5.3 Our recommendations ZIMBABWE PEACE PROJECT MONTHLY MONITORING REPORT AUGUST 2021 The Zimbabwe Peace Project calls on government to attend to the overall challenges affecting the public transport sector in Zimbabwe. These challenges, which we believe should be attended to with urgency, include - but are not limited to - the unavailability of buses, especially during peak hours, the poor state of the buses, the operators’ non-compliance to COVID-19 protocols, the hike in fares and the insensitivity to persons with disability. These challenges have become the major reasons why the ZUPCO public bus system has become a human rights issue. ZPP carried out an exploration around Harare and discovered the following issues, which government should urgently attend to. •Resuscitating a broke company: In 2019, when the programme started, ZUPCO was reeling under a debt of US$16 million, including US$7 million in salary arrears, US$5 million owed to trade creditors, and US$3 million worth of pension arrears. The bus company approached the government to warehouse the debt in order to make it more appealing to potential investors. It was under that dire financial background that ZUPCO was engaged to lead the public transport sector with the aid of private owners contracted to operate under the company’s banner. There has been little that has been said about the debt, neither has there been any clarity in how ZUPCO has managed the revenue it has acquired. ZPP therefore calls on government to be transparent in how ZUPCO is being run. This enhances public confidence in the system and enables citizens to understand how the company, which has a long history of being rundown, can be resuscitated to be efficient again. •Opaque subsidies: Government announced in January 2019 that ZUPCO was to engage private operators to be part of its subsidy programme. Under this, private operators were to get subsidized by government in order for them to operate. However, this has happened without any transparency. Firstly, there has not been a clear criterion of who qualifies to be on the programme and this has compromised the quality and standards of ZUPCO buses. Secondly, government has not publicly disclosed the terms of engagement with the private operators. In December 2019, 11 months after its inception, Parliament heard that the subsidy system had cost the taxpayer ZWL$51 million. A lack of transparency is the reason why the country has had an unabated, continuous public transport crisis for nearly two years now. Once again, ZPP calls for transparency in the nature of subsidies with private operators. ZPP also urges ZUPCO to ensure they enter into partnership with operators who have roadworthy, disability friendly and COVID-19 compliant vehicles. This is because some of the buses under the ZUPCO program are just but ramshackles that just got dusted up to enable the operators to benefit. •Disability unfriendly bus system: ZPP calls on ZUPCO to effect a disability-friendly public transport system. Persons with disability have continually endured having to pay extra for their assistive devices like wheelchairs and ZUPCO buses and terminuses do not have ramps while the staff have not been trained to be assistive of persons with disability during boarding and alighting of buses. This means persons with disability have to folk out extra money to accommodate their assistive devices, and their movement • Abuse of the law: ZPP urges government to end the inhumane criminalization of stranded citizens who end up hitch hiking when they fail to access ZUPCO buses. This follows the imposition of a ZWL2,000 fine for citizens found to be hitch-hiking .

Select target paragraph3