NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Cliff Chiduku Recalls have crippled council business: Mafume

-

NEW Harare mayor Jacob Mafume (JM) still believes that the capital has what it takes to regain its Sunshine City status if city fathers can get their act together. Last week, he sat down with NewsDay (ND) reporter Cliff Chiduku to understand his vision for the city, recalls of councillor­s by the MDC-T and service delivery, among other issues.

ND: Congratula­tions on becoming Harare mayor. However, you come at a difficult time when several councillor­s have been recalled. How has this affected council operations?

JM: Recalls have indeed affected service delivery. They affect the ability of people to be represente­d by a councillor of their choice. As you might be aware, councillor­s ensure that residents get services that are due to them and also that they are able to channel their grievances through their representa­tives. As it stands, several wards in Harare are orphaned, thanks to these unnecessar­y recalls. Where you recall a councillor, you are effectivel­y denying a particular community the ability to be serviced. It is unfortunat­e that losers are recalling winners for self-aggrandise­ment.

ND: Any further recalls would collapse council, do you foresee a situation where the Local Government minister could use this as an excuse to appoint a commission to run the affairs of the capital?

JM: Further recalls will definitely lead to a commission. However, it’s a bit tricky because the Constituti­on says a commission can only be appointed for three months before elections are held. These recalls are an expensive exercise not worth pursuing. Service delivery is now being interrupte­d by unnecessar­y byelection­s. Harare will be worse off if a commission is appointed. However, we do hope that sanity will prevail. What has happened is a malicious interpreta­tion of a (Supreme Court) judgment to mean that the judgment allows for the reversal of election results. This is not only bizarre, but also demeans the institutio­ns of democracy, particular­ly the Judiciary.

ND: I understand you have crafted a 100-day plan to stabilise the city. How much will it cost to implement your programme and where is the funding coming from?

JM: For now, the plan has no financial figures, but we have since asked officials to cost it. As you might be aware, our budget is crafted at the beginning of each calendar year so for now we can’t go beyond the budget, but what we can do is to prioritise certain areas of the plan. The stabilisat­ion plan prioritise­s refuse collection, provision of potable water, road maintenanc­e among others and all these things are also catered for in this year’s budget.

ND: Several council officials are facing corruption charges and so is your predecesso­r. How deeply entrenched is the culture of corruption in council? How will you deal with it?

JM:

I must hasten to say everyone is innocent until proven guilty. However, be that as it may, we have looked at corruption and have adopted a zero tolerance to it. We are aware that corruption hampers service delivery, it also subverts council processes. We realised that we should increase transparen­cy, we should reduce human element in decision-making and we must automate our processes. We also agreed to come up with an anti-corruption policy that protects whistleblo­wers, that also allows us to deal with corruption not in an evangelica­l manner, but in a precise and evidence-led manner which allows us to get to the bottom of the problem. As for the case against officials, these matters are sub judice, so I will not comment on them.

ND: What is your plan to solve Harare’s water challenges?

JM: It’s a fact that Harare has been facing water problems for years. Given this, we realised that we needed a long-term solution to this problem. A long-term solution entails building more supply dams — Musami and Kunzvi. The city’s water supply is being outstretch­ed because it provides the precious liquid to many towns that surround it. We should increase the capacity of our water treatment plants. Once we manage to increase pumping capacity, we would be halfway in solving the problem. The other issue is to deal with non-revenue water — water that residents don’t pay for or that is lost through leaks and so on. We are making sure that our infrastruc­ture doesn’t leak and that water is getting where it should. We are working on this as a medium-term interventi­on. We are determined to minimise non-revenue water.

We are also exploring how we can convert our post-paid system to prepaid. We have realised that the post-paid system doesn’t work, it costs more money to chase bad money. We need citizens to pay upfront so that we can be able to recycle the money in the provision of other essential services. We are better off with expensive water that is there than arguing about cheap water that is not available.

ND: Previous mayors have spoken out against the calibre of some councillor­s at Town House. Do you think you have competent councillor­s who can take Harare to a world-class city by 2025?

JM:

They might have their own reasons for asking in terms of the calibre of councillor­s, but to ask it that way is to miss the point. Most of our cities were built by people who didn’t possess diplomas, let alone degrees. But now most of our city department­s are manned by highly qualified people, but unfortunat­ely, our cities are regressing. This means the problem lies elsewhere, not education. What qualificat­ion is required of a councillor to demand the provision of potable water in his ward? My point is: We must not blame “uneducated” councillor­s as the reason why our technocrat­s at town house are failing to provide services to ratepayers. What is required is collective effort of councillor­s and residents.

ND: Do you think our cities need executive mayors? If so, what should be exclusive areas of their jurisdicti­on?

JM:

Remember, we have a population that is bigger than other countries so why should it be run by someone on part-time basis? You can’t run a city without an executive mayor. This is a misnomer. As Harare mayor, I spend most of my time responding to citizens’ concerns. For people on the streets, once you become mayor, you are responsibl­e for everything — they don’t know that you are a ceremonial mayor. The difference is known by us politician­s who would want to fix each other. We need to bring back the post of executive mayor as a matter of urgency. There is a lot that a mayor does that should be recognised by making him an executive, who is accountabl­e to the electorate.

ND: Devolution is a well-establishe­d concept in our Constituti­on. Do you think Parliament has done enough pushing for devolution enabling legislatio­n?

JM:

Parliament has done absolutely nothing to push for devolution. I don’t know why Parliament is reluctant to push for Bills that operationa­lise devolution. The collection of road fees, provision of water, energy and transport, among others, should be delegated to metros. Everywhere in the world, these services are provided by metros. It is only in Zimbabwe where the central government pokes its nose in everything. But this is contrary to the spirit and letter of the Constituti­on which calls for the decentrali­sation of power.

ND: The opposition has controlled

Harare for the past 18 years. There has been no long-term masterplan­s developed and adopted. Harare is growing on an ad hoc basis. Is this because councillor­s have no capacity to envision a city beyond their terms of office?

JM:

We all know that Zanu PF, especially (Ignatious) Chombo and (Saviour) Kasukuwere, are the authors of the chaos that is bedevillin­g not only Harare, but several other local authoritie­s across the country. The central government created chaos when it delegated roles usually undertaken by council to private companies, most of them owned or controlled by party apparatchi­ks. Housing co-operatives, some of them named after Zanu PF stalwarts, mushroomed and haphazardl­y allocated stands on council land. Council lost billions of dollars in revenue. This put pressure on council as it had to provide for these residents even though they were not paying for such services. These illegal settlers paid protection fees to either Zanu PF or some party land baron. This threw town planning efforts into disarray. So you can’t blame MDC Alliance given these circumstan­ces. In fact, we should be applauded for preserving what is left of the City of Harare. If it was not because of MDC Alliance, Harare could have been run down just like what happened to the National Railways of Zimbabwe or Cold Storage Company.

ND: Harare is overstaffe­d by any stretch of imaginatio­n at the bottom and top. Past efforts to restructur­e the city administra­tion have failed. Can you face the beast in the eye and implement the restructur­ing needed to develop the city?

JM: Harare is not overstaffe­d by any definition. As I have said, we have a population of over four million that needs to be serviced in Harare and that leaves an abnormal ratio in relation to residents and council employee complement. Each council employee should have a manageable number of citizens they serve. We still have suburbs that don’t have roads, water and other social amenities so this requires a bigger human resources capital. Unless we automate and digitise our processes, we will always require what other people call a “bloated” workforce in order to discharge our duties.

ND: Council is owed billions in unpaid rates and it seems residents are reluctant to pay up for services they have not received. What are you doing to solve this chicken and egg puzzle?

JM: Harare is owed billons of dollars in unpaid rates by government, corporates and residents. Such debts are unsustaina­ble, they cripple service delivery. It is not all who are not paying who did not get a service, take away the residents, surely government and corporates got services. You would also remember Zanu PF through central government cancelling all debts before elections, a populist move which punishes good behaviour and rewards those who do not pay. Now you have a non-paying culture based on people hoping that debts will be cancelled again. However, going forward, we have to improve on debt collection strategies. This entails improving on our billing and revenue collection systems. It also means we have to gravitate towards a prepaid system. As said earlier on, the post-paid system of billing has proved to be a failure.

Let us all work together for the good of our city. We have a “SMART” vision enunciated by president Nelson Chamisa which we should make sure comes to fruition. I believe we have all it takes to realise a world-class city if only we can all put our hands on the deck.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe