| |
Back to Index
ZIMBABWE:
Water cuts raise spectre of disease outbreaks
IRIN News
July 28, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=42409
HARARE - Residents
of Zimbabwe's capital, Harare, have been forced to use river water because
of ongoing breaks in the purified water supply, raising concern over possible
outbreaks of waterborne diseases.
Like many other urban residents, it's a daily routine for 12-year-old
Stella Chiyangwa to walk six kilometres to a river to fetch water for
household use - she now lives a life not much different from that of her
counterparts in remote rural areas.
The suburb of Mabvuku, where Stella lives, often goes without water for
days, and sometimes weeks at a time, due to the rundown state of the city's
water and sewer reticulation infrastructure.
Sources at the Harare city council say the Morton Jaffray Waterworks plant
needs a major overhaul of its purification and distribution capacity.
But the municipality does not have the resources, and neither does it
have the foreign currency needed to import water purifying chemicals.
As a result, foreign suppliers have cut credit lines to Harare and now
only supply chemicals when paid in advance.
These problems have combined to create major water shortages, forcing
residents to make use of the Mukuwisi river running through parts of the
city. Although bottled mineral water is available in the shops, at a price
of just under US $1 it is far beyond the reach of many.
Water cuts were initially experienced mainly in the high-density suburbs
of the city, but recently the plushest of them, like Glen Lorne, Borrowdale
and Graystone Park, have also been without piped water, and the municipality
has introduced 24-hour water cuts in some.
Although residents in the upmarket low-density suburbs can afford to sink
boreholes, those in the overcrowded areas have no such option.
Long queues of women carrying heavy buckets to and from unpurified alternative
water sources have become a common sight, raising concern that there could
be outbreaks of waterborne diseases. Public and household latrines in
several high-density suburbs have become blocked and emit a suffocating
stench.
"The council is not taking its duties seriously," said Kuda Hingi, who
lives in the suburb of Eastlea. "Employees do not seem to be dealing with
our complaints with any urgency."
Residents blame the Harare municipality for their plight and warn that
the city is now on the verge of an epidemic because of the lack of water
and proper drainage; municipal officials in turn blame the national government,
saying the macroeconomic problems causing the crisis are not of their
making.
The Harare municipality's public relations manager, Leslie Gwindi, said
the council was doing all it could to resolve the water crisis but was
constrained by the foreign currency problems affecting everyone. He appealed
to residents to conserve water until the authorities could raise money
to buy the necessary purification chemicals and overhaul the water treatment
works.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|