By Takura Zhangazha*
There have been a number of very curious and politicized debates about the status of Zimbabwe’s local government in recent weeks. Not least because of the Cheda Commission of Inquiry into what has been happening with the City of Harare’s financial and other transactions.
More recently there
was a media publicized allegation that the City of Harare had spent roughly
US$11 million on workshops for its councilors and staff. A figure that has recently been disputed by
the current mayor. He has whittled it
down to at least US$ 2 million.
There have also been other scandals that are in the public
domain. These include land transactions,
change of land use patterns from agricultural to residential or even industrial
to again residential. Not only in Harare but also every other major city in
Zimbabwe. These stories do not always
come out until there is a court case about either ownership or the legality of
the transaction.
But as it is, local government (LG) and its general or even specific
public accountability is in serious trouble in Zimbabwe. And so is the central Ministry of Local
Government and its ability to handle most of these matters as they emerge or as
it may be accused of being involved in them.
Now there are two important points to make about how we got
here.
The first being that our current LG system is one that is
embedded in colonial legacy. Both institutionally
as well as in relation to aspirations of post-colonial Zimbabwean society.
Institutionally because we never really changed either
colonial by laws for urban settlements which remain not only discriminatory toward
a majority black poor but also seek to set apart as of colonial old the ‘new
whites’ from the ‘new blacks’. In other words
we are scrambling over an established colonial cake that is the urban
settlement and its attendant lifestyles.
Almost everyone wants to move from the rural to the ghetto urban to the envied
suburbs. This is almost like a naturalized
aspiration. Hence sometimes the inexplicable
greed that we read about in the media of people getting massive properties forfeited
by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC).
The second key element of how we got here which is perhaps
the most important, is that of the Fast Track Land Reform Programme (FTLRP) at
the turn of the century. Most urban new
settlements and most urban councils’, even if they do not admit to this, are beneficiaries
of the same.
When it occurred the FTLRP changed land use in many areas. What was a farm, became a residential area.
What was communal land also became the equivalent of dormitory towns at the
cheap. Hence for example one can work in
Harare by day and drive back to Beatrice by evening.
So local governments are caught in a conundrum they have not
yet found a solution too. They want to
collect local taxes, they want to prove their professionalism but are caught up in a web
of either things they cannot control or things they willfully let play-out to
their own material undemocratic advantage.
This is were you will see that allocation of stands without
the offering of title deeds, the skipping of official housing lists and the
issuing out of tenders for road and other constructions such as lighting
become all interlinked in what it is turning out to be alleged rings of corruption.
What both the legacy of urban colonialism and now more
recently the FTLRP then created was this perpetual phenomenon that is now with
us, the ‘Land Baron’.
With the fact of either political affiliation or being close to city council powers that be, it has been open sesame for local government to be big business for many individuals. All you need is either an offer letter for a farm adjacent to a town or city, your party reference (ruling or opposition), change in land use approval and hey presto, you can start pegging and selling land to vulnerable families.
You can
even call them housing cooperatives. And then when things start not going well
again, you can easily abandon without an iota of guilt of where you left them
off, without title and without insurance.
I must also hazard to add that when I say ‘vulnerable
families’ I do not just mean the real poor in our society. I also mean even the aspirational middle
class who have been swindled out of thousands of dollars just to be told you
cannot have a title deed or to be asked to destroy a house they worked so hard
to build.
What needs to be now realized is that we need to reconfigure
our LG to our realities. And democratically
so. All these allegations of corruption in
local government in Zimbabwe have no singular source. They are merely part of its systemic
breakdown. Not just based on the fact of
colonial legacies where it was designed to serve a few and not a majority. But also because in our desires to be deemed
as urbanely successful we forgot to change the system to be more democratic and
transparent.
And then when the FTLRP occurred, the floodgates to land and
other related corruption activities opened up.
To the extent that by the time we read about workshop expenditure
scandals, we are only tipping at the iceberg of it all.
In all of this the scramble for urban land and its privatization, the
scramble to provide urban services via illicit tenders, the scramble for
peri-urban land has likely made us turn a blind eye to the structural crisis of
Zimbabwe’s local government.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)