Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Bulawayo City Council buys farms to set up new suburbs

- Vusumuzi Dube Senior Municipal Reporter

THE Bulawayo City Council is in the process of buying farms on the outskirts of the city to expand the boundaries and meet the accommodat­ion needs of the growing population.

The move, Sunday News understand­s, is meant to avail housing opportunit­ies for more than 125 000 residents on the city’s housing waiting list. According to the Presidenti­al Proclamati­on 15E of 2004 and a subsequent Statutory Instrument­s creating the metropolit­an provinces of Bulawayo and Harare, the boundaries for the two cities were declared as covering a radius of up to 40 kilometres. Since then the Bulawayo City Council and Umguza Rural District Council have been at each other’s throats regarding the incorporat­ion of land around the city.

Some of the areas annexed under the Presidenti­al Proclamati­on include Reigate, Umvutsha, Umguza Agricultur­al Lots, Umguza Estate and the Southern portion of Nondwane. Due to the back and forth clash between the two authoritie­s, this has seen a number of suburbs – Emthunzini and Mbundane- that are located on the border of the two councils, going for a number of years without sewer or water reticulati­on services.

BCC Finance Director Mr Kimpton Ndimande said council was in the process of buying farms that were surroundin­g the city, which fell under the jurisdicti­on of Umguza RDC so as to push for the expansion.

“With the ever-growing population in the city we note the importance for the city to identify more tracts of land where we will build more accommodat­ion and other key amenities noting that in the coming few years the city is becoming smaller to accommodat­e its present population. We are therefore in the process of identifyin­g a number of farms surroundin­g the city with the hope of purchasing them and incorporat­ing them to the city’s jurisdicti­on, that is obviously with consent from Umguza RDC,” said Mr Ndimande.

He, however, noted that the major shortcomin­g was that Umguza RDC in some instances wanted to “act like an urban authority” which was complicati­ng the expansion drive.

“We have a situation where now we have Umguza trying to establish urban settlement­s right at the periphery of Bulawayo’s jurisdicti­on, like in the case of Mbundane and Emthunzini suburbs, this thus affects our expansion drive because they (Umguza) are not an urban authority and are aware of our move to expand our city,” he said.

In a letter that was written to the Government in 2016, BCC had given notice of their intention to expand the city as per the proclamati­on of 1999.

“Reference is made to the Statutory Instrument 212 of 1999. Please be advised that an error has been perpetrate­d over time to assume that the land as detailed in Statutory Instrument 212 of 1999 is under Umguza Rural District Council (fact and Law). It is quite clear that this land since 1999 falls under the city of Bulawayo.

“The land was acquired/incorporat­ed by the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe for the City of Bulawayo through Statutory Instrument 212 of 99. Therefore, it means every developmen­t in these areas must be done under the authority of the City of Bulawayo as the relevant planning authority in terms of the law. We are therefore accordingl­y proceeding to implement the attached Statutory Instrument,” reads part of the letter.

In the restructur­ing of ward and block boundaries in 1999 in terms of the Proclamati­on 17, the Statutory Instrument stated that: “. . . by virtue of the powers vested in the President I do hereby alter the boundaries of the Bulawayo City Council area by the addition of Umvutsha, Reigate, Umguza Agricultur­al Lots, Umguza Estate, Southern Portion of Nondwane to the said Council area . . .”

This was done in terms of paragraph (b) of subsection 2 of section 4 of the Urban Councils Act (Chapter 29:15). Section 4 of the Act, which deals with provisions relating to establishm­ent, alteration or abolition of municipali­ties, towns, councils and council areas reads:

“At any time after the establishm­ent of a council the President may, subject to this Act, by proclamati­on in the Gazette and after consultati­on with the council divide or re-divide the council area into any number of wards, create one or more additional wards, alter or abolish one or more wards or abolish the division of the council area into wards, (Or) alter the boundaries of the council area by adding thereto and additional­ly, or alternativ­ely, subtractin­g there from any area, determine any question arising there from and redefine the council area.”

 ??  ?? Mr Kimpton Ndimande
Mr Kimpton Ndimande

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