NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

7 Byo church buildings face demolition

- BY NQOBANI NDLOVU ● Follow Nqobani on Twitter @NqobaniNdl­ovu

THE Bulawayo City Council (BCC) has warned that it will demolish seven church structures built without council approval. Council by-laws stipulate that no constructi­on should take place without approved plans and inspection by the environmen­t and engineerin­g department­s.

The by-laws also state that no new building should be occupied without a certificat­e of occupation issued by the local authority.

Latest reports of the council’s environmen­tal, management and engineerin­g services committee have, however, noted that a number of properties, including seven churches, were illegally constructe­d.

These are Family Covenant, Twelve Apostolic, The Apostolic Faith, Foundation of Christ, Assemblies of God and

Internal Pentecosta­l Holiness in Pumula South; and Christedom Pentecosta­l in Magwegwe West.

“As such, the developmen­ts should be regularise­d if they meet all council by-laws and policies subject to relevant penalties being paid. If they cannot comply, then the developmen­t had to be removed accordingl­y. The department carried routine inspection­s around the city,” the council report read.

“The table below showed the list (churches and residentia­l properties) of illegal developmen­ts with no approved plans and inspection­s. Appropriat­e 21 days notices had been issued. If no corrective action was taken, penalties would be charged, and where appropriat­e demolishin­g procedures instituted.”

Recently, council also condemned over 50 buildings in the city centre, saying they were severely dilapidate­d and posed a danger to inhabitant­s and passers-by and indicated it would demolish them.

In May, the local authority revealed that 14 buildings in the city centre had been condemned as unfit, with owners given a timeline to rectify the anomalies, but without success.

In 2017, three people escaped death by a whisker when a building housing a Simbisa Brands restaurant, Nandos, along Jason Moyo Street collapsed.

In 2020, council’s fire department exposed some government buildings such as Mhlahlandl­ela Complex, Zimpost, the Registrar-General’s Office and the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority as prone to fire.

The country’s second largest city is witnessing an unpreceden­ted increase in the number of abandoned, neglected and derelict buildings in the city centre, a clear sign of urban decay.

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