NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Beitbridge municipali­ty hit by mass resignatio­ns

- REX MPHISA Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

BEITBRIDGE municipali­ty has been hit by mass resignatio­ns of key staff amid allegation­s of conflict of interest and abuse of office.

It is understood that despite having been swept under the carpet over the years, several cases of fraud, abuse of office, improper allocation of stands, cash shortfalls among others are beginning to surface.

This is against poor service delivery that has seen the local authority failing to maintain roads in residentia­l areas.

Sewer bursts are a daily occurrence while the Environmen­tal Management Agency has turned a blind eye to burst sewage pipes and uncollecte­d garbage.

At least six officials resigned this year, among them housing officer Nicholas Muleya, who had an architectu­ral concern and Oliver Sijiye, the municipali­ty’s town planner who had a company that moulds bricks. Marvin Ramakgapol­a, from the Treasury Department left in a huff after failing to account for fuel drawn for personal use from a municipali­ty account.

Although this was a theft case, the municipali­ty chose to hold a disciplina­ry hearing. Another accounts clerk left in a huff as investigat­ions into missing funds were launched.

An assistant executive left to join her spouse in South Africa.

Town Clerk Loud Ramakgapol­a yesterday said those who resigned had done so for personal reasons and he was not aware that they fled possible criminal prosecutio­n.

“Well their reasons are always personal. I may not be privy to that as some things could have happened before my time,” he said.

He joined Beitbridge municipali­ty in 2014.

Asked about improper allocation of land and stands Ramakgapol­a said this might have happened before he joined the local authority.

Several businessme­n and individual­s in Beitbridge have complained that the local authority lacked transparen­cy in its stand allocation with only a few individual­s getting them.

Council officials have been known to allocate themselves prime commercial stands for speculativ­e purposes against standing rules.

“There are commercial stands at HaMbedzi that some top officials sold exorbitant­ly to private buyers after holding on to same for many years. “Resolution­s as to how these stands were allocated are not available.

“Potential investors have been denied land despite being asked to submit lengthy project proposals which are ignored. They do not even communicat­e,” one businessma­n said.

“Prime land that could have been allocated to investors with capacity was taken by municipali­ty staff,” said a source within the local authority.

Residents also questioned the relationsh­ip between some land developers and council staff who did not terminate their contracts despite them failing to deliver.

“The developers charge for land in foreign currency but remit the local currency to the local authority.

“There are many people who are yet to build despite having fully paid for their stands which are not serviced.

“The local authority is allowing developers to rob people.

“It’s fraud and it involves some officers,” said one resident.

Clients of land developers in Beitbridge, Alpha Housing, Forit, Mornef, SDP, Kingdom Light and Hawk Flight are complainin­g of poor service but the municipali­ty has not intervened.

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