The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Kwekwe to splurge on mayoral car

- Freedom Mupanedemo Midlands Bureau

KWEKWE City Council is set to splash thousands of dollars on an imported mayoral vehicle after councillor­s rejected a proposal to buy a cheaper locally-assembled one.

According to full council minutes seen by The Herald, the local authority — in consultati­on with the mayor Councillor Matenda Madzoke — had initially opted for a locally-assembled BAIC model that is cheaper.

According to the minutes, the financiall­y hamstrung local authority had indicated that there were no funds to buy a foreign assembled vehicle due to foreign currency concerns.

The councillor­s who barred the mayor from contributi­ng to the discussion on the purchase of the mayoral vehicle, shot down the idea of a cheaper model and proposed that council buys an Isuzu twin cab.

“To that effect, the meeting suggest that the council has no foreign currency to buy a foreign assembled vehicle and should buy a Willowvale Motor Industries assembled BAIC model as the mayoral vehicle,” read part of the minutes.

A councillor who spoke on condition of anonymity said, “Yes, we agreed that for a big city like Kwekwe, we can’t have a vehicle from BAIC for the mayor. If they want that for the municipal police or other services like pool cars for sewer and reticulati­on services, then yes,” said the councillor.

“This is what we agreed in our last full council meeting.”

The councillor said Clr Madzoke, who has been insisting on service delivery ahead of a mayoral vehicle, had agreed to go for a cheaper BAIC as the mayoral car, but the councillor­s rejected the idea.

“In that full council meeting, we were clear that the mayor should not interfere with the purchase of a mayoral vehicle,” said the councillor. “We said we wanted a car that gives our council some dignity.”

Clr Madzoke confirmed yesterday that the council had resolved to buy an Isuzu model ahead of a BAIC as the mayoral vehicle.

“When it comes to the mayoral vehicle, there was a resolution that the councillor­s passed,” he said. “I was asked not to interfere in the issue.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe