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Zimbabweans
face utilities misery
Tariro Chimuti, Institute for War and Peace Reporting
(IWPR)
May 18, 2007
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=335665&apc_state=henh
Abigail Mutisi, 23, has
a newborn baby girl she has named Progress, but the fulfillment
of being a mother for the first time has not come with the happiness
it should. She is afraid the child might not make it through this
winter.
Exaggerated anxiety,
this might be called. But picture this: Mutisi has not had running
water in the lodgings she shares with her husband for three weeks
and they receive only four hours of electricity a day.
For the nappies she has
two choices: to go to the Mukuvisi River a few kilometres away from
her home in Harare's poor suburb of Glen Norah or to wait until
her husband returns from work so he can search for water in the
neighbourhood.
Sometimes there is a
communal tap running somewhere where he can queue for about 20 litres
of water, or he might be able to buy water from homesteads that
have wells.
"There is simply
isn't enough water for us," Mutisi says in frustration as she
holds a half-dressed Progress. "I now avoid using nappies altogether
and only dress her in her waterproof pant which is easier to clean."
She says water in the
Mukuvisi is hardly clean itself, for the little river flows through
industrial areas collecting waste from factories that no longer
dispose of their waste properly.
It's not only about cleanliness.
Progress needs warm food during the day and throughout the night,
but because of power outages this has become almost impossible.
"The baby eats cold
food most of the time I really do fear for her," said Mutisi.
The Zimbabwe Water Authority,
ZINWA, which is supposed to provide water to all urban centres,
has failed dismally to do so, citing a lack of foreign currency
to buy treatment chemicals. It also blames old equipment at the
water treatment plants, most which was inherited from colonial Rhodesia
and is more that 50 years old.
ZINWA was established
only a few years ago and is a parastatal under the ministry of water
and infrastructural development. It is in the process of taking
over the treatment and distribution of water from local authorities,
a move that has been resisted by most cities and towns. In December
last year, it successfully assumed those duties for the city of
Harare but it is facing stiff resistance from the second city of
Bulawayo and smaller cities such as Gweru.
The cities that are resisting
the takeover argue that once their water is in the hands of a parastatal,
efficiency will be compromised. This is exactly what has happened
in Harare. Most of the water treatment chemicals are imported from
South Africa and again the foreign exchange to pay for them is not
available.
Workers at the water
treatment plants say some of the chemicals they are provided with
are substandard or obsolete.
Investigations have shown
that the provision of the chemicals is outsourced from companies
that belong to senior officials of the ruling ZANU-PF. To maximise
profits, these officials take a lot of shortcuts and end up with
either the wrong chemicals or an undersupply.
Because of the economic
downturn, most industries in Harare just let their waste flow into
the rivers. Harare water is heavily polluted, not only with industrial
waste but also with raw sewage, which now is left to flow freely
into the rivers that feed into the reservoirs. The city council
does not have the money to repair burst sewers, which are left to
go for weeks without attention.
Last week, the Zimbabwe
Electricity Supply Authority Holdings, ZESA Holdings, through its
chief executive officer, Ben Rafemoyo, announced that it would introduce
20-hour load rationing periods for households in support of winter
wheat production. Under the scheme, domestic consumers would be
disconnected from 9 pm in the evening and reconnected at 5 pm the
following day.
Although a junior officer
in the parastatal withdrew the statement the following day, many
believe it was just an attempt at damage limitation - for on the
ground, the power cuts are real. On May 15, most of Harare's central
business district was without electricity the whole day.
Zimbabwe is failing to
produce enough wheat for domestic consumption. This has mainly been
blamed on the land reform programme started in 2000, with experienced
white commercial farmers and their black workers being evicted from
their farms and replaced largely by inexperienced landless blacks
with little or no knowledge of farming.
Some of the farms went
to politicians who had no intention of farming but rather turned
their new possessions into holiday homes. And those new farmers
resettled on the former white farms who could have produced crops
found that most of the equipment left on the farms was either looted
or vandalised during the chaotic land grab.
In an attempt to revive
the production of wheat, a mainly winter crop, the power utility
has been forced to channel the electricity supply to the farms that
the government hopes can produce enough wheat for the people.
ZESA Holdings is failing
to generate enough electricity for both urban and rural consumers
because the power stations are in a state of great disrepair. The
utility presently produces 1,420 Megawatts a day, leaving a deficit
of 500MW.
It imports some of the
country's power needs from South Africa, the Democratic Republic
of Congo and Mozambique. However, there have been reports in recent
weeks that at least one of Zimbabwe's foreign suppliers, Mozambique,
is threatening to cut the supply because Zimbabwe, which lacks the
requisite foreign exchange, is failing to pay its debts.
A spokesman for Electricidade
de Mozambique, Adelino Muchanga, was recently quoted as saying,
"We understand Zimbabwe's situation as of now, but we want
them to pay because we should be using the money to fund other projects.
We want to see the debt paid." The amount is reportedly 55
million US dollars.
Abigail Mutisi is not
as lucky as Zimbabweans who are affluent enough to buy generators.
In most rich suburbs during the power outages, one can hear the
purring of generators, but for Mutisi these are completely out of
her reach.
Only the very rich can
afford them. Most low-to-medium income families depend on paraffin
if they can get it. Zimbabwe has been in the grip of a liquid fuel
crisis for the better part of the last decade. Paraffin, the lifeblood
of most poor homes, is the scarcest. When it is available it is
on the black market and, again, at the black market rate of 25,000
Zimbabwe dollars to 1 US dollar, is just too pricey for the majority.
The last resort is firewood,
which is now plentiful. It comes from invaded farms where new farmers
and poachers are chopping down trees with impunity to make a quick
buck. Driving into the city centres, one cannot miss the stacks
of prime indigenous msasa logs piled along the roads for sale. Commentators
say a huge environmental disaster is looming in the countryside
as the farms are laid bare by the wood poachers.
The water and power woes
are set to continue, as there is no end in sight to the political
crisis that has left Zimbabwe in the shape it is now. The pariah
status the country has earned in the past decade as a result of
the wayward behaviour of its leaders means that Zimbabwe has few
friends on the African continent and abroad willing to bankroll
its utilities.
And the collapse of agriculture,
which was the backbone of the economy, and the parlous state of
industry in general means Zimbabwe cannot in the near future export
enough goods to earn much-needed foreign exchange.
*Tariro Chimuti
is the pseudonym of an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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