The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Harare council ordered to address mobile toilets stand-off

- Ivan Zhakata Herald Correspond­ent

THE Government has directed the Harare City Council to convene a meeting with relevant stakeholde­rs by the end of the day today after the local authority confiscate­d 31 mobile toilets from the Zimbabwe Mobile Sanitation Associatio­n (ZMSA) which had been providing alternativ­e ablution facilities in the capital.

This comes after residents questioned the rationale behind council’s seizure of the toilets at a time the capital is battling a cholera outbreak.

After noting that there was a shortage of ablution facilities in the capital, ZMSA approached council with a proposal to introduce mobile toilets to bridge the gap in ablution facilities and to prevent the continued spread of cholera in the city.

Council was initially amenable to the idea but later deployed its employees to remove the mobile toilets, prompting ZMSA to approach central Government for recourse.

In a letter addressed to the Town Clerk Engineer Hosea Chisango dated January 24, 2024, the Permanent Secretary for Local Government and Public Works Ms Khonzani Ncube said council and ZMSA should engage on the provision of adequate toilets in the city.

“It has been brought to the attention of the Ministry that your local authority has confiscate­d 31 mobile toilets belonging to Zimbabwe Mobile Sanitation Associatio­n,” she said.

“The organisati­on has raised concern that this is frustratin­g to its efforts to augment the local authority’s provision of public toilets that are constraine­d.

“The organisati­on also cites that they have an agreement with the city to provide the service and the agreement was not officially terminated.

“Could you organise a meeting with the associatio­n by 30 January 2024 to find how you can cooperate and resolve the dispute? Please furnish the undersigne­d with a copy of the minutes of your meeting.”

Despite a serious shortage of public toilets in the city centre, council officials have reportedly been harassing private concerns complement­ing their efforts.

Only a handful of council toilets are usable with the majority either blocked or lacking running water.

The mobile toilets had been placed in busy spots including busy pick-up points for travellers such as the Harare Exhibition Park and the Civic Centre car park off Gamal Abdel Nasser Road.

Some of the areas that require mobile toilets in the city centre include the former Ximex Mall, where illegal foreign currency dealers are relieving themselves on the streets, posing a serious health hazard.

◆ Full story: www.herald.co.zw

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