By Takura Zhangazha*
The Harare City Council (HCC) has announced via the media that
it is at advanced stages of entering into a deal with an as yet unnamed South African based company to refurbish the
capital city’s water delivery system. The deal is estimated to be at a cost of
close to US$3 billion. HCC officials are
on record as referring to the pending transaction (subject to Cabinet approval)
as a prime example of public private partnership.
In the same deal, it has been publicly indicated that
residents are expected to have an added benefit of internet broadband connectivity that the South
African company would provide. This is regardless of the fact that we already
have three mobile phone companies and multiple internet service providers
sharing a stake in the fiber-optic cables that are being dug into the soils of
Harare.
But this somewhat inexplicable
benefit in relation to water is somewhat
besides the point until one reconsiders previous announcements by one of the
very well paid directors in the HCC that they intend to privatise water service
provision in Harare through prepaid water meters. So it will be a combination of
internet/broadband technology linked to ensuring that water is privatized (which
is the actual intent of HCC and central government.)
And this is not the first lauded loan/investment deal around water reticulation that the council has
indicated it has entered into. There is
the still unresolved matter of the Chinese National Machinery and Equipment Import and Export Corporation loan guarantee that was also reported in the media as having been
abused. Especially where it came to matters to do with procurement.
So even if the latest arrangement with the yet to be publicly named South African Company is
at advanced stages of finalisation, the HCC seems to be keen on papering over
the cracks of a very murky approach it has taken to public private
partnerships.
This is specifically in relation to the evident lack of
context that the HCC is functioning in. It appears as though they are ‘open game’
to almost any proposal from whatever company has come their way. So long the
proposal appears to make them appear as though they are ‘rationalising’ (also
read as privatizing) local government social service delivery.
Apparently including another one
on public transport which was reported in another newspaper. All of which have
come back as either done or almost done deals with the resident and ratepayer
not having full cognizance of them. Or how these will literally make access to
water the right of only those that can afford it.
The lack of context is even more evident where and when
those at the helm of the HCC are as arrogant as insisting that the extravagant salaries
they pay senior employees are not only in order but never explain how they fit
in the broader scheme of things. (All of
this while simultaneously sponsoring a Premier Soccer League football team on the basis of what former finance committee chairperson has referred to as irrational
grounds.)
What therefore obtains at the HCC is an unfortunate if not
deliberate intention to sweep scandals under the carpet under the guise of
‘work in progress’. That the media chose
to write stories of unnamed companies investing in the capital city without
evident deals of the full import of the same on residents and ratepayers is
also most unfortunate.
For instance, who really carries the burden of the US$300 billion investment cost? In any
event, if it is an investment and not a debt, does the respective and unnamed
South African Company start owning the city’s water? And how many jobs is this project expected to
create for Harare or any numbers as to the number if ancillary manufacturing industries
to re-emerge?
Furthermore, if there is interaction between central and
local government on broader economic policy how does this specific investment
deal fit into the still controversial indigenization and economic empowerment
policy?
What is probably continuing to obtain, as has been the case
in the last decade, is the literal ‘selling’ of the capital city's resources for a
song. Without adequate policy research
or democratically arrived at understanding of context.
Such ‘sales’ of
council property have come in the form of either properties in return for
liquidity or in terms of outsourcing council mandates with the evident intention of
privatizing basic social services beyond
the reach of a majority poor resident or ratepayer.
In the case of the HCC’s proposal to Cabinet with regard to
the unnamed South African company, we are witnessing more of the same. That is,
a city council without policy context or even the specific ability to explain
its intentions to its primary constituents.
Instead, the whole proposed project, broadband and all, is indicative
more of a ‘model privatization’ project intended to establish city oligarchies
without either the best public interest nor maximum public accountability.
I refer to it as a ‘model’ because, should cabinet approve
this investment/indebtedness deal for Harare, it shall be taken to our
remaining major cities and towns.
Almost, like the prepaid water meter, which is already symbolic of the
classic ‘haves and the have nots.’ All over a glass of safe to drink water.
*Takura Zhangazha
writes here in his personal capacity: takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com
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