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Residents
resolve to conserve wetlands
Nelson
Sibanda, The Zimbabwean
October
30, 2013
http://www.thezimbabwean.co/news/zimbabwe/69137/residents-resolve-to-conserve-wetlands.html
Residents of
Highlands in Harare have resolved to conserve the little underground
water left in their area through preservation of wetlands.
Some 400 residents
converged at the Highlands Presbyterian Church yesterday evening
and shared ideas on how they would best conserve the wetlands under
siege from urban farmers and land developers.
They also probed
causes of the disappearance of wetlands and the receding underground
water levels.
Patron of the
recently formed Wetlands Survival Forum, professor Chris Magadza,
partly blamed the water shortages around Harare and other towns
on wetland farming and disrespect of laws by some government officials
who allocated stands on the wetlands.
Magadza said
if conserved, wetlands would trap soil and waste matter headed for
rivers and lakes.
“There
is no reason why a government minister or anyone should defy town
planning intelligence and laws governing wetlands, by turning them
into residential and commercial areas,” said Magadza.
Magadza said
he had submitted a dossier to responsible government ministers in
this regard.
Geologist
Timothy Broderick said Harare had over 10, 000 recorded boreholes
despite their negative impact on the water table and national underground
water reserves.
Most of the
boreholes were in the Northern Suburbs.
“Residents
should realise that of the annual rainfalls the country receive
an average 2-4 percent of the water sinks into the ground while
the rest is lost to runoff. This should give us reason to be more
careful and protective of wetlands,” Broderick said.
Residents were
made aware of consequences associated with ground water mining.
Harare mayor,
Bernard Manyenyeni, said there was need for residents to consider
the negatives associated with use of boreholes.
“Boreholes
have turned from a solution to water woes into an enemy. Our water
problems are as a result of over 25 years of a planning deficit
and we should do the right things now,”
He said the
situation was worsened by the recent forced cancellation of debts
owed council by residents.
Harare council
wrote-off over $300 million owed by defaulting residents.
He said Harare
was pumping an average 500 mega litres of water to residents against
a 2,3 million mega litre requirement.
Harare Water
Engineer, Hosiah Chisango, told the residents that the $144 Zimbabwe-Chinese
Bank water services resuscitation deal would start bearing some
fruit from March next year.
“We expect
the deal to start improving the water situation around March 2014
though some tangible changes would be noticeable in December this
year,” said Chisango.
Residents pointed
out that Harare water woes were mainly caused by corrupt government
and council officials, who parceled out wetlands to developers against
the town’s development plan.
Soil vending
was also cited as a contributory factor.
Residents vowed
to formally resist further grabbing of the wetlands by urban farmers
and land developers.
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