Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Reprieve for Mbundane residents

- Vusumuzi Dube Municipal Reporter

THE Bulawayo City Council and Umguza Rural District Council have reportedly signed a Memorandum of Understand­ing ( MoU) bringing to an end a war between the two authoritie­s that has seen a number of suburbs located in the outlying areas of Bulawayo failing to get key services like water and sewer reticulati­on.

Confirming the latest developmen­ts, BCC spokespers­on Mrs Nesisa Mpofu said the two authoritie­s have finally reached an understand­ing. She revealed that they were already setting aside funds to connect Umguza and Emthunzini suburbs.

“Yes, there is a council resolution to the effect that BCC will service Mbundane and Emthunzini suburbs with water and sewer reticulati­on. In the short term we require about $900 000 to connect these two suburbs but in the long term we require about $10 million to connect other outlying areas that are under Umguza, like Rangemore. Under the agreements Umguza RDC will retain the rates for the land while we will recover our money through water and sewer charges. However, we will soon have an all stakeholde­rs meeting to discuss the finer details of this arrangemen­t,” said Mrs Mpofu.

The two local authoritie­s have for the past years been at each other’s throats regarding the possible expansion of the city with Umguza accusing BCC of trying to illegally take over land under their jurisdicti­on. Residents in the outlying areas which include Mbundane and Emthunzini have for over 10 years been operating without key amenities with BCC refusing to connect them to their water and sewer reticulati­on arguing that the suburbs do not fall under their jurisdicti­on despite them being located just at the boundary between the City of Bulawayo and Umguza.

The move brings to an end a fight between the two local authoritie­s over the ownership of this land with BCC at one point accusing Umguza RDC officials and land developers of building houses close to the border between the two councils and expecting BCC to provide services to those areas.

Umguza RDC on the other hand were accusing BCC of arm-twisting land developers that were interested in constructi­ng houses close to the boundary of the two councils on the side of Umguza to seek voluntary incorporat­ion for the council to award them subdivisio­n certificat­es and connect them to the city’s water and sewage reticulati­on.

The matter had been escalated by the developmen­t of Mbundane and Emthunzini suburbs, whose incorporat­ion into the master plan of Bulawayo had courted controvers­y as neither of the local authoritie­s wanted to accept responsibi­lity of both suburbs. The move is also seen as part of efforts by BCC to expand the city and identify new areas for its growing population. Last year they announced that they were working at upgrading a number of illegal peri-urban settlement­s, formalisin­g and putting in place the requisite infrastruc­ture required for them to house proper developmen­t.

Some of these informal settlement­s that were targeted for upgrading included Cabatsha, Trenance, Ngozi Mine, Durnkirk, Willsgrove and Killarney. The list also included two suburbs; Mbundane and Emthunzini. Further according to the Presidenti­al Proclamati­on 15E of 2004 and the subsequent Statutory Instrument­s that created the metropolit­an provinces of Bulawayo and Harare, metropolit­an boundaries were declared as covering a radius of up to 40 kilometres, most of these areas are currently under the jurisdicti­on of Umguza RDC.

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