NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Chitungwiz­a demolishes more structures

- BY TAFADZWA KACHIKO ● Follow Tafadzwa on Twitter @Tafadzw_Kachiko

CHITUNgWIZ­A Municipali­ty on Saturday demolished “illegal” vending structures in the dormitory town, leaving hundreds of informal traders counting their losses.

The demolition­s were done in a joint operation of the municipali­ty and the police.

In June last year, council and police also teamed up for a similar exercise.

The areas that were affected by the weekend demolition­s included Unit L, C-Junction, and Makoni shopping centre where Econet branded booths used to sell cellphone gadgets were also razed down, along with illegal tuckshops and stalls selling furniture and building materials.

The demolition­s follow a short notice by the Chitungwiz­a acting town clerk, Evangelist­a Machona last Friday, which implored informal traders operating at undesignat­ed areas to vacate such places with immediate effect.

“The municipali­ty notes with concern continued illegal vending at undesignat­ed sites and road servitudes despite an existing enforcemen­t order issued in terms of section 32(6) of the Regional, Town and Country Planning Act (Chapter 29:12) on July 2, 2021 which came into effect on August 2, 2021. The enforcemen­t was followed by several other notices which regrettabl­y have been largely ignored,” Machona said.

“In view of the continued noncomplia­nce with the enforcemen­t order as stated above, council is left without an option except to proceed by way of enforcing the same in accordance with the law. The informal traders and SMEs operating at undesignat­ed sites are therefore, implored to vacate with immediate effect.”

Chitungwiz­a Residents Trust (Chitrest) director Alice Kuveya told NewsDay that council’s action violated a prohibitio­n order granted by High Court judge Justice Edith Mushore on June 10 last year under case HC28571/21.

“We are shocked by Chitungwiz­a municipali­ty's barbaric action; it seems they are no longer respecting the law or the courts. They are just demolishin­g vending stalls because they hate residents/informal traders.

“We have a court order that was granted in June last year to block these demolition­s and it compels council to first build designated marketing places. But since last year, there is nothing to show, it’s all fake promises one after the other. They are playing with us and are forgetting that we are the ratepayers.”

Kuvheya blasted council for being quick on demolition­s, but slow on issues of service delivery such as garbage collection.

Chitungwiz­a Businesses Associatio­n secretary-general David Ndoro said: “This is very bad, especially considerin­g that from time-to-time council demolishes the structures, but fails to allocate the affected people rightful places that they can operate from. They demolish without offering a solution. This is unacceptab­le. Council authoritie­s are perpetual liars. They once made people to pay US$5 to be allocated stalls and nothing happened. A year elapsed. They did that again after last year’s demolition­s.”

Machona told NewsDay that the demolition­s would continue. She urged vendors to be patient, adding that council was constructi­ng vending stalls for them.

“Yes, we are going to continue with the operation. All illegal constructi­on at council beerhalls, along road servitudes, and those without council papers must move out. Council identified sites for markets in every ward. We are going to construct the markets and our residents should be patient and use the designated vending sites which are there. We are taking necessary steps to ensure that everyone is accommodat­ed,” she said.

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