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A
water and sewerage crisis that goes "straight to the grave"
Tonderai Kwidini, Inter Press Service News Agency (IPS)
September 30, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=39468
A young Zimbabwean
couple glances furtively around before settling on a bench in a
bare patch of ground that used to be a recreational park in Glen
View, a sprawling, high-density suburb of the capital, Harare. It's
a Monday morning, and the two of them are struggling to come to
terms with a strange sickness that has gripped their family. Every
move they make in the direction of the Glen View One Satellite Clinic
shows they are in great pain.
"We are
going to the clinic to seek medical attention. We have been twisting
and turning all night and we don't know what has hit us, but I suspect
it's the untreated water that we are drinking," Charles Nemukundu
tells IPS as he leads his partner to the clinic, where waterborne
diseases are being treated for free.
A water shortage
and dilapidated sanitation works have caused Harare to become stifled
by pools of open sewage and filthy public toilets.
Groups of women
with buckets on their heads have become a common sight around streams
that many residents of the city now use as their main source of
water. Various toxic substances are deposited into the streams on
a daily basis; yet the prospect of contracting diseases does not
prevent people from drawing water there.
As a result,
the incidence of waterborne diseases such as dysentery, diarrhoea
and cholera has increased to such an extent that the Harare City
Council (HCC) is obliged to offer free treatment.
The city's health
department last month warned of an imminent disaster in the capital
if the water situation was not addressed. "The cases of diarrhoea
reported and being treated at our clinics are increasing daily.
We are treating 900 cases daily," an official at the HCC who
preferred to remain anonymous told IPS.
Those living
in the more affluent suburbs have also been caught up in the water
crisis.
"Since
the start of the problems, I have been buying mineral water from
the shops for my children, but now I can't do that any more because
there is nothing left in the shops and I don't know what to do now.
I have tried boiling the water but it's not helping either,"
said Gladys Mtombeni, a resident of Hillside, one of Harare's more
upmarket areas.
The current health crisis intensified when the Zimbabwe National
Water Authority (ZINWA) took over the running of the city's water
affairs from the HCC. The takeover was met with considerable public
opposition that went largely ignored by the authorities.
"The government
has vowed it will go ahead with the project even as health officials
show that recent deaths are due to the incompetence of ZINWA and
that whole urban areas are threatened because ZINWA cannot be relied
upon to provide water regularly," commented the weekly Standard
newspaper in an editorial.
"Just how
many more people must die in order to convince the government that
this is a man-made catastrophe?"
A resident of Harare voiced similar sentiments in a letter to the
editor published in a daily newspaper.
"Things
might be hard, but it does not mean we have to accept living with
our own waste in our kitchens. I suggest we declare the current
water and sewer problems a national disaster. A stitch in time saves
nine, lest we head for a catastrophic health situation," wrote
the resident.
ZINWA says it
is struggling to provide water and sewerage services to residents
of the capital because ageing infrastructure has not been properly
maintained. The lack of maintenance means that sewerage pipes burst
repeatedly.
The country's
foreign currency shortages exacerbate the problem, making it difficult
to import the raw materials needed to produce chemicals for the
treatment of effluent. With an official inflation rate of 6,600
percent and an unofficial rate of almost twice that figure, many
Zimbabwean companies that used to produce water treatment chemicals
have been forced to suspend their operations. ZINWA now has to import
the chemicals directly from overseas.
While Zimbabwe's
economy continues its downward slide, it will probably be all but
impossible to raise the funds required to restore normal water and
sewerage services to all urban areas in the country.
The government
of President Robert Mugabe has been accused of demolishing the economy
through -- amongst others -- an ill-advised land reform programme.
In the most recent case of mismanagement, an edict from government
instructed retailers to cut all prices by fifty percent. This instruction,
in an economy already crippled by rampant inflation, made it difficult
for store supplies to be replenished -- and has caused many businesses
to stop trading.
Noted Jabusile
Shumba, a senior programmes officer for the Combined
Harare Residents Association "We are in a crisis which
has reached health menace status. This is certainly a national disaster
which other people have made and are allowing to continue straight
to the grave."
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