The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Residents’ associatio­n petitions minister

- Gilbert Munetsi Correspond­ent

CHITUNGWIZ­A and Manyame Rural Residents Associatio­n (CAMERA) has petitioned Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Minister July Moyo and Parliament over priorities being set by the commission running the affairs of the town.

The organisati­on said the priorities were misplaced and authoritie­s should “intervene for purposes of bringing sanity to the perenniall­y problem-ridden urban settlement”.

The petition comes after another one served on former Minister Saviour Kasukuwere by the Chitungwiz­a Residents Trust (Chitrest) on September 24, 2017.

Top on the CAMERA queries list is the logic by the commission to operate for months without the services of key personnel who include a substantiv­e town clerk, works director, mayor, deputy mayor and councillor­s.

Former mayor Philip Mutoti and his entire team of 24 councillor­s were suspended in April last year for allegedly contraveni­ng Section 114 of the Urban Councils Act, and were charged for gross incompeten­ce, misconduct and wilful violation of the law in the management of the council’s funds and affairs.

They were replaced by a three-member commission headed by Mr Madzudzo Pawadyira and assisted by District Administra­tor Mrs Zivanai Chisango and former councillor and businessma­n Joshua Mabhiza.

However, of the suspended lot, only former Clr Mutoti has since been convicted, while the fate of the others lies in limbo as there has not been an official position proffered.

“Nine months after former Minister (Kasukuwere) served Chitungwiz­a with yet another commission, it appears the motive has never been to benefit the general populace of Chitungwiz­a,” wrote former legislator for St Mary’s Constituen­cy and CAMERA executive director Marvelous Kumalo in the communique.

“Instead of prioritisi­ng the filling in of vacant service delivery-related posts such as that of a substantiv­e town clerk and director of works, the Municipali­ty — which has been operating through a caretaker commission made up of three (3) appointees since May 2017 — has chosen to rush to push for secondary appointmen­ts and replacemen­ts without attending to the other key vacant positions in the local authority.

“To make matters worse, the same local authority has been functionin­g without councillor­s, including a mayor or a deputy after the entire lot was suspended by the Ministry of Local Government in April 2017.

“We are also in the process of engaging you (the Ministry of Local Government) on why an appointed Commission has continued to superinten­d the affairs of Chitungwiz­a Municipali­ty for more than eight (8) months, which is a long time.

“We continue to blame the current poor state of service delivery in Chitungwiz­a on the circumstan­ces obtaining at the local authority where a caretaker Commission is now taking care of itself at the expense of the welfare of residents and ratepayers. We demand that the situation at Chitungwiz­a Municipali­ty be brought to finality and returns to normalcy without any further delay.”

The residents’ body lamented lack of engagement, no will on the part of the local authority to convene regular public consultati­ve and feedback meetings and also called on the Minister to consider putting in place a criteria that ensures councilors were of sound educationa­l and profession­al qualificat­ions to meet the demands of the job.

The sentiments echo those by Chitrest to the parent Ministry five months ago in which they requested “well-defined terms of reference from commission­s that continue to frustrate residents by looting from depleted coffers”.

“Chitungwiz­a has had more than five commission­s in the past for various matters, including land management and allocation, but most of these commission­s, if not all, have failed to address the challenges bedevillin­g the town and its residents,” wrote Chirest.

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