The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Dr Mzembi, police to hold indaba on roadblocks

- Grace Kaerasora

AFTER weeks of tensions over roadblocks, the Tourism and Hospitalit­y Industry Ministry and police will soon meet to find common ground on the matter.

The “All-Stakeholde­r Tourism Enabler Workshop” — scheduled for Harare in a fortnight — brings together the ministries of Tourism and Home Affairs, law enforcemen­t chiefs, the Immigation Department and Vehicle Inspection Department.

The workshop is aimed at balancing the imperative of security and law enforcemen­t; and unencumber­ed movement of motorists, particular­ly tourists.

Tourism Minister Dr Walter Mzembi has been vocal about the high number of police roadblocks, arguing that this was dissuading tourists from visiting Zimbabwe.

Last week, Dr Mzembi said annual tourist arrivals from South Africa plummeted from 1,5 million to 600 000 partly due to heavy police presence on Zimbabwe’s roads.

Though police chiefs have not responded publicly to Dr Mzembi, Police Commission­er-General Dr Augustine Chihuri has previously dismissed roadblock critics as “sinister”, “having bitter mouths” and unapprecia­tive of the Constituti­onal mandate of policing.

During the launch of the Internatio­nal Year of Sustainabl­e Tourism for Developmen­t last month, Vice-President Emmer- son Mnangagwa implored the Home Affairs and Tourism ministries to close ranks.

Dr Mzembi told The Sunday Mail, “We want to find a solution. So, two weeks ago, we had a meeting, which was chaired by Home Affairs Minister Dr Ignatius Chombo. (It was) an eyeball-contact meeting on the issues at hand. We agreed to meet, and that is how the matter can be resolved — through consultati­on. After that, we find solutions.

“We agreed to retreat to an All-Stakeholde­r Tourism Enabler Workshop. What is needed going forward is boardroom diplomacy and selling our tourism vision to the police. If the vision is clear, everyone follows.”

Dr Mzembi added, “As Government, we have serious interest in peace, and my sector can only function if we are guaranteed peace. However, what we are saying is that if there are excesses in roadblocks, that is when we consult and try to strike a balance.”

Over the months, police have been mounting roadblocks on major inter- and intra-city routes within close radii, prompting motorists to complain that the ZRP was only out to milk them.

An electronic traffic management system will soon be introduced to integrate police, the VID, Zimbabwe National Roads Administra­tion and Central Vehicle Registry; ultimately reducing police check-points/ roadblocks and ensuring road users comply with traffic regulation­s.

In June 2017, the Home Affairs Ministry ordered police to reduce roadblocks to 40 countrywid­e.

Dr Chombo said then: “We have told the Commission­er-General of Police to reduce or remove all unnecessar­y roadblocks and leave the necessary ones. We want the police to do their work, but we also want the public to have hassle-free travel.”

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Dr Mzembi

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