• Home
  • About

#Shutdown Zim2016

Aggregated news, videos, opinion and more

  • News Articles
  • NGO Statements
  • Video & Audio
  • People Speak
  • Opinion / Analysis
  • Get Involved
You are here: Home / News Articles / Byo vendors devise strategy against council police

Byo vendors devise strategy against council police

November 15, 2016

Source: Nqobani Ndlovu, NewsDay

Original article URL

VENDORS operating in Bulawayo’s city centre have resorted to buying whistles for use to alert each other of raids by municipal police officers, as a way to avoid arrest and eke out a living from the streets.

Council in September hammered a peace deal with vendors’ associations to ease tensions between municipal police and informal traders that often resulted in violent running battles.

The raids were temporarily suspended, but recently, municipal police intensified raids on illegal street vendors, forcing the latter to devise circumvention methods like blowing whistles.

“Scores of vendors now have whistles, which they blow to alert others when the municipal officers are approaching, to give us time to pack our wares and run away.

“This strategy has proved to be very effective because since we introduced this system, very few vendors have had their wares confiscated,” Stephen Moyo, a vendor told Southern Eye.

Another vendor, Jairos Nkomo, who sells fresh fruit and vegetables in a push cart, said he has been saved by the whistles on several occasions.

“These days, if I hear the sound of a whistle blowing, I immediately pack my goods and push away my cart to a safe place,” he said.

“Before the introduction of whistles, a lot of vendors, including myself, used to lose goods almost on a daily basis to the municipal police officers.”

A number of vendors have been injured while fleeing from the marauding police officers who are in the habit of confiscating their wares.

An increasing number of people have turned to vending to make ends meet, as the economy continues to meltdown, forcing companies to either scale down, retrench of close shop altogether.

While the use of whistles is a novel idea to the vendors, it is not entirely new, as at the height of political violence before the 2008 elections, MDC-T supporters blew whistles, as used in sport, to symbolise that Zanu PF had committed a foul.

Bulawayo city Mayor Martin Moyo was recently reported to have expressed his reservations about the raids.

“As council, our stance is that they should not be harassed and their wares should not be confiscated, but we still need to balance by having some resemblance of order,” he said recently, but this has not stopped municipal police from continuing with the raids.

Source: Nqobani Ndlovu, NewsDay

Filed Under: News Articles, NewsDay Tagged With: activism, bulawayo, vendors

Search

Inspiring Quotations

"The determined efforts, and spirited focus by Zimbabweans from all paths and circles of life against authoritarianism as epitomised by #Tajamuka, #ThisFlag, churches, political parties, individuals etc just transmits a 'zing' of confidence, hope and dawn of a new dispensation from my skull nerves to my balls right to the tip of my foot. Authoritarianism and the despotic dispensation are under electrocution."
- Adolf, Kubatana subscriber in reply to our question asking what keeps people inspired during these tough times
" It was good and permissible when the flag since 1980 was carried by every Harry and Tom to Rufaro Stadium or National Sports Stadium to support Zimbabwe's national team the Warriors. It is good and permissible when the flag is carried about by women and children flocking to the airport to routinely receive the President from his many foreign travels. It is good and permissible if the flag is mutilated and redesigned on the party regalia of the country's self-acclaimed LIFE RULING SINGLE PARTY. It is now bad and not permissible when it is carried by those who demand that the sacrifices of those who lost their lives and years in the liberation struggle be respected by those in power through fighting corruption; practising good governance; public accountability by bringing to book those who are responsible for the missing $15 billion diamond revenues; fiscal austerity by cutting down on the many annual trips the President embarks on; by cutting on extravagance through avoiding the purchase of expensive Range Rovers when the govt is very broke to the point of asking for financial help from those it says are destabilising the economy and country."
- Zvakwana Taneta
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Email: info [at] kubatana [dot] net
WhatsApp: +263 772 452201
Twitter feed is not available at the moment.

Follow

@263Chat // @ali_naka // @all africa // @BBCAfrica // @ConcernedZimCit// @crisiscoalition // @DavidColtart // @DougColtart // @wamagaisa // @dewamavhinga// @fuzzy_goo // @guardian // @hararenews // @HealZim // @joeblackzw // @KalabashMedia // @KudakwasheChits// @LanceGuma // @lsmakani // @mailandguardian // @MurunguMutema // @NewsDayZimbabwe // @PastorEvanLive // @ZiFMStereo // @ZLHRLawyers

If you’re not Outraged, you’re not paying Attention