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Zimbabwe:
Capital city needs Zim $49 billion to save water works
IRIN
News
September 13, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=43146
JOHANNESBURG - Municipal
authorities in Zimbabwe's capital, Harare, will need an estimated Zim
$49 billion (US $8.7 million) to restore the city's dilapidated water
distribution system, according to official sources.
Ongoing neglect of the water and sewerage infrastructure forced the council
to restrict water supplies to Harare residents to just six hours a day
last week.
Of the US $8.7 million needed, US $3.2 million would be used for water
and sewer reticulation, the official Herald newspaper reported on Monday.
Nearly US $710,000 would go towards upgrading the water distribution network,
which was in "shambles and leading to the loss of large volumes of treated
water".
Harare-based economist Denis Nikisi told IRIN the municipality would "have
no problem" raising the funds for the improvements from the domestic market.
"It may take some time and convincing, but the council will persuade local
financial institutions and the central government to lend it the money,"
he said.
He alleged that because the ruling ZANU-PF party now had virtual control
of Harare, after opposition Movement for Democratic Change councillors
resigned en masse last month claiming political interference in their
duties, it would be "easier" to raise the cash for overhauling the city's
water works.
"The ZANU-PF-dominated council will now claim that the MDC mishandled
the water affairs of the city, which led to the current situation. But
the fact is that the entire system has been in disrepair long before the
MDC was represented in the council," Nikisi claimed.
Recurrent breaks in the purified water supply have forced Harare residents
to use river water, raising concerns over possible outbreaks of waterborne
diseases.
The municipality has said it did not have the resources or the foreign
currency needed to import water-purifying chemicals, while foreign suppliers
have cut credit to Zimbabwe nd now only supply chemicals when paid in
advance.
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