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Bulawayo
faces water crisis
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Mike Nyoni (AR No. 129, 30-Aug-07)
August 30, 2007
http://iwpr.net/index.php?apc_state=hen&s=o&o=l=EN&p=acr&s=f&o=338223
The government is refusing
to tackle increasing water shortages and instances of waterborne
diseases in Bulawayo because of a struggle over control of the city's
water supply.
Unless local officials
hand over control of the water supply to a government agency, the
central authorities have said they will not help residents in Zimbabwe's
second largest city where waterborne diseases are on the increase
and most of the water supply has now dried up.
Resistance to a takeover
by the government agency is fuelled by reports that it has failed
to tackle the water crisis in Harare and other cities.
Water shortages and contaminated
water supplies are the latest in a long line of daily hardships
to face people all over the country.
In Harare, residents
of the poorer suburbs of Mabvuku, Tafara and Glen View sometimes
go without tap water for up to four weeks at a time. Even the wealthy
are beginning to suffer, with the water supply in the upmarket suburb
of Glen Lorne drying up two weeks ago.
Water shortages in Harare
have led to doctors treating 900 cases of diarrhoea a day, according
to a report by the state-run Herald newspaper on August 20.
"We have a persistent
problem and have decided to continue treating all diarrhoea-related
cases free of charge," said Harare health director Prosper
Chonzi, in the report.
Even where there is access
to water, it is often unfit for human consumption.
The Bulawayo authorities
have resorted to stringent water rationing, allowing residents to
access water for only a few hours every three days.
In Harare, Gweru and
Mutare, the government agency the Zimbabwe National Water Authority,
ZINWA, took control of the supply and distribution of water, after
President Robert Mugabe's regime fired popularly elected opposition
mayors and councillors and appointed its own favoured commissioners.
But Bulawayo city council
has resisted a ZINWA takeover bid.
Situated in the heart
of Matabeleland 450 kilometres west of Harare, Bulawayo has always
been an opposition city, voting against the ruling Zanu-PF in every
election since independence in 1980.
The city has for years
battled with water shortages, due to drought and a rapidly increasing
population.
The ambitious and expensive
Matabeleland Zambezi Water Project - which plans to pipe water from
the Zambezi river 450 km away to Matabeleland - has remained a pipe
dream for political reasons.
Even if there was the
political will to see it through, the recession-hit government lacks
the resources.
Bulawayo is now facing
its worst water crisis ever - which is compounded by the fact that
the government refuses to help unless the city allows a government
agency to take control of the supply and distribution of water.
The city's mayor
Japhet Ndabeni-Ncube last week accused the government of trying
to destroy the city.
Without water, people
are unable to wash their hands or flush their toilets, increasing
the risk of disease outbreaks. Most people answer nature's
call in the bush or open public spaces at night.
While the effects of
the water crisis may be similar in Bulawayo and Harare, analysts
say the causes are different.
Water shortages in Bulawayo
are exacerbated by drought and the standoff over control of supplies,
whereas those in Harare are the result of gross mismanagement, inefficiency
and lack of planning, as the city's population continues to
expand rapidly.
"Harare is very
different from Bulawayo," said a Harare council employee who
requested anonymity.
"Our water problems
here are man-made. The shortages are mainly a result of old pipes
which keep bursting. A lot of expensively treated water is wasted
through leakages."
He said any deaths which
occur as a result of water-related illnesses could be blamed on
poor management of the city's affairs.
Since ZINWA took over
water management in the capital nearly a year ago, supplies have
worsened. This has fuelled resistance by Bulawayo residents who
say they have no faith in ZINWA given its record in Harare and other
cities.
Mike Nyoni is the pseudonym
of an IWPR journalist in Zimbabwe
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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