|
Back to Index
ZIMBABWE:
Diarrhoea outbreak claims 34
IRIN News
July 09, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=73145
HARARE, - A diarrhoea
outbreak has claimed the lives of 29 children and five adults in
the last two weeks in Zimbabwe, which has been experiencing water
shortages as a result of frequent disruptions of supplies, according
to a UN official.
"The problem [diarrhoea
outbreak] is related to the water pumping capacity in the affected
areas, and we are aware that it is something that can happen again
and again," said James Elder, spokesman for the United Nations
Children's Agency (UNICEF) in Zimbabwe. Most of the deaths have
occurred in Kadoma, a mining town in Mashonaland West Province in
the north.
"We are taking the
situation seriously and we are on the ground, together with WHO
[World Health Organisation] and the Ministry of Health and Child
Welfare. We have managed to contain the outbreak, but we will continue
monitoring the situation so that lives are not lost again,"
he added.
Water and power cuts
are frequent in Zimbabwe, which is grappling with an economy hit
by an annual inflation rate of around 4,000 percent, shortages of
foreign currency and a steep increase in the cost of essential services
such as health, water and electricity.
A severe shortage of
foreign currency means service providers cannot maintain or replace
ageing water purification and distribution equipment, or import
power from neighbouring countries to keep waterworks functioning.
Urban residents are being
forced to use water from streams into which raw sewage and industrial
effluent are being discharged. A lack of potable water is among
the root causes of the outbreak.
Last week the official
daily newspaper, The Herald, quoted Wenselaus Nyamayaro, a provincial
medical director, as saying that 20 people had died in the mining
town of Kadoma, which has a population of about 80,000 people.
"The town has been
hit by an outbreak of diarrhoea over the past two weeks, but we
worked hard to isolate ... [the bacteria] and we can now safely
say the situation is under control," he said.
Unhygienic
conditions
Richard Mbaleni, who
lives in the populous, poor suburb of Rimuka in Kadoma, said deaths
resulting from suspected diarrhoea and cholera were "something
we live with every week".
"For years, we have
seen many people die because of the unhygienic conditions under
which we live. There are several sections of the suburb that have
gone without water for more than eight months, and residents are
forced to use the bucket system when relieving themselves, thereby
getting exposed to communicable diseases," he said.
"To make matters
worse, the sewer system is always breaking down and children often
come into contact with flowing waste. It therefore comes as no surprise
to have so many deaths."
UNICEF is installing
water tanks in Kadoma's high-density suburbs and providing disinfectants
in its fight to suppress further outbreaks.
Following reports of
the deaths, residents elsewhere fear that they could also face an
outbreak.
"These deaths should
send a clear warning to the government and other stakeholders, because
the conditions that have led to the diarrhoea outbreaks in those
areas are also present in our own communities," said Cecilia
Mauto of Waterfalls, a residential area southwest of the capital,
Harare, which often goes without water for long periods.
"There is need to
make sure that water supplies improve, even if it means having to
dispatch water bowsers to areas that suffer ... water shortages,"
she added. "Public toilets are pathetic, as they usually are
overflowing and there is no running water ... if this is not attended
to we are bound for a national tragedy."
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
|