Tshabangu Evicts 9,000 Families
2 June 2025
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By Municipal Reporter-Over 9,000 families are facing eviction from Harare City Council-owned properties, in what critics say is the latest fallout from Sengezo Tshabangu’s controversial rise within the opposition Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) and his alleged collusion with the ruling Zanu PF party.

The evictions are being spearheaded by Harare Mayor Jacob Mafume, a former MDC Alliance official now aligned with Tshabangu, who controversially declared himself CCC interim secretary general in 2023.

Tshabangu’s actions have been widely condemned as a Zanu PF-engineered scheme to decimate Zimbabwe’s strongest opposition force from within.

In late 2023 and throughout 2024, Tshabangu triggered a political earthquake by recalling dozens of CCC Members of Parliament, senators, and councillors, including some elected under the leadership of Nelson Chamisa, effectively handing control of Parliament and local authorities back to Zanu PF or its proxies.

He claimed the recalled representatives were no longer members of the party, despite having no formal mandate or founding role within the CCC.

Many viewed his actions as part of a broader strategy to weaken democratic institutions and consolidate authoritarian rule.

Now, that political maneuvering appears to be translating into real suffering on the ground. Harare City Council Housing Manager Edgar Dzehonye revealed this week that mass evictions are imminent due to widespread non-payment of rentals.

“The City of Harare owns about 10,000 rented properties and only less than 10% of tenants are up to date with their payments,” Dzehonye said. “We are issuing final demand notices that will run for 14 days, after which eviction notices will be served.”

Dzehonye acknowledged that some tenants were subletting properties, and that the council was “not in the business of making people suffer,” but insisted that obligations must be fulfilled.

Mayor Mafume’s leadership has been under scrutiny since Tshabangu’s faction took over council decision-making.

Critics argue that under his watch, service delivery has deteriorated while punitive measures, such as mass evictions and demolitions, have increased—often targeting opposition strongholds and informal settlements.