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ZIMBABWE: Feature - Key municipal services collapsing as economic
crisis bites
IRIN News
October 07, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=37055
HARARE - Three
children on their way from school splash dirty water flowing from
a burst sewer pipe at each other, while further down the road a
man holds his nose as he passes a pool of liquid human waste accumulating
in a pothole.
The sewer pipe
burst two weeks ago, but nothing has been done - in spite of repeated
visits to the Harare City Council's health department by residents
of the high-density suburb of Warren Park with requests to mend
the pipe.
The sight of
sewage flowing down the streets and accumulating in drainage pipes
is common, not only in Warren Park, but also in other suburbs. The
problem used to be confined to high-density areas due to overcrowding,
but affluent low-density suburbs are now also being affected.
Residents have
largely blamed the situation on the ongoing squabble between the
ministry of local government and national housing, and the municipal
council, which is dominated by the main opposition party, the Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC).
Mike Davis,
the chairman of the Combined Harare Residents' Association (CHRA)
said the standoff between the council and the ministry had adversely
affected the delivery of essential services.
"The government
is interfering too much in the affairs of the council, and our feeling
is that the local government ministry wants ratepayers to believe
that the municipality is not capable of delivering. Too much attention
is now being focused on the disturbances occurring due to the interference,
and it is unfortunate that the residents are suffering most,"
Davis told IRIN.
The suspension
of Harare mayor Elias Mudzuri had turned the city council into a
political battleground, Davis added.
Mudzuri, elected
mayor on an MDC ticket last year, was suspended in April by the
local government minister, Ignatius Chombo, on charges of incompetence
and corruption. Since his suspension the council has been run by
another MDC member, Mudzuri's deputy and currently acting mayor,
Sekai Makwavarara, pending the finalisation of Mudzuri's case.
Makwavarara
was seen by most of the councillors as being too sympathetic to
the ruling ZANU PF, and her house was recently stoned by suspected
MDC supporters.
"It is
obvious that Makwavarara cannot exert herself fully to running the
affairs of the council. The current tension makes her feel vulnerable,
and makes her unable to adequately co-ordinate activities of the
municipality," said Davis.
He alleged that
the government was deliberately postponing Mudzuri's case as a way
of perpetuating the problems at Town House, where the municipal
offices are located. "The interference is so bad that the council
cannot fire bad workers, for as long as they belong to the ruling
party. That obviously compromises professionalism, hence the failure
to deliver," added Davis.
Earlier this
year Chombo established a five-member committee that he said should
help in the running of the affairs at Town House. Mudzuri rejected
the committee, charging that it was Chombo's way of trying to frustrate
him.
Residents remarked
that since the MDC council took over from a government-imposed commission
last year, standards in the city had been steadily falling. Besides
the sewage problem, householders were becoming used to mounds of
garbage accumulating on the roadsides because refuse collectors
were failing to cope - it now took more than a month before garbage
collectors visited their area.
Juliet Moyo
of Kambuzuma suburb said residents were resorting to dumping their
garbage on the streets because they did not have a choice.
"Refuse
collectors used to clear rubbish on a daily basis. As time went
on, they cut their visits to three times a week, but now we have
to go for more than a month without getting the services. This is
despite the fact that we are always paying our rates on time,"
she told IRIN.
She expressed
the fear that children who played at the dumps risked contracting
diseases as the rubbish mounds were infested with rats and flies.
The city council
last year engaged black-owned companies to collect refuse but they
were not adequately performing the task, mainly due to the shortage
of spare parts needed for the maintenance of their trucks. Most
of the council fleet that would normally be allocated to garbage
clearance is also not operating because the municipality does not
have enough money for parts and fuel.
Davis said collapsing
infrastructure was another major problem - a number of suburbs have
gone without water for more than three weeks because the water reticulation
and pumping system could not cope.
Davis said CHRA
had tried in vain to lobby the government on behalf of the embattled
city council to obtain increased borrowing powers. The council was
granted limited borrowing powers, but the money they could access
was said to be far less than required.
"The government
seems averse to increasing council's borrowing powers. Right now,
we are made to understand that council can only access Zim $200
million (US $250,000), but common sense will tell you that the municipality
needs billions of dollars in order to cope," said Davis.
Observers have
questioned why the commission that previously ran the city was accorded
full borrowing powers, yet the current municipality was being denied
these facilities.
Davis said full
borrowing powers should be restored urgently if service delivery
was to improve. Acting mayor Makwavarara admitted that inflation,
which has shot beyond 400 percent, was making it difficult to properly
maintain the city's infrastructure.
She said the
skyrocketing prices of equipment needed to keep the city running
was playing havoc with finances. As a result, the council had been
forced to suspend some of its main projects, such as the expansion
of residential estates and the upgrading of sewage treatment works.
The lack of
sufficient funding has affected not only the quantity of water being
supplied to consumers, but also its quality. Makwavarara indicated
that cost of water purification had risen fifteen-fold, and the
department of works was finding it difficult to access foreign currency
to purchase and import purifying chemicals.
The frequent
cuts in water supplies were adversely affecting the performance
of industry. Shakespeare Maya, the proprietor of a steel manufacturing
company, said his plant had been without water for three weeks.
The company consumed more than 40 000 litres of water in its industrial
cooling process and had to hire people to fetch water from a nearby
river, but this was far from enough.
"We are
operating at less than 20 percent of our capacity. Because of the
water problem, we are failing to meet demand. We have big orders
but cannot honour them, and that is bad for business. If the situation
continues like that, we will be forced to downsize operations,"
Maya told IRIN.
He said there
was no accountability in the way the council and the local government
were treating the water shortage problem. He urged residents to
mobilise themselves and lobby government.
However, Davis
said it was difficult to get residents to protest against the poor
services they were receiving.
"It has
proved to be difficult to mobilise people. All the time we try to
hold a meeting, we are arrested under the Public Order and Security
Act. People are now afraid to gather to discuss their problems because
of the draconian law," said Davis. The only option left was
to organise residents to boycott paying rates, but this was difficult
because it would mean the suspension of many key services.
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