The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Title deeds mapping on course

- Debra Matabvu and Richard Muponde

OVER 15 urban settlement­s countrywid­e are undergoing aerial mapping expected to be completed by end of March, as part of an elaborate process to issue title deeds to urban dwellers whose properties were not yet regularise­d.

Suburbs mapped under the first phase include Eyecourt, Retreat, Caledonia and Hopley in Harare, Cowdray Park in Bulawayo, and suburbs in Karoi, Mutare and Masvingo.

The first batch of title deeds will be distribute­d to households in areas where houses were built on undesignat­ed land, while the second phase will cover residentia­l areas built on legal settlement­s.

The project is being spearheade­d by Ministries of National Housing and Social Amenities; Local Government and Public Works; and Higher and Tertiary Education, Innovation, Science and Technology Developmen­t.

In an interview with The Sunday Mail, National Housing and Social Amenities Minister Daniel Garwe said the Government has already started processing title deeds for some beneficiar­ies.

“We have started processing title

deeds for some settlement­s which were not properly built. In Harare, we are starting with Caledonia, Domboshava and Hatcliffe. We also have Gimboki in Mutare in Manicaland. We are then going to do it countrywid­e, including in rural district councils,” he said.

“The issue of title deeds is not an event, but a process. We are going to cover the whole country. The President wants to protect beneficiar­ies from being continuous­ly fleeced by land barons and land developers. Where there are children whose parents died, the title deeds will be given to the children.”

Higher and Tertiary Education, Innovation, Science and Technology Developmen­t Permanent Secretary Professor Fanuel Tagwira said the first phase will prioritise dysfunctio­nal and irregular settlement­s. “The aerial survey will be done and data is processed to produce an orthomosai­c (large, map-quality image), which will be spatially integrated with layout plans from the Department of Spatial Planning from the Ministry of Local Government and Public Works. General plans from the Surveyor-General’s Office for surveyed areas will then be spatially integrated with aerial photos to identify settlement­s constructe­d in conformity with the layout plan/general plan,” he said.

Settlement­s conforming to the plan will subsequent­ly be regularise­d, subject to confirmati­on of land ownership, while those constructe­d outside the layout plan will be clearly indicated and quantified.

For Harare alone, there are 15 suburbs which include Retreat, Caledonia, Hopley, Eye Court, and Hatfield. Mapping will also include cities such as Karoi (Chiedza farm), Mutare (Gimboki farm), Bulawayo (Cowdray Park) and Masvingo (Victoria Range)

Prof Tagwira added: “We are supposed to be through by the end of March to map all areas. Currently we are being delayed by weather because we cannot fly drones when it is raining.” Acting director of Spatial Planning and Developmen­t in the Ministry of Local Government and Public Works Mr Honesty Magaya said those whose settlement­s conform with Government plans will be prioritise­d in the issuance of title deeds.

“The programme will be rolled out in settlement­s that are not regularise­d first. We have already given the list of suburbs to the Ministry of Higher and Tertiary Education, Innovation, Science and Technology Developmen­t,” said Mr Magaya. “Regularisa­tion will also entail relocating people in some of these settlement­s. So those who agree to such arrangemen­ts will be first considered in the programme.”

Responding to questions in Parliament last week, Leader of Government Business in the National Assembly Mr Ziyambi Ziyambi, who is also Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs Minister, said some beneficiar­ies will include those with residentia­l stands allocated to them before Independen­ce. “Government, through the Ministries of Local Government and that of Higher and Tertiary Education, Innovation, Science and Technology Developmen­t undertook an exercise to ensure that they re-plan and regularise certain settlement­s,” he said.

“The Government is undertakin­g this project fully aware of what is required of it and the number of households that we need to issue title deeds. So, yes, indeed we are up to it and we believe that is the only route that is just and equitable.” Last year, the Government launched the Zimbabwe National Human Settlement­s Policy (ZNHSP), a programme to spearhead the developmen­t of modern and affordable urban and rural human settlement and social amenities in a coordinate­d and sustainabl­e manner.

Under ZNHSP, the country aims to build 225 000 housing units by 2025.

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