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Thabani
Moyo, "It's disheartening to tell someone you will not attend
to his burning house"
IRIN
News
November 24, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=81631
Thabani Moyo*
is a fireman in Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo; like everything
else in the country, the fire brigade faces serious operational
problems, including a lack of fuel and mass resignations.
"When I joined the
fire service I was happy, because my dream of fighting fires and
saving people's lives had finally come true. I always dreamt of
myself driving though red robots [traffic lights], racing in a fire
engine with sirens wailing.
"My dream was always
to be a hero to people after saving their property from fires, but
I spend whole days sitting and doing nothing, as there is [a lack
of] fuel to enable us to attend to fires ... [with] frequent water
shortages affecting residential suburbs and the entire city.
"The fuel situation
is desperate, as we get supplies from NOCZIM [the National Oil Company
of Zimbabwe] once in a fortnight; sometimes we do not get the fuel
during the two-week period, and during that time the whole emergency
services is at a standstill.
"It's disheartening
to tell someone at the end of the line that you will not attend
to his or her burning house because you do not have fuel to get
there ... Out of about 30 operational fire engines in the city,
only one is in use at a time due to the shortage of fuel.
"The situation is
demoralising, because in some instances we are forced to attend
to more than one emergency with one fire engine. I remember in one
instance, after attending to a road accident, we were called to
attend to a fire in one of the high-density suburbs.
"We had
one small fire engine, which was inadequate to deal with the fire,
and the engine ran out of water and residents were very angry and
they ended up pelting us with stones.
At times, when
you report for duty you discover that your colleagues did not report
for duty, and you know at once that they have resigned. A lot of
colleagues have resigned since the beginning of the year.
Every week there
is a new group of recruits being trained, but they also do not stay;
they leave after a few months on the job - some don't even wait
to graduate, they just leave."
* The fireman
spoke on condition IRIN did not use his real name
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