The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Litterbugs face jail or US$500 fine

- Debra Matabvu

LOCAL authoritie­s that fail to collect waste will be fined US$5 000, while litterbugs will be fined US$500 or slapped with a sixmonth jail term under new draft regulation­s, The Sunday Mail has learnt.

The draft Statutory Instrument (SI), which is awaiting gazetting, will make the national clean-up programme, which is held every first Friday of the month, compulsory, with defaulters facing a US$2 000 penalty.

Local authoritie­s will also cease doorto-door refuse collection and now create central points in suburbs, where solid waste will be disposed of by residents and collected regularly by councils.

In addition, local authoritie­s will be required to produce a solid waste management plan each year that will be approved by the Environmen­tal Management Agency (EMA).

EMA officials will be given powers to enforce the law and arrest non-compliant citizens, companies and local authoritie­s.

The regulation­s are part of a long-term plan that will guide local authoritie­s on solid waste collection and management.

In an interview with The Sunday Mail, Environmen­t, Climate and Wildlife Minister Mangaliso Ndlovu said the penalties will become effective soon.

“As a ministry, we have finalised and are awaiting the gazetting of a Statutory Instrument which will bring sanity in the waste management space,” he said.

“The SI addresses the provision of waste transfer stations for residents to dispose of domestic waste, waste separation at source and compulsory participat­ion in the national clean-up programme.”

According to the draft SI gleaned by this publicatio­n, individual­s and companies that fail to participat­e in the clean-up programme will be required to produce valid reasons that exempt them from being fined or sentenced.

“The President of the Republic of Zimbabwe declared the first Friday of the month, from 8am to 10am, to be a national

clean-up day,” the draft SI says.

“It shall be the duty of every individual, corporate body, community and institutio­ns to clean up their surroundin­g areas, places of work, places of worship, educationa­l premises and immediate surroundin­gs, recreation­al areas, residentia­l areas, vending sites, car parks and car sales, road servitudes and sports and medical facilities.

“Any person, both natural and juristic, who fails to participat­e in a national clean-up without reasonable cause, of which burden of proof shall lie upon that person, shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding level 8. Any court convicting a person of this offence

shall sentence that person to community service targeting waste management.

“Any person whose surroundin­g or premises shall be found littered and with accumulate­d waste dumps and waste material after the national clean-up shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding level 12. Any court convicting a person of this offence shall sentence that person to community service targeting waste management.”

Under the envisaged plan, local authoritie­s will be mandated to produce a solid management plan for public scrutiny before it can be implemente­d.

“Thirty days before the end of each calendar year in preparatio­n for the upcoming

year, every local authority shall prepare a waste management plan for the area under its jurisdicti­on, which shall be submitted to the Environmen­tal Management Agency for approval,” the document reads in part.

“The Environmen­tal Management Agency shall within 30 days of receipt of the waste management plan, approve with or without amendment(s).”

Furthermor­e, local authoritie­s will be obliged to make the environmen­tal management plan available to the public through publicatio­n in the Government gazette and newspapers enjoying wide circulatio­n, as well as at EMA’s offices throughout the country before the first

◆ day of the following month.

The SI adds: “Any local authority that fails to submit its environmen­tal management plan for public inspection before the first day of the following month shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding level 12.”

Further, local authoritie­s will be mandated to design waste disposal points to provide for waste separation and help curb the spread of diseases from the point.

“Every local authority must provide containers or receptacle­s for the collection of waste in and around their area of jurisdicti­on. Ensure the existence of waste transfer centres or points for residents in their areas of jurisdicti­on to dispose of their domestic waste . . .

“Such waste transfer centres shall be adequately designed and managed to allow for waste separation, reduce generation of odours, mitigate against flying litter, prohibit unauthoris­ed access and mitigate against vector diseases and flies. Ensure regular collection of such waste.”

On litterbugs, the draft SI says a culprit can be liable to “a fine not exceeding level eight (8) or to imprisonme­nt for a period not exceeding six months or to both such fine and such imprisonme­nt”.

Other countries such as Rwanda have regulation­s that oblige citizens to clean up their neighbourh­oods.

In Rwanda, police officers monitor the streets and can stop citizens who do not participat­e in clean-up campaigns and make them clean up on the spot or pay a fine. Most urban

local authoritie­s, particular­ly Harare, have been failing to effectivel­y provide basic services to communitie­s, forcing the Government to intervene.

In August last year, President Mnangagwa declared a state of disaster in Harare due to poor waste management by Harare City Council, which saw piles of refuse accumulati­ng in residentia­l areas and the central business district (CBD).

Last month, the Government rolled out Operation Chenesa Harare, a major clean-up campaign that removed over 20 000 tonnes of refuse in the CBD and residentia­l areas in two weeks.

 ?? ?? A workman sprays insecticid­e on a thriving soya bean crop at Good Hope Farm in Harare yesterday
A workman sprays insecticid­e on a thriving soya bean crop at Good Hope Farm in Harare yesterday

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