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Churches
warn of Bulawayo water crisis
Ekklesia (UK)
September 10, 2007
http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/5670
Churches in Zimbabwe's
second largest city, Bulawayo, are launching emergency distributions
of water and warning of 'disastrous' water shortages that could
lead to diseases like cholera. "Many people in western areas
have had virtually no water for a whole month. There are already
cases of diarrhoea and we are facing a crisis," said pastor
Promise Manceda, one of the leaders of Churches in Bulawayo, a network
of more than 70 congregations across the city. The churches report
that three of the five dams supplying the city's population of 700,000
have run out of water, with the fourth due to run dry later this
month. "With people, especially the poorest, already suffering,
it is too ghastly to contemplate what will happen when we are down
to only one dam," said Promise. The churches' warning comes
soon after Zimbabwe's main bread producer was quoted in state media
as warning it had only two days' supply of flour.
In a statement,
Churches in Bulawayo declare: "The health hazards that loom
in Bulawayo are very real and very serious. The vast population
of Bulawayo has been exposed and left vulnerable to diseases such
as cholera. Thousands of people have been forced into the degrading
and inhuman situation of using ground around their homes as toilets
under cover of darkness." Churches in Bulawayo are appealing
within Zimbabwe for funds. And British aid agency Tearfund, which
works through local churches, is preparing to supply twenty 5000-litre
water tanks to be placed in communities where the need is greatest.
Churches say the catastrophic decline in water supplies is due to
unregulated farm resettlements putting pressure on supplies, a dispute
between national and local government over the city's water supply,
vandalism and drought. They are appealing to local and national
government, with little response.
The Churches in Bulawayo
statement adds: "It saddens us deeply that, though we wrote
to the minister responsible for water and to local government for
two months about the looming disaster, there was neither acknowledgement
nor any reply to our letters. Hearts sank when it was reported in
the media during the past two weeks that the government will not
intervene in the Bulawayo water crisis . . . . This has left a sense
of hopelessness and desperation among the people." Karyn Beattie,
Tearfund Disaster Management Officer states: "It is a measure
of just how serious the crisis in Zimbabwe has become that churches
now have to supply water to local communities once their appeals
for local and national government action went unanswered."
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