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Greater
centralisation threatens city's water supplies
IRIN News
January 22, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57150
BULAWAYO - The residents
of Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo, have joined the local authority
in opposing the takeover of its water distribution network by the
Zimbabwe National Water Authority (ZINWA), fearing that the cash-strapped
parastatal will create more problems than it will solve in trying
to meet the city's water demands.
Bulawayo, in the drought-prone
southwestern region of Zimbabwe, receives bulk water supplies from
the national authority, but the city authority is responsible for
distribution to the city's residents.
ZINWA's track record
of water distribution in the capital, Harare, and other regions
has been chaotic, but last week the Cabinet granted it the right
to assume control of the Bulawayo's water supply network. The local
council said this would reduce the city's revenue base by nearly
half.
Winos Dube, chair of
the Bulawayo Residents Association (BURA), told IRIN the government
had erred in handing control of water distribution to the national
water authority when the city was facing serious water shortages
after two of its five supply dams had been decommissioned because
of drought.
"We are against
the idea of a ZINWA takeover in the light of its record of erratic
service delivery to its bulk water customers across the country.
I think ZINWA should stick to its core business, which is to supply
bulk water. They should leave the distribution to the city council,
which has managed to maintain supplies through a number of crises,"
Dube said.
"ZINWA has failed
in Chitungwiza [a large town near the capital], Harare and [other
areas designated as economic] growth points, so we do not need that
confusion here, because we are already in a crisis they cannot manage."
Stringent water restrictions
have been imposed in the city since 2005, and last week the council
said it would begin drawing water from boreholes it had sunk to
complement water distribution via its ten designated water collection
points around the city.
Instead of imposing ZINWA
on Bulawayo, Dube said the government should assist the city by
funding the construction of more dams and so avert a major water
shortage crisis.
"ZINWA has not fulfilled
any of its previous promises, which include the construction of
a pipeline to connect the city to idle dams around the province.
This issue needs to be re-examined, because we can see ourselves
sinking deeper into crisis if ZINWA is not stopped. It is a risk
residents are not willing to take."
The residents' organisation
was planning protests against the Cabinet's decision to allow ZINWA
to assume control of water distribution, in the hope that the decision
would be rescinded.
Bulawayo's executive
mayor, Japhet Ndabeni-Ncube, told IRIN that although the council
was yet to receive formal notification of the takeover, ZINWA officials
had already written to the council demanding that they hand over
the city's consumer database, billing systems, the water and sewage
reticulation network, and information on the staff working in the
city's water supply section.
The mayor said there
was no doubt that the takeover would result in "total distribution
chaos", besides putting the environmental and public health
of the city at risk.
"I hope this [taking
over local water distribution] is not true. If it is, then we are
heading for a major catastrophe, not only in water supply but in
all service delivery. We stand to lose more than 40 percent in revenue,
which comes from water distribution. That will render us incapable
of sustaining other services areas and we may have to cut down,"
Ndabeni-Ncube told IRIN.
"The ZINWA take
over is also bad for the city because, by looking at their record
in Harare, the authority cannot supply adequate water. They have
failed to deliver water of good quality - a situation that may lead
to outbreaks of waterborne diseases. ZINWA is a national disaster."
Despite attempts to contact
them, ZINWA officials were unavailable for comment.
A recent report by the
auditor-general's office was damning about the national water authority's
ability to provide adequate, high-quality water and said ZINWA had
failed to provide water to small towns and the growth points of
Harare and Chitungwiza, where it was already responsible for water
distribution.
Apart from poor service
delivery, the authority was also condemned for its failure to run
Harare's sewage reticulation networks, which had led to raw sewage
being released into city's streams and watercourses. The report
had disclosed that the parastatal required more than US$80 million
for urgent maintenance work on the Harare and Chitungwiza water
and sewage reticulation networks.
Zimbabwe is currently
suffering an acute shortage of foreign currency. The country's economic
meltdown in the past eight years has been characterised by a slew
of other shortages, including food, clean water, fuel and energy,
with unemployment levels touching 80 percent and inflation reaching
1,281 percent - the highest in the world.
Ignatius Chombo,
Minister of Local Government, Public Works and Urban Development,
confirmed that the Cabinet had approved ZINWA's takeover of Bulawayo's
water distribution system, but refused to comment on the concerns
raised by the city's authorities and residents.
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