
PATRIOTIC Front (PF) secretary general Wynter Kabimba has been named as being among those that benefited from plots at the piece of land where the PF-dominated Lusaka City Council (LCC) has shared plots without advertising them to the public in breach of the 1985 Land Act.
The PF has claimed that the plots were allocated to councillors and members of Parliament but Mr Kabimba, who is not a councillor at LCC, received an offer letter for plot number 915 in Lilayi.
According to a letter dated January 12, 2011 authored by council acting director for legal services Mumbi Chocho, Mr Kabimba was informed that the offer was temporary but the permanent one would be given to him in due course.
But in an interview in Lusaka yesterday, Mr Kabimba said his 15-acre plot in Lusaka West was re-entered and he decided to apply for a replacement and was given the Lilayi land.
He said the plots were not exclusively for councillors and members of Parliament but any other person was free to apply.
Asked how he knew about the plots since they were not advertised, Mr Kabimba said he applied to the commissioner of Lands.
The PF council was last month exposed over its dealings in the land administration after 45 councillors, council high ranking officials and members of Parliament allocated themselves plots.
Mandevu Constituency MP Jean Kapata and her Kanyama counterpart Gerry Chanda, also from PF, are the other councilors that received offer letters for plots and the December minutes on the subject confirmed that the two had been allocated plots.
The Land Act prescribes that all plots numbering above 100 must be advertised to residents to promote transparency in the allocation of plots and only allows councillors to receive plots if they are available during their tenure of office.
Following the revelations, Local Government and Housing Minister Brian Chituwo has suspended the council for 90 days and appointed the Copperbelt Local Government administrator Solomon Sakala to run the affairs of the council.
“The provisional offer is valid until a formal offer issued by the Lilayi Housing bearing the stand number with conditions for development,” Ms Chocho wrote in the letter.
[pullquote]“We therefore consider these allegations as malicious and cheap aimed at gaining political mileage. One would have thought TIZ was a credible non-partisan institution which should not get embroiled in mudslinging,” Mr Mwaliteta said.[/pullquote]
The letter is referenced number mm/ck.
“I am pleased to issue you a provisional offer of the above-mentioned stand at the Lilayi Housing Project as agreed between the LCC and Lilayi Housing,” the letter reads in part.
The Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) has since launched investigations against the council and officials recently entered the office of the mayor, which is being occupied by Mr Sakala to seek details on plots.
Dr Chituwo, LCC public relations manager Chanda Makanta and Mr Sakala all declined to comment, saying it would not be prudent to discuss a matter that was under investigations.
Mr Kabimba is on record calling for the reinstatement of the LCC, whose suspension he said was meant to weaken the PF in Lusaka and had even written to Dr Chituwo on the matter.
And Kafue District Council has challenged Transparency International Zambia (TIZ) to prove its allegations that the local authority awarded land to its councillors without following the laid down procedure.
Council chairperson Obvious Mwaliteta said in a statement obtained by the Times in Lusaka on Thursday that as an agent of the Ministry of Lands, the council adhered to all procedures when allocating land to any citizen who qualified for it.
Mr Mwaliteta said the council had in the past recommended allocation of land to various applicants who at one time included some councilors who applied as citizens.
Last week TIZ reported the alleged illegal allocation of land at Kafue District Council to the Anti-Corruption Commission.
“It is very unfortunate that TIZ made these allegations without even bothering to verify facts with the council before lodging a formal complaint to the Anti-Corruption Commission and the Local Government Minister, as a council we strongly refute the allegations and challenge TIZ to prove the allegations against the MMD-dominated council,” he said.
He said the council minutes were available for TIZ and members of the public to scrutinise on request. “This land was advertised in the public media and was open to everybody.
The number of plots was 450, and as of now less than half has been taken up and the rest are still available to anybody who would like to acquire them.
“We therefore consider these allegations as malicious and cheap aimed at gaining political mileage. One would have thought TIZ was a credible non-partisan institution which should not get embroiled in mudslinging,” Mr Mwaliteta said.
[Times of Zambia]