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Cholera
fears as Bulawayo water crisis continues
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Yamikani Mwando (AR No. 133, 19-Sept-07)
September 19, 2007
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=338785&apc_state=henh
Bulawayo city council
this week announced an outbreak of diarrhoea amid growing fears
of a cholera epidemic, but the government in Harare remains unresponsive
to calls to declare the water shortage a national crisis.
Officials in Bulawayo,
Zimbabwe's second city, say that only when the government
formally designates the water problems as a crisis will resources
be pumped in to avert what many here already see as a major humanitarian
disaster.
A council spokesman this
week told a state-controlled daily newspaper that a number of people
had now contracted cholera, the deadly water-borne disease that
proliferates in areas with inadequate access to clean water.
This revelation, and
reports that hundreds of people have been treated for diarrhoea,
come as no surprise given the lack of mains water which has forced
many in this city of more than two million to use untreated water.
Because of the persistent
power cuts, people are unable to boil the potentially harmful water
they collect from boreholes and other outside sources.
With some townships reporting
water outages for seven days in a row, domestic lavatories have
all but stopped functioning, and people are using areas where there
are trees and bushes as open latrines, while health officials warn
of the risks of disease.
"I wake up at about
five in the morning when many people are still in bed and head for
the bush," said local resident Hilary Ndlovu, 27, explaining
how he takes a hoe with him and digs a makeshift latrine.
"It's increasingly
becoming difficult to do the rounds in these areas because of the
human waste," said a council forest ranger.
Pathisa Nyathi, a spokesman
for Bulawayo city council, said there was no need for people to
behave like this. "We have publicised the water cuts timetable
so people can stock up water," he said.
However, residents complain
they cannot store enough water to last them for the seven days they
are likely to need it.
There is no sign that
the water shortage will ease any time soon.
Information Minister
Sikhanyiso Ndlovu recently told state media that the government
had an obligation to step in and deal with the water crisis. "The
people of Matebeleland must not feel they are being punished by
the government," he said.
However, the government
has made it clear that assistance will not come until Bulawayo's
leaders agree to have the Zimbabwe National Water Authority, ZINWA,
take over the city's water network.
Munacho Mutezo, Zimbabwe's
minister for water and infrastructure, said recently that the government
would not intervene, and cited the city administration's resistance
to a ZINWA takeover.
Mayor Japhet Ndabeni-Ncube,
who belongs to the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, MDC,
says "they [government] want Bulawayo dead".
Bulawayo city council
is run by the MDC, which fears that the government wants to replace
it with an appointed commission. There is a precedent for this -
in April 2003, the elected council in the capital Harare, led by
MDC executive mayor Elias Mudzuri, was dismissed and a commission
was installed which still runs the city.
Bulawayo has faced acute
problems since with the major reservoir that supplies its water
all but dried up after last year's poor rains.
An ambition project to
bring water to Matebeleland from the Zambezi river 450 kilometres
to the north has failed to get off the ground since independence
in 1980, and some suspect the inaction is due to official resistance
to helping this region, seen as a stronghold of opposition to President
Robert Mugabe.
Some Bulawayo councillors
blame the city's current water problems on the government's
reluctance to back the Zambezi project.
"Each year, the
council discusses the problem, and each year government frustrates
us," said a councillor who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Meanwhile, as the war
of words between Bulawayo council and central government drags on,
the health risks are likely to become greater as people continue
drinking and washing in water from polluted sources.
Yamikani Mwando is the
pseudonym of a reporter 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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