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Council unpreparedness on water provision exposed
Harare Residents'
Trust (HRT)
July 29, 2012
Without any
major investment in the upgrading and maintenance of existing water
infrastructure source, the distribution network, and storage facilities,
against a backdrop of an ever increasing population, this becomes
a mammoth task for any local authority, let alone a bankrupt government
fighting internal incoherence, policy inconsistencies and a partisan
bureaucracy, unwilling to professionally discharge its mandate.
The result of such a scenario is one of stagnant community development
and political bickering over all issues that benefit the ordinary
people. In spite of all this, the population continues to grow;
owing to high poverty levels in the rural areas where desperate
villagers are flooding urban centers in search of better economic
opportunities and better social living conditions.
Given the state
of the economy, there is very little foreign direct investment coming
to Zimbabwe in general and Harare in particular. With the increase
in the number of people internally relocating to urban centers,
themselves experiencing high rates of unemployment, and stagnant
economic growth, the threat of overburdening existing water infrastructure
becomes a reality, never to be ignored by Central and Local Government.
There is a general mismatch between the resources available and
the increase in the demand for water services. The resultant effect
is overcrowding, deterioration of social services, increased urban
poverty, mounting tensions within the communities and intense conflict
between major service providers and consumers as rights holders.
Aware of these
socio-economic and political dynamics, the expectation from the
HRT was that the City of Harare as a collective would have a multi-
sectoral and dimensional approach to dealing with the multi-faceted
challenges including water supplies, the expansion of water sources,
and sewerage reticulation and disease control among other challenges.
The 2008 experience with the Cholera outbreak should provide important
lessons to city planners and project managers in the department
of water, city health, waste management and treasury departments
to prepare for all unexpected public health risks, guided by the
Regional, Town and Country Planning Act (Chapter 29:13), the Urban
Councils' Act (Chapter 29:15), the Environment
Management Act (Chapter 20:27) and the Public Health Act (Chapter
15:09).
With this clear
approach to planning in public health, the City of Harare, in collaboration
with its external and internal stakeholders, would have emerged
with a comprehensive strategy and policy to deal with waste and
water management, and sewer reticulation. This would entail that
there is a public document accessible to residents, the media, city
employees and development partners to inform and guide implementers
on dealing with public health emergencies like the current typhoid
outbreak, driven by water challenges.
The ongoing
inaction in dealing with the typhoid outbreak brings to the fore
the fact that Zimbabwe as a nation does not have a national water
policy, 32 years after independence. Even the City of Harare lacks
a clear policy and strategic direction to deal decisively with water
delivery to the heterogeneous citizenry, demonstrating beyond reasonable
doubt that water is not being regarded as a priority economic and
social resource at both national and local government level. The
absence of a national or local water policy demonstrates that the
Cabinet of the Government of Zimbabwe, as the chief policy making
body, has no immediate desire or the political will to address water
challenges bedevilling the country. This is the major reason why
politicians become so concerned and deliver partisan and appeasement
messages during election time, promising disgruntled communities
that their dams would be completed and water shortages would be
a thing of the past. According to the Third Draft of the National
Water Policy, presented to national stakeholders by the Ministry
of Water Resources Development and Management on Wednesday 25 July
2012 in Harare at the Rainbow Towers, Zimbabwe has signed a number
of international, regional and national guiding principles and commitments
in relation to water. Among them are 'the International Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights General Comment Number 15
of 2002 on the Human right to Water, the United Nations Millennium
Development Goals, Number 7, target 7c, which aims to halve by 2015
'the proportion of people without access to safe drinking
water and basic sanitation'.
The HRT, guided
by its Objective Number Four which clearly state that the organisation
shall 'closely monitor and audit the performance of service
providers so that they deliver quality and affordable services to
the citizenry'; several communities within Harare have experienced
acute shortages and erratic supplies of water.
In Glen Norah
B, only two of the seven boreholes drilled by the United Nations
Children Education Fund (UNICEF) are functional, the rest have broken
down. City water is available at night most of the times. In the
Avenues area there are erratic supplies particularly in areas around
the Avenues Clinic and when it is available it has very low pressure.
This portrays a serious lack of commitment and political will by
both the central and local government to initiate and sustain investment
in water infrastructure provided by humanitarian agencies and development
partners.
Areas on high
ground such as Mabvuku, Tafara and other areas experience acute
water shortages. In the Grange, Borrowdale, Glen Lorne, among other
northern suburbs, residents are billed by the Harare City Council
yet they do not receive any city water, relying on boreholes and
buying from water companies. This chaotic billing system shows that
city fathers enjoy reaping off residents of their money for services
which they seldom provide. With this prevailing environment there
is need for the city fathers to take heed of the sentiments of the
residents and come up with a comprehensive and practical policy
framework to address the water situation within and without the
borders of the City of Harare.
The HRT therefore
strongly calls for Central Government to come up with a practical
water policy, and desist from this retrogressive attitude which
the government has portrayed so far. The Government of Zimbabwe
undertook a major Water Sector Reform Programme, the First Phase
being carried out from 1994 to 2002, and the Second Phase started
in 2009 and is reportedly in progress. The first phase, undertaken
with financial and technical assistance from the Government of Germany,
Norway, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, resulted in the
reformulation of the Water Resources management Strategy which included
an annexed National Water Policy which was never formally passed
by the Cabinet.
The government
should come up with a comprehensive water policy that encompasses
participatory methodologies in order to address the water challenges
bedeviling the country, and the City of Harare and Bulawayo in particular.
The water woes facing the country indeed need an attitude overhaul
and a multi-sectoral approach in order to enhance the improvement
of the livelihood of the people and improved public health.
Visit the Harare
Residents' Trust fact
sheet
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