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"Make
the issue of water attractive to the authorities"
Miriam Mannak, Inter Press Service News Agency (IPS)
December 01, 2007
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=40315
To tackle droughts in
Southern Africa, one needs to think out of the box instead of pointing
fingers at obvious causes such as lack of rainfall, experts said
this week during the third Zambezi Basinwide Stakeholders Forum,
held in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe.
The Nov. 27-29
gathering, an annual event, was organised by the 'Zambezi Action
Plan Project 6, Phase 2' (ZACPRO 6.2), an initiative of the Southern
African Development Community that aims to facilitate social and
economic development in the Zambezi River Basin through improving
management of its resources.
The Zambezi Basin --
one of the largest river basins in Africa -- is shared by eight
countries (Angola, Botswana, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania,
Zambia and Zimbabwe) and is home to over 40 million people.
One of the discussions
at the meeting focused on the management of water related calamities
such as drought -- a common phenomenon in Africa's southern region,
often blamed on scarce rainfall.
However, the reality
is more complex, Dominic Mazvimavi of the Okavango Research Centre
in Botswana told IPS: "Insufficient rainfall is one of the
causes of droughts, but there is more to the story."
Bad management, poor
decision making and lack of investment are also important causes
of water scarcity and droughts, he added.
"The Zambezi River
has enough water to provide each person living in the basin with
200 litres per day. So why is it that some communities do not have
enough water? It is not expensive to pump water from the Zambezi."
According to Mazvimavi,
droughts in general are avoidable -- if the root causes of such
events are treated, rather than the symptoms and consequences.
Government's role is
central in this regard. "We need to be more proactive instead
of being reactive. Government participation is crucial. Unfortunately,
many authorities tend to treat water as a non-priority. The development
of water infrastructure has, for instance, fallen behind in many
regions in Southern Africa."
Mazvimavi said it was
now necessary for governments in the Zambezi Basin and elsewhere
in Africa to put more funds aside to tackle hydrological problems.
"More money is needed
for water infrastructure development, human resources, research,
and systems to collect hydrological and climatological and scientific
data. And, this information needs to be transformed into understandable
knowledge, which should be made available and accessible to people
at grass roots level."
Water organisations,
non-governmental groups and other stakeholders should also increase
efforts at making authorities more aware of water related challenges.
"We need to come together and make the issue of water attractive
to the authorities," noted Mazvimavi. "We have to make
them realise why they should invest in water."
It is incorrect to state
that the frequency of droughts in Africa is on the increase, Mazvimavi
said.
"This is often claimed
so by the media, but it is nonsense. Scientific evidence rejects
this. According to the statistics, the number of droughts in Southern
Africa has not increased over the past decades. It may be that the
structure of rain seasons is changing, but this does not mean that
specific regions are becoming dryer."
Sometimes what it termed
drought may in fact be aridity.
"There is a lot
of confusion about the difference between drought and aridity. Not
every dry period is a drought, and it is a misconception that areas
are drought prone," Mazvimavi explained.
"Dry periods occur
in every region across the continent, even in Victoria Falls, which
is not famous for being dry. This is simply due to the fact that
climate in this part of the world is incredibly variable. The 1970s
were a wet period, while the 1980s were dry. The key is how these
dry periods are handled."
Mazvimavi said crop failure
was often blamed on lack of rainfall, but that other factors --
poor land use, high population density -- should also be taken into
account.
"If land is used
extensively in a non-sustainable way, land erosion occurs and soil
fertility decreases. This augments the chance of failed crops. This
situation worsens when a lot of people extensively use the same
water source."
Furthermore, "When
crops are not suitable for a certain region, they have a chance
of failing. To prevent this, people need to adapt their crops to
the region and not the other way around."
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