The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Manyenyeni stirs hornet’s nest again

- Innocent Ruwende Senior Reporter

LOCAL authoritie­s require technocrat­s to serve as mayors and the current scenario where mayors and chairperso­ns only come from elected leaders is short-changing ratepayers as councillor­s may lack skills required for the job, Harare Mayor Councillor Bernard Manyenyeni has said.

In an interview, Clr Manyenyeni, who is not seeking re-election when his term lapses this year, said the dominant party in elections should be allowed to choose the best candidate for the coveted position of mayor or chairperso­n of a local authority.

Currently, councils can only choose candidates for the mayoral office from elected councillor­s.

“We have had two experience­s, the current experience and the previous experience. The previous experience is what I would call the Much Masunda (Former Harare Mayor Muchadeyi Masunda) experience where the dominant party had the latitude to find the most capable person to be mayor of the City of Harare,” he said.

“The current scenario is where the mayors and chairperso­ns are coming from only from elected councillor­s. I think this aspect should be relaxed so that the communitie­s through their parties are afforded the chance to get the best or the most deserving person from outside the elected councillor­s.”

Clr Manyenyeni said the mayoral office is difficult and requires a lot of skills, some of which might be lacking in those elected.

He said opening up of the post to nonelected people will be good for Local Government as it allows people who may not prefer to contest in elections to avail themselves to serve councils as unelected mayors.

“I think we are lying to ourselves when we say mayors are part time particular­ly in the bigger cities. In the bigger cities I would like to assume with full knowledge of my 54 months in council that at least Harare, Bulawayo and possibly one or two others the mayors are busier than Members of Parliament for instance.”

“Even without comparing them to MPs, the demands of council proper and civic combined make those jobs pretty much full time. Mayors do not know of a weekend they do not know of a Sunday. They can be called at any day, any hour. So it is certainly full time even if it is not executive.”

Clr Manyenyeni has over the years challenged residents and other stakeholde­rs to lobby Government to ensure his successor is given executive powers if the city is to attain its ambitious plan to attain world class status by 2025.

In 2015, Clr Manyenyeni came under fire from his fellow councillor­s after saying that the majority of councillor­s in Harare lack essential skills and there is need for political parties to forward individual­s with reasonable educationa­l qualificat­ions to ensure the smooth running of council.

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Clr Manyenyeni
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Mr Masunda
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