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Water
shortages in capital leave residents desperate
Tonderai Kwidini, Inter Press Service News Agency (IPS)
July 31, 2007
View images
of the water and sanitation
crisis in Kuwadzana
http://ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=38747
Taps in the Zimbabwean
capital, Harare, are running dry even though the city's main
supply dams are more than 60 percent full, according to figures
from the Zimbabwe National Water Authority (ZINWA). With more than
half of Harare's three million inhabitants now experiencing water
shortages, residents are resorting to desperate measures to find
supplies.
Carrying a large bucket
to work has become a daily task for Tedious Marembo, employed as
a cleaner at a block of government offices in the city. This building
is never without water, because it houses three government ministries.
So Marembo fills his bucket at work to provide water for his wife
and two children who live in Kuwadzana, a poor suburb in the south-west
of Harare.
"My wife has to
walk a long distance to get water at a church in my neighbourhood
where a borehole was sunk, (and) she has to pay 50,000 dollars for
a bucket. The only way I can help her cope with household chores
is to carry with me a 20-litre bucket to bring water from my work
place," he said.
At the official exchange
rate, 50,000 Zimbabwe dollars is worth 200 U.S. dollars; at the
black-market rate, however, it would only buy 36 U.S. cents at the
time of writing. On average, civil servants earn four million Zimbabwe
dollars -- a little over 22 U.S. dollars per month, at unofficial
rates.
Harare has experienced
intermittent water shortages for some two years now, due mainly
to poor management and ageing infrastructure. Water experts from
a Scandinavian development agency who preferred to remain anonymous
said ZINWA management was inadequate because the water authority
was not run by professionals, but rather by political appointees
hired by Water Resources and Infrastructural Development Minister
Munacho Mutezo.
The experts believe the
capital's water distribution system, built long before independence
in 1980, has gone without proper maintenance for many years. Critically
important pumps that have an expected lifespan of between 15 and
20 years had not been replaced since they were installed, for instance.
Sanitation has gone the
way of water provision, as members of the Mashapa household -- also
in Kuwadzana -- can attest. A blocked pipe caused a fetid pool of
sewage to build up around their house, and this outflow now slowly
winds its way through the suburb to a nearby stream.
"We are locking
children in the house. They can no longer play outside because of
the danger of contracting diseases. Cholera is right in our midst;
we have reported to ZINWA and they came . . . but as soon as they
left the problem started (again); we now don't even know what
to do and who to tell," said Olivia Mashapa, mother of the
family.
While the Mashapa children
may be kept away from the sewage, others are not: primary school
children who use a path alongside the Mashapa home are obliged to
pick their way through waste matter, while other children play in
the effluent -- and are exposed to water borne diseases.
At the far end of the
suburb, still more residents are at risk, as they buy vegetables
from vendors who sell their wares right next to open sewage. Many
toilets in this area are blocked and can no longer be used.
"I did not bath
today; I have been up and down the suburbs looking for water. Sometimes
we get the water from the main local authority office, but today
they are refusing to let us into their premises to fetch water,
although we are still paying our water bills in full," said
Memory Mucherahowa, an elderly street vendor.
For the fortunate few
who can afford membership for the city centre gym, visits there
have become a necessity -- not only for exercise, but also for a
shower.
The frequency of service
delivery problems increased significantly after the management of
Harare's water system was transferred earlier this year from
the City Council to ZINWA. Opposition party members believe the
transfer was based more on political considerations than managerial
criteria.
Two reports tabled recently
in Zimbabwe's House of Assembly by the parliamentary portfolio
committee on local government made it clear that ZINWA, a parastatal,
lacked funds, equipment and above all, the expertise to run the
city's water affairs.
"Although ZINWA
reiterates that it has the capacity to take over the entirety of
water and sewerage services in the country's urban areas, local
authorities and the public feel that ZINWA is not able to undertake
this task," one of the reports stated.
"In view of the
evidence gathered, the committee recommends that the cabinet reconsider
the directive as the takeover of the services from the city of Harare
has proved that ZINWA has no capacity."
Government has however
not implemented recommendations for the city's water management
to be returned to the council, and ZINWA is in the process of extending
its reach to other cities and towns including the country's
second largest city, Bulawayo.
IPS was not able to get
comment from ZINWA about the complaints made against it.
The water shortages
constitute just one of many difficulties confronting Harare, and
Zimbabwe as a whole. Runaway inflation and high unemployment have
driven many into poverty -- and the United Nations World Food Programme
(WFP) estimates that just over two million of the country's approximately
13 million citizens will experience food shortages "as early
as the third quarter of 2007."
This figure "will
rise to 4.1 million at the peak of the crisis in the months before
the next main harvest in April 2008," the WFP website goes
on to say.
Economic difficulties
are paralleled by a political crisis that has resulted in a number
of disputed elections, and widespread human rights abuses.
* This feature
is the first in a two-part series on water shortages in Zimbabwe.
The second item, The
city of "Passport Size" ablutions, focuses on the
water situation in Zimbabwe's second largest city, Bulawayo.
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