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Typhoid outbreak - Index of articles
Typhoid and cholera return
IRIN News
July 27, 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/95965/ZIMBABWE-Typhoid-and-cholera-return
More than 100
people in the Zimbabwean capital Harare and Chitungwiza, a dormitory
town 35km southeast of the city, have contracted
typhoid this month, and the dilapidated water and sanitation
systems are again being blamed for another round of water-borne
diseases.
According to
health officials cited in the local media, 83 cases of typhoid have
been confirmed in Chitungwiza and a further 28 in Harare, of which
25 were linked to a supermarket in the Avenues area of the city
centre.
Portia Manangazira,
the chief disease control officer in the Health Ministry, told IRIN
that in June 22 cases of suspected cholera, 10 of which were confirmed,
were reported in Chiredzi - a town in Masvingo Province close to
neighbouring South Africa - and one confirmed case of cholera was
reported in Manicaland Province, which borders Mozambique.
"We are
monitoring the situation very closely to make sure the cholera does
not spread. The health sector is on high alert," she said.
A year-long
outbreak of cholera in 2008 killed more than 4,000 people and infected
about 100,000 others and since then there have been regular outbreaks
of waterborne diseases in both urban and rural areas. In January
2012 about 900 Harare residents were diagnosed with typhoid, but
no fatalities were recorded.
Harare's
daily water requirement is estimated at about 1,200 million litres,
but the city only has the capacity to provide on average about 620
million litres daily, forcing residents to find alternative sources.
Shallow
wells
Elizabeth Tembo,
from the Harare township of Mabvuku where three people contracted
typhoid, told IRIN: "Water supplies in this part of the city
have been unreliable for many years and this has forced us to dig
shallow wells. Unfortunately, those areas are also used by residents
to relieve themselves because toilets do not have running water."
In the past decade or so, sanitation coverage in the city has fallen
from 95 percent to about 60 percent, according to health officials.
However, there
are also health concerns related to reservoirs supplying the city
and other nearby urban areas. Harare's town clerk, Tendai
Mahachi, announced recently that a sanitation plant in Norton, a
satellite town 40km west of the capital, had discharged 10 million
litres of raw sewage into Lake Manyame, while industrial effluent
and raw sewage had been discharged into Lake Chivero.
Donors have
been supplying water treatment chemicals to urban and rural municipalities,
but this support was scheduled to end in March 2012.
The government
announced recently it would spend US$60 million rehabilitating and
upgrading water and sanitation systems nationally, including in
Harare, and part of that money would also be used for road repairs
in areas affected by water-borne diseases.
Precious Shumba,
director of Harare
Residents Trust, an NGO campaigning for better municipal service
delivery, told IRIN: "That figure of US$60 million might just
cover part of what is needed to overhaul the Harare city water and
sewerage reticulation system. We have reached a stage where we need
to urge central government to prioritize the rehabilitation or complete
replacement of all outdated systems in order to ensure that residents
throughout the country have uninterrupted quality water."
He said failure
to comprehensively address Zimbabwe's water and sanitation
needs would ensure the cycle of "easily avoidable" water-borne
diseases continued.
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