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ZIMBABWE:
Drought tightens grip on already parched Matabeleland
IRIN
News
October 06, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=49423
BULAWAYO - Persistent
water shortages in Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo, have forced
local authorities to deploy bowsers in several high-density townships
to ease the situation.
Water rationing has also intensified, with each household being
allowed only 60 litres a day. An average bath takes 50 to 150 litres.
Parts of Bulawayo have been without water for the past two months,
mainly because two of its major dams have dried up, leaving the
city with the option of two other sources that authorities fear
are also fast running low.
While the municipality blames poor rainfall for the shortages, it
has also chided the central government for failing to take decisive
action to solve the city's recurrent water woes.
Matabeleland, a vast region in southern Zimbabwe where Bulawayo
is located, has been dogged by chronic drought that has affected
both water supplies and food security. The city's executive mayor,
Japhet Ndabeni-Ncube, described the situation as "dire and most
unfortunate".
"The problem is far beyond our control, and what we are waiting
for is the rains. The real issue is that our major sources, Upper
Ncema and Umzingwane dams, have gone dry because of the ongoing
drought," Ndabeni-Ncube told IRIN.
"We have, however, done all we can as a municipality to alleviate
the situation, but still the water is not adequate," he said.
Last week the situation deteriorated further as bowsers failed to
provide water because the municipal fleet had no fuel, forcing many
township dwellers to negotiate with borehole owners, who hiked prices
by charging Zim $20,000 (around US 10 cents) for a bucket of water.
Residents complained because they were forced to use the nearby
bushes as toilets.
"Our toilet is stinking and we are also dirty because there is no
water. We can no longer afford to bath; it's very unhygienic. What
makes the situation more unbearable is that it is summer time and
the sun is very hot. We just pray that there is no outbreak of diseases,"
said resident Anastasia Dube.
Last week the local authorities finished drilling 22 boreholes in
the city's outlying areas, which provide an additional 300 cubic
metres a day. Bulawayo's population of slightly over a million people
usually consumes 140,000 cubic metres a day but at the moment the
city is only getting 90,000 cubic metres.
An engineer with the Ministry of Water Resources, who wished not
to be named, said Matabeleland's water problems could only be addressed
by implementing the Matabeleland-Zambezi Water Project, an ambitious
pipeline scheme for obtaining water from the Zambezi River to supply
towns in the perennially dry region.
The project was first mooted by the former colonial government over
a century ago but was quickly shelved due to high costs. President
Robert Mugabe's government also had a go at implementing the scheme
but has been hamstrung by lack of funds.
It would take a whopping Zim $500 billion - way beyond the coffers
of the government, which is battling high inflation and a critical
shortage of foreign exchange.
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