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Keynote speech by the Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai at the Harare
Metropolitan Water Summit
Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai
March 30, 2012
Deputy Prime
Minister, Thokozani Khupe,
The Minister of Water
Resources, Development and Management, Hon. Sipepa Nkomo
Cabinet Ministers here
present,
His Worship, The Mayor
of Harare, Muchadeyi Masunda,
Invited Guests, Ladies
and Gentlemen
I am greatly honoured
to address this important gathering of stakeholders at the Harare
Metropolitan Water Summit because water is the driving force of
all nature.
We meet here today a
week after the commemoration of the World Water Day, an international
day to celebrate freshwater. The International World Water Day is
held annually on the 22nd of March as a means of focusing attention
on the importance of freshwater and advocating for the sustainable
management of freshwater resources. Each year, World Water Day highlights
a specific aspect of freshwater.
The theme of this year's
World Water Day is Water and Food Security.
The United Nations estimates
that there are 7 billion people to feed on the planet today and
another 2 billion are expected to join by 2050. Statistics say that
each of us drinks from 2 to 4 litres of water every day and that
is why they say our bodies are molded rivers!
In marking the World
Water Day, UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-Moon, said over the coming
decades, feeding a growing global population and ensuring food and
nutrition security for all will depend on increasing food production.
This, in turn, means ensuring the sustainable use of our most critical
finite resource - water.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
when we talk water, we are talking of agriculture, food security,
famine, and political stability. Unless we increase our capacity
to use water wisely in agriculture, we will fail to end hunger and
we will open the door to a range of other ills, including drought,
famine and political instability.
The need to guarantee
food security through the provision of adequate fresh water influences
the objectives for the Harare Metropolitan Water Summit, which include
but are not limited to the provision of adequate potable water,
eradication of water related diseases, treatment of all wastewater
to acceptable standards and sustainable re-investment into the water
and wastewater infrastructure as revenue collection is optimised,
among many others.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
the right to drinking water and sanitation is a recognised human
right.
In 2010, the United Nations
General Assembly and the Human Rights Council recognised the right
to access drinking water and sanitation as a human right on the
same footing as other social rights such as the right to food and
the right to health.
Despite this international
recognition, there is still much to be done: every ten minutes,
ten people including four children die of diseases directly related
to water. The time has come for the right to water and sanitation
be put into effect.
It pains me to note that
there has been little or no significant investment in water and
wastewater infrastructure over the past 30 years. The existing water
and wastewater infrastructure countrywide is beyond its design life.
No significant upgrade and rehabilitation have been done to improve
the quality of water and to optimise water supply and sewage treatment.
This has compromised the provision of safe water to the people,
mostly to Harare residents.
The Food and Agriculture
Organisation estimates that today some 1.6 billion people live in
countries or regions with absolute water scarcity and by 2025 two-thirds
of the world's population could be living under water stressed conditions.
One primary reason for
this is the necessary use of water for food production. As mentioned
earlier, the average human drinks 2 to 4 litres of water every day,
but it takes 2 000 to 5 000 litres of water to produce one person's
daily food.
These statistics call
us to seriously look into our infrastructure to mitigate the effects
of high demand for fresh water due to rising rural, urban migration
and general population growth.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
the Harare Metropolitan Water Summit, is a forum for us to formulate
and strategise short, medium and long-term solutions to the water
problems bedeviling Harare.
That the City of Harare
has managed to reinstate water supplies to areas such as Mabvuku
which had gone for months, if not years, without water is a positive
indicator that the current challenges are not insurmountable.
Here amongst us are leaders
in Government, the private sector, development partners and civic
organizations who can help find lasting solutions to these challenges
if we all work together.
Working together means
that we plan together, develop strategies and implement together.
As leaders we must lead by example. By this I mean that we must
take the initiative to encourage demand side management for water:
let us conserve water.
Secondly we must pay
our bills. Refusal to pay for services provided is not different
from economic sabotage. Zimbabwe's power sector has been seriously
compromised by the big chefs' failure and outright refusal to pay
their electricity bills.
This cancer has however
spread to almost all sectors of the economy. I am aware of the huge
water bills run by ministers and senior Government officials. The
worrying trend is that most of those who are refusing to honour
electricity bills also owe several thousands to Zinwa and local
councils.
They refuse to pay for
water at their farms and their houses, owing huge sums of money
running into several hundreds of thousands, they refuse to pay for
electricity and they refuse to pay for literally anything. They
have institutionalised looting, but our society will not accept
this.
It is a syndicate of
economic saboteurs, a web of corruption which we must nip in the
bud.
The hullabaloo about
bills having been released to the public and questions of client
confidentiality is much ado about nothing. It is hiding behind the
finger. Pay your bills and you will save the country.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I am appalled by those in high offices' penchant for free goods
despite their opulence voluntarily displayed in a poor country such
as ours.
The sad thing is where
an old widow, who is looking after several orphans has her electricity
and water disconnected for arrears of just as little as $30, the
big chefs enjoy these services all the time but still refuse to
pay up.
Load-shedding and water
cuts are being forced on the people yet they are paying their bills.
We cannot continue with a situation where the poor are subsidising
the rich elite who include Cabinet ministers. Zimbabwe is for us
all and therefore let us all play our part.
Local authorities and
parastatals are in need of funds to recapitalise and improve service
delivery but cannot succeed when we have some in high offices refusing
to pay for services rendered. I trust everyone in arrears pays up.
Some of them are harvesting their tobacco and we urge ZESA and local
authorities to garnish amounts owed to them from their huge payouts.
Water and sanitation
are now recognized as a human right. Because water sustains life,
is necessary for meeting reproductive roles (domestic chores, drinking)
productive roles such as livelihoods, community management when
there are gatherings and funerals there has been much attention
towards infrastructure development.
This water summit must
also come up with strategies to help local authorities, particularly
Harare, to collect revenues owed to ensure improved liquidity.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I now take this opportunity to officially launch the Harare Public
Awareness and Water Conservation Campaign, which the City of Harare
crafted with the support of the Development Bank of Southern Africa
(DBSA).
The City of Harare and
its development partners will take this to the residents to induce
a change in our water usage habits towards increased efficiency.
It is encouraging to note that pilot projects carried out in Dzivaresekwa
had positive results.
If you save water, you
have saved the nation.
I thank you.
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