The Herald (Zimbabwe)

. . . city commission­s waste equipment

- Innocent Ruwende Senior Reporter

HARARE City Council on Tuesday commission­ed 10 skip trucks, which were bought under the $30 million loan facility accessed from local banks for recapitali­sation, while foreign currency shortages have affected the delivery of outstandin­g 21 refuse compactors.

The city bought 30 refuse compactors from FAW Group Corporatio­n for $3,1 million and some of the trucks were delivered, together with five rollers worth $546 000.

The city also bought 10 tipper trucks, three graders, one chip spreader, one jet patcher and 25 utility trucks.

FAW operations director Mr Patrick Masocha bemoaned foreign currency shortages, saying as the manufactur­er they had the capacity to supply even in excess of what Harare ordered.

“The challenge is the foreign currency aspect to remit to our parent company,” he said.

“As a subsidiary, there are certain laws which govern us. They do not just bring in units to Zimbabwe because of risk issues.

“If we get the allocation like today, it will take us two weeks of logistics to bring them here.”

Mr Masocha said his company used its own means to ensure that it supplied 15 units, adding that once the foreign currency shortage was resolved, the outstandin­g units will be made available in no time.

Harare Mayor Councillor Bernard Manyenyeni said the city was happy to cater for some of the residents’ waste management needs.

“We collected the first batch of compactors which are now in the service of the city,” he said.

“Today, we are receiving 10 skip trucks. We have another 21 compactors which we are still

good precedence to other local authoritie­s across the country. It is a precedence they will definitely replicate in their respective areas of jurisdicti­on as cities.”

The remarks by VP Mohadi comes a fortnight after police shot and killed two people in the CBD to pay for.

“We will be appealing further to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe for the necessary resources to complete the transactio­n.

“We are not on top yet. So, as we equip and retool our waste department, we are getting closer and closer to meet our residents’ expectatio­ns.”

“The skip trucks are for the collection of skip bins which are in high waste generation points like Copacabana, Market Square, Fourth Street, Government buildings and other key points around the city, including Mbare, the market place where we have been struggling to collect refuse.”

as they tried to enforce order by barring commuter omnibuses from picking passengers at illegal points.

The city council has been battling to remove illegal vendors and pirate taxis from the Central Business District without any success.

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Clr Manyenyeni

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