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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Residents' Voices - Issue 33
Bulawayo Progressive
Residents Association (BPRA)
October 01, 2010
Water
shortages are a looming health hazard
Most of Bulawayo's
high density suburbs went for at least five days without tap water.
This forced most residents to resort to unsafe water sources as
they were driven by desperation. Most residents fear that the water
situation would draw the city back to the 2008 scourge of cholera
that led to the death of approximately 1400 residents in Zimbabwe.
To avoid a similar situation in the future, residents propose that
the city council should put back into working order all faulty boreholes.
It has been said a countless number of times that the city council
should not wait for crises in order to realise the need to maintain
alternative sources of water.
Residents
demand better service from ZESA
Residents have
condemned ZESA for lacking integrity. In 2008 the service provider
claimed that it could not repair faults because the Zimbabwean dollar
was too weak a currency to procure the necessary equipment. ZESA
went on to say that the availability of electricity will improve
markedly if residents were to pay their bills in foreign currency.
Almost two years down the line, residents have been paying their
bills in foreign currency but sadly the parastatal's service
provision has not improved at all. Residents say that ZESA's
billing system is flawed and they suggest that the parastatal should
clear all debts and start billing on a clean slate. ZESA's
standards have dipped so low that residents have been reminded of
the time when the municipality was responsible for electricity supply.
Most residents were quoted as saying that they wish electricity
supply would go back to being the sole responsibility of the municipality.
Notwithstanding, the municipality has its flaws but ZESA has failed
residents immensely.
The
review of civil servants' salaries is a necessity
Residents have
said that the government must prioritise the review of civil servants'
salaries. This comes at a time when people have alleged that corruption
is rife in the country largely because civil servants earn insufficient
salaries. Most government employees tend to solicit for bribes due
to the fact that their salaries are not enough to cater for their
basic needs. Police officers are known to take advantage of road
blocks while teachers hold strikes in protest for incentives from
parents. Addressing the issue of salaries will relieve parents as
they will not have to subsidise the government. For years residents
have taken up the burden of the government's failure to remunerate
its employees adequately.
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