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ZIMBABWE:
Water crisis hits major cities
IRIN News
January 10, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51020
HARARE - Despite
an unusual abundance of water after recent heavy rain, taps continue
to run dry in several of Zimbabwe's major cities.
Some residents in the capital, Harare, have gone without water for
as long as two weeks, while areas of Bulawayo, the country's second
city, have experienced water cuts lasting for several days at a
time. Old, unreliable water reticulation equipment has been blamed.
The quality of tap water has also become a problem. Harare's water
was recently condemned by the municipality's own experts for failing
to meet the minimum safety requirements set by the World Health
Organisation and the Standards Association of Zimbabwe.
A report by the Harare municipality's Works Department said the
city's water had very low concentrations of chlorine, resulting
in high levels of bacteria and ideal conditions for disease outbreaks.
"Toxin producing blue-green algae and other impurities are constantly
present in the drinking water," read part of the report.
Some industrialists involved in processing milk, ice cream, beer
and soft drinks have lodged formal protests with the Harare municipality
over the quality of water being supplied, and a few factories have
threatened to stop production until the water quality improves.
This week three people in a Harare household died, while seven others
were hospitalised, after contracting cholera. Outbreaks of cholera
have also occurred in Chitungwiza, the capital's dormitory town,
due to persistent water cuts that have lasted several weeks, leading
some residents to dig shallow, unprotected wells.
Until recently, most of Zimbabwe's main cities were governed by
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) executive mayors,
but a number of them were fired by the central government for alleged
poor performance.
Precious Shumba, spokesman for the Combined Harare Residents Association,
said they were working on a lawsuit against the government-appointed
commission in charge of Harare, the minister of health and the local
government minister who fired the mayor.
"Residents have overwhelmingly agreed that there is a clear case
against the respondents that they have violated the public health
act by failing to create an environment in which residents can live
in a healthy city," Shumba told IRIN.
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