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Harare to demolish illegally extended houses, tuck shops

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HARARE City Council has threatened to raze down all illegally extended houses, tuck shops and booths around the city as part of its campaign to rid the capital of unwanted structures.

HARARE City Council has threatened to raze down all illegally extended houses, tuck shops and booths around the city as part of its campaign to rid the capital of unwanted structures.

BY MOSES MATENGA

“The city has zero tolerance on illegal structures and settlements. We are targeting illegal extensions. All extensions on properties have to be approved by council and if they are not, then they are deemed illegal and will be removed,” city spokesperson Michael Chideme said yesterday.

1_AT-least-200-families-in-Budiriro-and-Aspindale-were-left-homeless-today-after-the-Harare-City-Council-razed-down-their-houses-claiming-they-were-illegal-structures

He declined to say when the local authority would launch the blitz although he warned owners of illegal structures to regularise their properties.

The unauthorised extensions on houses have taken shape in most surburbs around Harare including Mbare, Glen View, Kambuzuma and Mufakose, among other areas.

Tuck shops have also been erected either within properties or outside houses in most surburbs.

This, observers say was as a result of the high rate of unemployment and shortage of accommodation that has forced people to build tuck-shops and illegal accommodation structures either at the back or in front of their houses to accommodate family members or to rent out.

The operation is likely to rekindle sad memories of the Operation Murambatsvina of 2005, strongly condemned by the international community as against the tenets of human rights as many people suffered during the time.

Council is also expected to continue demolishing houses built in illegal settlements, a move that will see more than a thousand families being affected.