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Thirsty
Bulawayo struggles with diarrhoea
IRIN News
November 07, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=75193
JOHANNESBURG,
(IRIN) - More than 3,000 cases of diarrhoea have been reported in
Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city, in the last two months, as residents
struggle with water shortages.
"We have
so far recorded 3,600 cases of diarrhoea since the first cases of
the outbreak were reported in August this year, and since then figures
from the city's Health Department indicate that we have been getting
between 300 and 400 new cases of diarrhoea every week," said
Phathisa Nyathi, spokesman for the Bulawayo City Council. "We
expect the situation to worsen until we get adequate rains and the
water supply situation normalises."
Since the outbreak
was first reported in August, the city has experienced a 10-fold
increase in cases, from 300 to 3,600, up to the second week of November.
Low rainfall
and an inability to keep up with the demands of a growing population
in a depressed economic environment have left many of Bulawayo's
1.5 million residents in the grip of water shortages and often having
to obtain water from unprotected sources.
The city's water
woes began early this year, when three of its five supply dams were
decommissioned due to low water levels. The two remaining dams have
failed to meet its daily water requirement of 120,000cu.m, pumping
out only 69,000cu.m.
Nyathi said
the council was working with the World Health Organisation in Bulawayo,
the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), Health Ministry teams and several
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to contain the outbreak.
Health Minister
David Parirenyatwa said his ministry was monitoring the situation
in Bulawayo and Harare, where diarrhoea outbreaks have also been
registered. "We have teams that are dealing with the outbreak
and people are getting treatment in Harare and Bulawayo, and we
have put in programmes to contain the outbreak."
The struggling
Bulawayo city council has resorted to transporting water in bowsers,
where people can queue to fill their buckets. The global charity,
World Vision International, has sunk boreholes in most high-density
suburbs to complement water supplies, but the few boreholes cannot
keep up with demand.
Residents constantly
complained about the long water-rationing periods. "We have
not received water for five days now, and the water bowsers from
council have not brought water," said Mandla Nkomo. One day,
his family were forced to drink the water from a hand-dug well near
their home and had to be hospitalised.
Charles Mpofu,
a Bulawayo city councillor, said the actual number of diarrhoea
cases was much higher than those being reported, as many people
resorted to visiting private hospitals when they became ill because
the government hospitals had no medication.
"The city
is sitting on a time-bomb, because the statistics we have are those
from council hospitals and clinics, and do not reflect figures from
private hospitals, and very soon we will get a cholera outbreak,
which is more serious than diarrhoea and dysentery outbreaks."
Mpofu said the
council was working frantically with partner organisations, such
as UNICEF and international charity Medicines Sans Frontiers (MSF),
to provide water purification tablets.
The water shortages
have also had a negative impact on industry and the manufacturing
sector, which require large volumes of water in their daily operations.
Bulawayo and the surrounding Matabeleland region have faced water
problems for more than two decades.
Successive governments
since 1912 have postponed construction of a water pipeline from
the Zambezi River to alleviate perennial water shortages in Bulawayo.
Known as the Matabeleland-Zambezi Water Project, the pipeline is
envisaged to create a green belt through Matabeleland North Province.
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