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Rural
living standards now apply in the capital
IRIN News
August 02, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=73551
HARARE, - The
lifestyle normally associated with an urban society is fast disappearing
from Zimbabwe's once bustling capital, Harare.
The city's 2.8
million residents are adopting a way of life more akin to the country's
rural areas, where drinking water is drawn from shallow pits and
electricity is all but unavailable, although the metropolitan area's
population density has produced its own quirks, such as untreated
sewage spilling onto the streets.
Nomusa Dube,
a night shift nurse living in Chitungwiza, a dormitory town about
25km from Harare, told IRIN her daily routine started with the search
for water. After queuing for three hours at a shallow well that
is also a watering point for cows and donkeys, Dube finally fills
her 20-litre container with muddy water at 2pm.
She glances
anxiously at her watch; she has an appointment at her home, 5km
away, with a supplier who said he would deliver firewood at 3pm,
about the same time a colleague promised to bring her some candles,
which have become much harder to get.
She is in luck:
by just after 4pm the firewood and the candles have been delivered,
and she sets off on her two-hour walk to work, telling her colleagues
on the way how successful her day has been.
Dube is just
one among millions of city dwellers adapting to the ruralisation
of Zimbabwe's urban areas, brought on by the collapse of service
delivery in an economy once described as one of the most promising
in Africa.
No escape
from the decay for the middle classes
In the capital's
affluent areas of Chisipite, Borrowdale and Glen Lorne, erratic
power supplies have turned electrical hobs and other appliances
into little more than decorations, and dusk is greeted by clouds
of smoke billowing from suburban homes as the well-heeled residents
use wood-fired ovens for cooking their evening meal.
"With each
passing day, we have forsaken and abandoned the basic comforts and
lifestyles associated with living in an urban environment, particularly
a capital city like Harare," said Dadirai Chimuko, who lives
in Chisipite.
"It is
becoming more and more difficult to distinguish the difference between
living in a rural area and an urban area, because the truth is that
urban areas in Zimbabwe are fast becoming more and more like rural
areas." She told IRIN that she had not had potable water for
three months and had dug a shallow well on her property.
Electricity
rationing has reduced availability to four hours a day, even for
those with access to the power grid, since the national power utility,
Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority (ZESA), introduced daily 20-hour
cuts.
Sarudzai Muzenda,
a resident of Glen View, a working-class suburb, told IRIN that
having electricity for four hours a day did not mean they were better
off than others, who received nothing.
"The electricity
comes in the middle of the night when we are asleep, and therefore
is not of any benefit because we would have used firewood for cooking.
In fact, the power cuts have come at a great inconvenience to many
families whose household electrical goods have been destroyed as
a result of power surges."
But it was the
small comforts, taken for granted in the past, that Muzenda missed
most, like an evening stroll or visiting friends in the neighbourhood.
"Way before
we started getting unreliable electricity supplies, the city authorities
were not replacing expired street bulbs because of a lack of foreign
currency," she told IRIN. "But now, at night, it is total
darkness, and those who venture out have to travel in large groups
for fear of being mugged."
ZESA's energy
production relies mainly on thermal power stations, but its ability
to do so is severely handicapped because it does not have the necessary
finance to buy the coal from the Hwange Colliery Company, the sole
supplier, or the foreign currency for spare parts to maintain its
power stations.
The power utility
is producing less than half its normal output, and Zimbabwe relies
on electricity imports from neighbouring South Africa, Mozambique
and the Democratic Republic of Congo, although shortages of foreign
currency have led to wrangling over payments in a region where economic
demands are outpacing energy supplies.
Price
controls
Zimbabwe is
facing severe shortages of just about everything from water to petrol,
and four out of five people are without jobs. According to international
donors, in the coming months more than a quarter of its 12 million
people will be living on food handouts.
The government
introduced price controls six weeks ago, ordering retailers and
wholesalers to slash their prices by 50 percent. Stock flew off
the shelves, only for the goods to reappear on the parallel market
at prices even more expensive than before the government introduced
price controls: foods like beef and chicken are almost unobtainable
on the formal market, and beer is a rarity.
The attempt
to curb hyperinflation resulted only in empty shop shelves. Inflation
is estimated at over 4,000 percent, although some independent economists
put the rate at 40,000 percent; if current economic trends prevail,
the International Monetary Fund expects inflation to reach 100,000
percent by the end of the year.
A Zimbabwean
manufacturer, who declined to be identified, told IRIN of the prevailing
mood in the business sector: "We were told to sell our commodities
at near give-away prices, but now we cannot afford to restock, so
we hope the government will come with a rescue package to help us
remain in business ... many have closed shop and many are considering
doing the same."
Waterborne
diseases
Mabvuku, one
of Harare's high-density suburbs, is pockmarked with shallow wells,
a consequence of potable water not being available in the area for
the past six months.
"It looks
like the municipal authorities and the government have abandoned
us. Recently there was an outbreak of diarrhoea and several people
died after drinking unsafe water," Constance Chiminya, a resident,
told IRIN.
"Because
authorities cannot provide the community with any form of water,
we are now resorting to digging shallow unprotected wells, which
we share with some animals."
She said the
authorities had brought in water bowsers when there were incidents
of waterborne diseases, but once the outbreak was contained the
bowsers were withdrawn.
In Kadoma, a
mining town of 80,000 people about 140km south of Harare, 20 people
died during an outbreak of diarrhoea in July. The United Nations
Children's Agency (UNICEF) installed water tanks in the town's high-density
suburbs and provided disinfectants to prevent further outbreaks.
Precious Shumba,
spokesperson for the Combined
Harare Residents Association, told IRIN that service delivery
had collapsed in the capital and the risk of the waterborne diseases
was high.
"Many households
have gone for months without water so, naturally, residents are
not using their lavatories. They now use the bush to relieve themselves
... Unfortunately it is in the same bushes that shallow wells are
dug to provide water for the residents. This creates a ticking health
time-bomb because, in addition, refuse is not being collected, while
burst sewer pipes are not being attended to on time."
The former elected
executive mayor of Harare, Elias Mudzuri, told IRIN: "You see,
when I was the mayor, we had some twinning arrangements with some
cities around the world. Harare was twined with Munich, in Germany."
Mudzuri, from
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change party, was replaced
by commissioners appointed from the ranks of President Robert Mugabe's
ZANU-PF government. "They [Munich] were ready to assist us
with equipment for managing refuse collection, but they pulled out
from the arrangement, saying they only dealt with elected city leaders,"
he said.
"It is
scandalous that the capital of a country has raw sewage flowing
in some streets, and that people go for weeks without water. How
can the streets of the capital of the country be in total darkness
because the commission managing the city abandons its role of lighting
up the streets?"
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