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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Cholera
outbreak points to service collapse
IRIN
News
September 08, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=80232
The Zimbabwean
government has confirmed the deaths of four people from cholera,
and is verifying the cause of death of eight others in the dormitory
town of Chitungwiza, 25km southeast of the capital, Harare.
Persistent water cuts,
breaks in the sewerage system that allow raw sewage to flow into
the streets, and the inability of the local authorities to collect
and dispose of domestic refuse have all been blamed for the outbreak.
Health officials confirmed that 35 people were admitted to the local
hospital for treatment of the waterborne disease.
Chitungwiza town council
buys treated water from Harare, but the capital is not supplying
its own residents with enough clean water, causing diarrhoea and
cholera outbreaks earlier this year after some areas went for more
than three months without water.
The state-run Zimbabwe
National Water Authority (ZINWA), which is responsible for treating
and distributing water, has admitted to pumping raw sewage into
Lake Chivero, Harare's main water source, because it could not afford
to treat it. Local authorities like Harare and Chitungwiza have
not collected domestic refuse from residential areas for more than
six months, forcing residents to dump garbage in available public
spaces.
Deputy health minister
Edwin Muguti, who visited Chitungwiza, immediately banned fruit
and vegetable sales by street vendors "to contain the disease
outbreak ... What is needed is clean water and proper disposal of
human waste."
ZINWA has managed to
restore water supplies to some areas in response to the outbreak,
and the fire brigade has begun delivering water to homes and clinics
unable to be reconnected.
Never
ending crisis
Tapuwa Taruvona, who
lives in Chitungwiza, told IRIN that the outbreak was an indication
of how bad Zimbabwe's political and humanitarian crisis had become.
"No aspect of Zimbabwe
is functioning properly. What we need is a new government that will
sort out the mess that we are in. If the cholera outbreak is contained
it will only be briefly, because water cuts will return, sewage
will continue to flow in the streets, while refuse will not be collected."
Precious Shumba, coordinator
of the advocacy group, Harare Residents Trust, which promotes good
local governance, said: "ZINWA does not have the capacity to
treat and distribute water. It does not have the capacity or ability
to attend to sewerage treatment, and that is why we have these disasters
happening and waiting to happen. ZINWA should allow other players
to come in and offer better service to the residents."
Zimbabwe is in limbo
after presidential elections in June were won by President Robert
Mugabe, the sole candidate, following a boycott by the opposition
protesting the political violence that claimed the lives of over
80 of its members.
Mugabe blames the country's
eight-year recession on Western powers determined to secure regime
change; the opposition accuses the government of wholesale mismanagement
and corruption in its bid to stay in power.
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