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In
Bulawayo, a decade of waiting for electricity
Lesley Moyo Radio Netherlands
September 10, 2013
http://www.rnw.nl/africa/article/bulawayo-a-decade-waiting-electricity
Gladys Ndlovu always
dreads the dawn of a new day. It always means making a long trek
to the bush to look for firewood, the only source of energy for
the 51 year old and her family. She’s been waiting 10 years
for the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority to connect her suburb
to the power grid.
Ndlovu resides in one
of Bulawayo's sprawling, high-density suburbs, Cowdray Park, which
is expanding rapidly. The latest census figures put its population
at over 50,000.
The section of the suburb where she lives has gone for over ten
years without electricity, as power utility Zimbabwe Electricity
Supply Authority (ZESA) drags its feet to connect them to the power
grid.
While the establishment
of new suburbs has decreased the pressure on the city authorities,
they’re still faced with a long list of people looking for
housing. The city council housing waiting list is estimated at 100,000
people.
Poaching
wood
"We walk for more
than seven kilometres to look for firewood. Sometimes we are harassed
by city council game rangers or farm owners who sometimes catch
us poaching firewood on their farmland," said a disgruntled
Ndlovu.
While alternatives such
as gas and paraffin are easily available, these products are more
expensive than firewood.
Ndlovu simply cannot afford them and her meagre earnings from her
pension cannot sustain her and the family.
The city by-laws prohibit
the cutting down of trees and perpetrators are often fined. But
residents have long defied the city council on this matter.
“A
governance issue”
Ambrose Sibindi,
the organizing secretary of the Bulawayo
Progressive Residents Association (BPRA), says that while his
association does not condone the wanton cutting of trees, the residents
are in a crisis.
"There is a law
that protects the environment but residents are in a difficult situation.
We do not encourage people to cut down trees but there are people
who live in suburbs like Pumula South, Cowdray Park and Emganwini
who have gone for more than 10 years without electricity.
"That is why these people then resort to using firewood. We
do not blame residents because this is a governance issue,"
said Sibindi.
Deforestation
Sibindi said there has
been talks between the power utility and resident associations,
but so far there has not been any move by the power utility to address
the situation.
The Forestry Commission's forestry and wildlife ecologist, Mthelisi
Msebele says deforestation is a serious problem.
“In 2002, the forests were denser and there was more canopy
cover compared to 2012, and that is why we are saying deforestation
is a serious problem,” said Msebele.
“The period between June and October is the time when we experience
a growth in deforestation largely because of wood poaching and incidents
of field fires.”
Meanwhile, the long wait for electricity continues for many.
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