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ZIMBABWE:
Water under pressure
IRIN
News
October 04, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=55833
HARARE - Shouts
of "water, water, water," stir frenetic activity in the affluent
suburb of Marlborough in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare.
Ntando Ndlovu,
10, runs down the street spreading the news that the water, unavailable
for three weeks, has been reconnected and within minutes men, women
and children spill out of their houses and start filling buckets,
pots and even cups with water from the standpipes in the street,
while baths fill up inside the houses to store the increasingly
rare liquid.
The spillover
creates a novelty for Ntando and his friends, who splash and dance
in the puddles, but their playtime is cut short as the water splutters
and runs dry a few minutes later, and the summer heat returns.
Ntando's mother,
Sarah Ndlovu, is grateful. "I am happy that I managed to fill a
few containers with water, and I hope this time the water will only
be gone for a few days instead of more than 21 days," she told IRIN.
Although Harare's
reservoirs are near capacity, the water scarcity is being blamed
on Zimbabwe's foreign currency shortage, which makes it difficult
for the government to afford water treatment chemicals and the necessary
spare parts to keep an ageing reticulation system going.
Clean drinking
water has joined the growing list of shortages in Zimbabwe, which
also includes fuel and food.
Until
recently the treatment and distribution of water was the responsibility
of the Harare municipality, but in 2003 residents voted for executive
mayor Elias Mudzuri, of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change.
Mudzuri was
fired in September 2003 after allegations of mismanagement, and
replaced by an unelected commission staffed by ZANU-PF government
sympathisers and technocrats. The authority to distribute water
was handed to the Zimbabwe National Water Authority, but the city
fathers have failed to deliver a consistent and adequate water supply
to residents.
Precious Shumba,
spokesperson for the Combined
Harare Residents Association, told IRIN that some Harare suburbs
have gone without water for nearly three months and, when it was
available, the quality had deteriorated substantially compared to
previously.
Shumba blamed
the water shortages on the commission, which was appointed and not
democratically elected and therefore had no obligation to deliver
decent municipal services. "The hardest hit areas are the affluent
northern suburbs, like Borrowdale, Chisipite and Highlands, although
some high-density suburbs, like Mbare, Mabvuku and Rugare, have
also been hard-hit by water cuts."
John Mupani,
an enterprising resident, has identified an opportunity for easy
money in an economy with an annual inflation rate of 1,200 percent
- the world's highest - and unemployment above 70 percent.
"Although I
am employed elsewhere in the CBD [central business district], I
have employed four people who drive my water bowser to the rich
suburbs, where they sell water to residents of that area. I have
given them powers to be flexible with their pricing and I cannot
complain about the profit which I am making."
Selling water
is not restricted to the richer suburbs; households in poorer neighbourhoods
are also targeted by the water entrepreneurs, but the price is lower.
Formal business has also cashed in. TAISEK Engineering, a borehole
company, says it is doing a "roaring business".
"After experiencing
these horrible water cuts, Harare residents, especially those who
live in houses built on large pieces of land, have begun seeking
our services," a company official told IRIN. "The amount of business
that we are doing is so amazing because there has been a huge surge
in demand for boreholes."
Residents in
poorer neighbourhoods are sinking shallow open wells, which have
become a feature of "high-density suburbs". An influx of people
since May last year, when the government launched Operation
Murambatsvina - a sudden campaign to purge informal settlements,
which left more than 700,000 people homeless or without a livelihood
- has increased pressure on already stretched resources.
Untreated water
sources have been blamed for a recent outbreak of scabies in poor
neighbourhoods. Several Harare schools have stopped children affected
by scabies from attending school and there have been reports of
diarrhoea outbreaks, attributed to contaminated water supplies.
The minister
responsible for Water Resources, Munacho Mutezo, has admitted that
the state agency was failing to supply water, saying: "We are asking
consumers to bear with us while we are battling to provide enough
water for everybody."
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