NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Residents oppose Macheke-Murewa amalgamati­on

- BY JAIROS SAUNYAMA • Follow Jairos on Twitter @jairossaun­yama

MACHEKE residents have blasted the amalgamati­on of their town with Murewa, saying the move would disadvanta­ge them in so many ways.

This was revealed by Macheke Citizens Developmen­t Trust director Ali Maulani during a workshop last Friday organised by the Zimbabwe National Editors Forum and Youth Developmen­t in Action Trust in Macheke.

Macheke is being administra­tively run by Murewa Rural District Council despite having its own sub-offices at local governance level.

“The intention (amalgamati­on) was noble, but in the process one side was, and is still being deprived of developmen­t. Macheke has lost in terms of developmen­t due to this amalgamati­on — from equipment, land and progressiv­e planning in terms of programmes and projects that lure investors to the area,” Maulani said.

“As residents, the question that everyone is asking is whether this amalgamati­on is still viable now that Murewa has grown in terms of developmen­t, surpassing Macheke,” he said.

Macheke falls under Murewa South constituen­cy and is mainly dominated by commercial farming activities.

Maulani said it was high time that the amalgamati­on of the two areas was reversed.

“We appeal to authoritie­s to do an evaluation of this amalgamati­on and come up with viable and beneficial planning to correct this anomaly. There is no industry and the rates alone cannot sustain this area. With the pencilled programmes by the government like the local economic developmen­t, I see us going nowhere and achieving nothing because we cannot make decisions on our own without the blessing of Murewa,” Maulani said.

Women’s representa­tive, Portia Machemba said: “As women in Macheke, we are not benefiting much from this arrangemen­t. For example, if you want to obtain a birth certificat­e, one has to wait for weeks to get it. This is because the birth certificat­es come from Murewa.

“At one point, I was told that the vehicle that delivers birth certificat­es had developed a mechanical fault. Why can’t we have our own administra­tive offices in Macheke? Surely, we cannot struggle to get a birth certificat­e in this era,” she said.

Residents recommende­d that Macheke should be independen­t from Murewa so that it runs its own affairs.

The meeting was attended by various stakeholde­rs, among them councillor­s.

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