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Residents reject pre-paid water meters
Dalphine
Tagwireyi, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
September 29, 2013
View this article
on The Standard (Zimbabwe) website
Residents of
Harare have rejected the introduction of pre-paid water meters by
the Harare City Council, saying the move was a recipe for a health
disaster as more people will succumb to water-borne diseases.
The Harare City
Council last week announced plans to embark on a project to install
pre-paid water meters, starting with the Avenues area, to give consumers
power to manager their own consumption.
The Harare
Residents Trust (HRT) rejected the installation of pre-paid
water meters, saying the move was a profit-making project for the
local authority which would not address the residents’ needs.
“Pre-paid
water meters represent the total hijacking of a human right by city
bureaucrats who are only concerned with increasing revenue inflows
instead of addressing its billing system, which has given residents
nightmares,” said HRT director, Precious Shumba.
“We reject
this apparent profit- making project in its totality, and will only
express a different view once we have sufficient information on
the benefits that will accrue to residents.”
Harare Water
director, Eng Christopher Zvobgo, said the project was aimed at
encouraging residents to pay their bills.
Council intends
to install 1 000 pre-paid water meters in the Avenues and later
expand to other suburbs, depending on the success of the pilot project.
Shumba said
the introduction of prepaid water meters should be viewed as part
of the measures by city management to privatise the council’s
water department, in a move that will replace workers with technology.
There are fears
that there would soon be an outbreak of water-borne diseases, such
as dysentery, cholera and typhoid as residents resort to unprotected
water sources because they would not be able to afford the cost
of running water.
Over 4 000 people,
mostly from Harare, succumbed to cholera in 2008/9, after going
for several days without running water.
The Combined
Harare Residents Association (Chra) and other relevant stakeholders
on Friday held a consultative meeting in Kuwadzana where residents
rejected the local authority project.
The project
is set to be launched in the suburb soon.
Doreen Chigova
of Kuwadzana 5 said the community needed more boreholes, rather
than pre-paid meters.
“The government
should be installing more boreholes because we don’t have
enough water points at the present moment, our dire need is water
but they want to introduce irrelevant meters, we are already suffering
with the Zesa pre-paid meters,” she said.
The power utility
(Zesa) early this year introduced pre-paid meters, and as a result
some households have no power because they cannot afford it. They
have resorted to using firewood poached from peri-urban areas.
Mirirayi Shoko
of Kuwadzana 1 suburb said: “This is an unfair imposition
and we as consumers were not consulted first.”
“It will
be very difficult because some of us only get money at the end of
any given month, hence if I use up my budgeted consumption, what
then will I do?”
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