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MPs
witness sewage "horror"
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Mike Nyoni (AR No. 140, 25-Oct-07)
October 25, 2007
http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=340169&apc_state=henfacr340092
Zimbabwe's state-owned
Herald newspaper this week ran a huge colour picture on its front
page with the caption, "Legislators and senators looking at
flowing raw sewage during a joint tour of the parliamentary portfolio
committees of local government and health and child welfare in Budirirro,
Harare . . . ."
Next to the picture was
a report that the water utility, the Zimbabwe National Water Authority,
ZINWA, had sharply increased water penalties for domestic consumers
who use more than 20 cubic metres a month, with the additional revenue
to be used for development and maintenance of existing infrastructure.
The painful irony for
most Zimbabweans is that water is never available on demand. In
the capital, Harare, posh northern suburbs can go for three days
without water. This month they went for two weeks without electricity
as well.
Despite the dire water
and sewage problems, widespread shortages of fuel and basic food
stuffs and skyrocketing inflation at around 8,000 per cent, the
ruling party is focusing on the forthcoming special congress to
select a candidate - or simply endorse President Robert Mugabe,
many believe - to represent ZANU-PF in the presidential election
scheduled for March next year.
In the second city of
Bulawayo, 450 kilometres west of Harare, the local authority has
imposed stringent water rationing measures in poor townships, allowing
residents supplies for a few hours every three days. Those fortunate
enough to have boreholes sell water to people desperate for the
precious commodity.
Back in Harare, Deputy
Minister for Water Resources and Infrastructural Development Walter
Mzembi warned of the health hazards posed by the lack of constant
supplies in poor residential areas and council clinics. During a
tour of Highfield, Glen View, Budiriro and Chitungwiza southwest
of Harare, members of parliament reported a sharp rise in cases
of water-related ailments such as diarrhoea.
Residents complained
of high water bills despite going for days on end with no water
in their taps; and of sewage flowing in front of their houses, posing
a threat to the health of their families.
Mzembi attributed water
shortages partly to the failure by the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply
Authority, ZESA, to provide power. "As you know, no power means
no pumping [of water] so we are holding meetings with the ministry
[responsible for power distribution] to spare areas with water pumps
[from power cuts]," Mzembi told Chitungwiza residents during
the October 23 tour by parliamentarians.
He said the government
was setting up a framework which would put residents "at the
centre of water management systems" in the country so that
they could appreciate the problems ZINWA was facing.
Unfortunately, that is
not what the residents and ratepayers in the country's major cities
where water distribution and the sewage system have been taken over
by ZINWA want. They say this has pushed them out of the equation.
Previously, residents
and ratepayers elected representatives to local government in the
form of ward councilors. In this way, they were able to periodically
express their support or disapproval through biennial elections.
But government has removed these institutions and replaced them
with a state company which is seen to represent the interests of
government, not those of ratepayers. ZINWA has neither their support
nor their sympathy, so they are not interested in its problems.
In his latest monetary
statement on October 1, Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono allocated
a staggering 14 trillion Zimbabwe dollars (approximately 14 million
US dollars) to ZINWA to refurbish major waterworks across the country
and improve the sewage system. So far there has been no noticeable
change, as the touring MPs discovered on their tour.
The front page picture
in the Herald didn't tell the full story, or the horror that the
parliamentarians felt when they came face-to-face for the first
time with what for most poor residents has become a "normal"
life. None of the daily reports in the official media had prepared
them for the degree of squalor they saw.
Anthony Mapurisa in Highfield
told the MPs he had been living with the stench of the raw sewage
flowing close to his house for a whole month. Another said he had
been doing so for the past three months. As the residents spoke,
the smell of the sewage flowing in front of the shocked MPs was
so overpowering that one reportedly vomited.
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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