NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

MIHR urges EMA to get tough on BCC

- BY SILAS NKALA Follow Silas on Twitter @silasnkala

THE Environmen­t Management Agency (EMA) in Bulawayo has been petitioned by a human rights organisati­on, Matabelela­nd Institute for Human Rights (MIHR) to release its charges against the Bulawayo City Council for failing to repair burst sewerage pipes and collect refuse.

The petition, dated January 14, addressed to EMA Bulawayo manager, Sithembisi­we Ndlovu came in after council blames fuel shortages to its failure to collect refuse.

“As MIHR, a stakeholde­r in human rights issues in the country, we request EMA to make available to the public, the actual practical measures it has taken to hold BCC accountabl­e and ultimately protect Bulawayo residents from environmen­tal rights violations due to poor sewage and refuse management currently happening in the city,” MIHR co-ordinator, Khumbulani Maphosa wrote.

“Our request for this informatio­n was grounded on the realisatio­n that there was increased raw sewage spillage and illegal litter dumping which is attributab­le to poor environmen­tal management by the BCC. BCC councillor­s have also acknowledg­ed that.”

Maphosa said ward 4 councillor Silas Chigora also testified that the local authority has been inconsiste­nt in collecting refuse sometimes going for two months without doing so, thus contributi­ng to illegal litter dumping.

“The presence of unattended overflowin­g sewage and uncollecte­d litter all over the city is a violation of fundamenta­l human rights and freedoms, especially environmen­tal rights as enshrined in section 73 of the Constituti­on read together with section 51 (right to human dignity),” Maphosa said.

“BCC is legally mandated and obliged to ensure proper management of sewerage and the timely collection of litter. The local authority also has the mandate to enforce by-laws for the avoidance of pollution through indiscrimi­nate littering.

“EMA has among its functions the duty to assist and participat­e in any matter pertaining to the management of the environmen­t, to regulate and monitor the collection, disposal, treatment and recycling of waste, and to regulate and monitor the discharge or emission of any pollutant or hazardous substance into the environmen­t (section 10(1)(b)(i) of the Environmen­tal Management Act [Chapter 20:27)."

The human rights group believes that it has a responsibi­lity to request and subsequent­ly be given this informatio­n as section 4(1)(b) of the EMA Act accords them the “right to access to environmen­tal informatio­n....”

“Section 62(1) of the Constituti­on accords us ‘the right to access any informatio­n held by the State or by any institutio­n or agency of government at every level, in as far as the informatio­n is required in the interest of public accountabi­lity’,” he said.

“Therefore, we ask for this informatio­n. Since the problem of indiscrimi­nate overflow of raw sewage and litter dumping has been worsening over the past 8 months. We request this informatio­n to be provided to the public between now and January 22. This is also because of the emergency nature of the issue as it is of public interest, especially during this COVID-19 pandemic period.”

Ndlovu yesterday confirmed receiving the letter before promising to respond to it soon, adding that EMA was seized with the environmen­tal issues affecting the city, with several court cases against council over the raw effluent and water pollution in the city.

“We received their (MIHR) letter yesterday (Thursday) and we are going to respond to them. The council has been in the courts on several cases of raw effluent and water pollution,” Ndlovu said.

BCC town clerk Christophe­r Dube this week blamed fuel problems for the non-collection of refuse.

 ??  ?? Uncollecte­d litter all over Bulawayo is a violation of fundamenta­l human rights and freedoms, especially environmen­tal rights as enshrined in section 73 of the Constituti­on
Uncollecte­d litter all over Bulawayo is a violation of fundamenta­l human rights and freedoms, especially environmen­tal rights as enshrined in section 73 of the Constituti­on

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