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Possible
water cuts could result in health risks
IRIN News
February 20, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=39606
BULAWAYO
- The directorate of disease control has warned that threatened
countrywide water cuts by the Zimbabwe National Water Authority
(ZINWA), could result in the spread of diseases like cholera.
ZINWA, a parastatal charged with managing and distributing water,
has threatened to disconnect supplies to councils in a bid to recover
a soaring collective debt estimated at around Zim $200,000,000 (US
$50,000).
Dr Stanley Midzi, the director of disease prevention and control
in the Ministry of Health and Child Welfare, told IRIN that there
could be a nationwide outbreak of epidemic illnesses such as cholera
and dysentery if ZINWA went ahead with its plan.
"I would urge ZINWA to pursue all possible avenues of dialogue in
resolving the debt problem with the local authorities. The immediate
result of such action would be catastrophic, because the absence
of water facilitates [would lead to] the quick breeding and spread
of hygiene- related diseases."
Although the department had enough medical supplies to deal with
an outbreak of these waterborne diseases, its financial and human
resources were already overstretched.
"We would not want ZINWA to test our systems to the point of exhaustion
by causing an artificial catastrophe - they should talk to the local
authorities and save lives. Others say prevention is better, but
we would like to add that it is cheaper than cure," said Midzi.
Fani Phiri, president of the Urban Councils Association of Zimbabwe
(UCAZ) and also the mayor of Kadoma in the Midlands province, said
the association was looking forward to an emergency meeting with
ZINWA to resolve outstanding issues. The meeting is expected to
take place next week.
Although Phiri did not have the figures, he confirmed that urban
councils were heavily indebted to ZINWA, but added that these councils
had grounds for refusing to pay.
"Most of the authorities say they will not pay until ZINWA considers
their plea for a reduction in water tariffs. Councils feel that
ZINWA is overcharging, and that is beyond the budgets of local authorities,"
Phiri explained.
He said the combined effect of a high water tariff and the expense
of importing water treatment chemicals would eventually force the
councils to pass on the costs to consumers - the water authority
had increased consumer tariffs by between 80 percent and 100 percent
in August last year.
The revised rates for 2004, proposed by most councils, were already
being resisted by residents, while the Central Statistical Office's
Consumer Price Index for last month indicated that rents and rates
went up by 97 percent.
The councils would also ask ZINWA to reduce its new water pollution
fines, among other grievances to be tackled at the planned emergency
meeting, said Phiri. ZINWA increased its pollution fines by 2,900
percent in July last year, resulting in an outcry from local authorities.
ZINWA’s recent water shut-off threat is the second in six months.
In September last year it threatened to cut supplies to all urban
and rural authorities in Matabeleland South province over a collective
debt which had soared to over US $24,000. The cut was only averted
by the intervention of government and UCAZ, after strong protests
from health officials who feared major disease outbreaks.
Phiri said the shortage of water treatment chemicals that urban
authorities faced last year had eased, following an allocation of
almost US $300,000 by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe to fund the importation
of chemicals from neighbouring South Africa and Botswana.
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