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In
search of a river
Prespone
Matawira
March 09, 2009
This is the
second article in the Chii
Chirikuita (What-s Up?) series
At 6.50am today, International
Women-s Day, I joined hundreds of women all around Harare
in search of a river.
The search took me down
the beautiful tree lined Josiah Tongogara Avenue, past what Zimbabweans
now know as the hanging tree. The tree where Mbuya Nehanda, a spiritual
medium and revolutionary war heroine of Zimbabwe-s first chimurenga,
was hanged, after capture by colonial forces in 1896.
But the freedom from
oppression for which she fought and died remains elusive. Zimbabwean
women are still waging wars against oppressions, a reality made
even starker on this 8th of March.
Today the struggle takes
the shape of resistance to deprivation. To the lack of a basic need
- water. The entire city of Harare has been without water for the
last 4 days.
Harare City Council,
which recently reclaimed water management functions from the Zimbabwe
National Water Authority (ZINWA) said it was battling to restore
supplies.
The grapevine tells a
story of sabotage. That Zinwa is withholding much needed chemicals
because of the takeback by the city council. But Harare is a city
rife with rumour. The more conventional understandings speak of
a lack of chemicals for water purification, an outdated and dilapidated
water treatment system and a lack of electricity to pump.
Whatever the reason,
the taps are dry and Zimbabwean women are taking to the streets.
Walking or driving, carrying
plastic bottles, buckets, containers of all shapes and sizes, pushing
wheel barrows or bearing the weight of full buckets on their heads
women go in search of water. It-s a massive movement that
will continue throughout the day. Like a relay. A rolling demonstration
for life, against all odds. It is a form of resistance.
For some women the only
water source they have is unprotected and the chances of contamination
are high. There are boreholes that are also contaminated due to
the overflow of sceptic tanks. There are schools with wells and
there are some private residences who have installed taps near the
roadside of their properties for public use.
The one I found had a
queue. It took me an hour to reach the tap. You learn to make the
water stretch. You bath in a litre - 4 cups.
While waiting for my
turn, we talk. We talk about sanitation, cholera and how difficult
it is to live in this man-made drought.
Death is always imminent
in this demonstration for life. On this women-s day, standing
around a tap on the side of a suburban road we also talk about Susan
Tsvangirai.
Mainstream news in Zimbabwe
has been circumspect around the details of her death. While late
last night the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) reported
that the wife of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, bore the full
impact when the landcruiser they were traveling in was sideswiped
by a USAID truck near Beatrice, causing the vehicle to veer off
the road and roll three times. Today the news is more circumspect.
They are giving minimal detail. Rumour, speculation and conspiracy
theories are rife.
But for now, my bucket
is full. Who knows what will happen next in this place where water
= life and where death is never far away.
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