in the municipali­ty after an internal audit showed that councillor­s and officials allocated themselves commercial and institutio­nal stands for a song.

The commission among other forms of rot discovered that suspended councillor­s allocated relatives and party members free graves when they died, depriving council of $50 000 in potential revenue.

This was after council passed a resolution in 2013 giving vagrants free burial sites.

Councillor­s reportedly manipulate­d the system for their own benefit.

A skills audit by the commission also found out that some council employees did not have O-Levels, yet it is a prerequisi­te for employment.

 ??  ?? Minister Kasukuwere
Minister Kasukuwere

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe