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Council decommissions contaminated boreholes
Moses Chibaya, Community Radio Harare (CORAH)
January 24, 2013
Glen View 7
residents are up in arms against Harare City Council after it emerged
that the local authority is set to decommission a number of boreholes
which it claims are pumping out contaminated water that is not fit
for human consumption.
The residents
are opposed to the development saying the move will leave them without
an alternative source of water as council is failing to provide
the precious liquid. 'It's not possible for council
to shut down the boreholes. We are using the water for other purposes
not for drinking because we are aware of the risks associated with
drinking contaminated water,' Chipo Mutanga of Glen View told
Talking Harare on Wednesday.
Another resident
Justice Mungwena says, 'Council is saying the boreholes are
causing typhoid so they want to shut them down. This is going to
cause more disaster because l can't remember the last time
we got tap water, so it's better for them to leave the boreholes
like that.'
Harare
Residents Trust (HRT) Founder and Director, Precious Shumba
has weighed in saying his lobby group has received several reports
concerning the decommissioning of boreholes by Harare City Council.
'People
are just defending their rights because they have a right to get
water. It is impossible for council to take such drastic measures.
It must find other alternatives before condemning the boreholes,'
Shumba said.
Harare City
Council Health Director Dr Prosper Chonzi confirmed the development
but referred Talking Harare to Engineer Philip Pfukwa in-charge
of the engineering services, whom we however failed to reach.
'There
are a number of boreholes that we de-commissioned. Some of the boreholes
are supposed to be rehabilitated but I don't have the information
why they were decommissioned let me give you Pfukwa's number
because he was working on that issue,' Dr Chonzi said.
As a result
of continued water shortages in Harare, residents in areas such
as Mbare and Chitungwiza have resorted to fetching water from streams
and pen wells thereby exposing themselves to typhoid and cholera.
Water shortages
have become a common feature in Harare, a situation which prompted
development partners to join hands and drill boreholes as an emergency
response to the 2008/9 cholera outbreak which claimed at least 4000
lives.
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Radio Harare fact
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