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Water
shortages cause diarrhoea outbreak
IRIN News
January 07, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76120
A diarrhoea outbreak
that has hit hundreds of people in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare,
is being attributed to a combination of factors, including a failure
by the local city authority to provide clean water and collect refuse
in residential areas.
Harare's director of
health services, Stanley Mungofa, told journalists during a recent
tour of Mabvuku and Tafara, two of the capital's low-income suburbs
hardest hit, that more than 400 cases had been reported in these
areas.
"There has been
an increase in diarrhoea cases, with 459 reports of diarrhoea being
received towards the end of 2007. The figures of diarrhoea cases
received so far are way above what is normally experienced at this
time of the year," he said.
A nurse at Harare's Glen
View clinic, who declined to be identified, told IRIN that while
cases were concentrated in Mabvuku and Tafara, the rest of the capital
had not escaped unscathed.
"Most parts of Harare
have gone without water for several weeks and garbage has not been
collected throughout the city, and that means the whole city has
an environment conducive for the spread of waterborne diseases."
Health
care workers on strike
Medical services have
been severely stretched since health workers embarked on a strike
at the beginning of the year to demand higher salaries. The wages
of doctors and nurses are rapidly eroded by the world's highest
inflation rate, officially cited at 8,000 percent but estimated
at 25,000 percent by independent economists.
Doctors are paid Z$60
million monthly (US$30 at the parallel market rate of Z$2 million
to US$1), while nurses earn Z$25 million a month (US$12.50). Government
has offered health personnel a 600 percent wage hike if they return
to work.
Precious Shumba, spokesperson
for the Combined Harare Residents Association, a civic organisation
advocating good local governance, said the incidence of diarrhoea
could have been avoided but for the interference of the ruling ZANU-PF
government in 2001, when a government-appointed commission, staffed
by ruling party loyalists ill-equipped to deliver services to the
capital's residents, replaced the city's elected authority.
"The Harare municipality
used to provide clean and reliable water to residents until the
government started meddling in the affairs of the city by awarding
water supply to the parastatal Zimbabwe National Water Authority
(ZINWA), which has failed dismally to provide clean water all the
time."
The two worst affected
residential areas have not have had access to potable water for
months and during that time have experienced sporadic outbreaks
of waterborne diseases, including cholera.
"While some homes
have gone for as long as three months without water, the spreading
of waterborne diseases has been encouraged by failure of the commission
running Harare to collect refuse from residential areas," Shumba
said.
"Residents now dump
garbage in open areas, which has caused an increase of flies in
many residential areas, making it easy for diarrhoea to spread.
Many sewerage pipes have burst but they are never attended to on
time, resulting in raw sewage flowing in residential areas and creating
a health time bomb in the process," she told IRIN.
Water
for a few
Elias Mudzuri, former
executive mayor of Harare and member of the opposition party, the
Movement for Democratic Change, told IRIN that during his term of
office he had arranged twinning agreements with European cities,
in terms of which Harare would have received assistance with refuse
collection through the delivery of vehicles to dispose of household
rubbish.
"However, following
the sacking of the elected Harare municipal leadership by the ZANU-PF,
all the arrangements that were in place, especially with the city
of Munich, in Germany, were cancelled, as they insisted that they
would only partner [cities with] democratically elected municipalities,"
Mudzuri said.
"Most of the problems
being experienced in Harare are generally to do with the fact that
people with no history in local governance were hand-picked to run
the capital city, which is not an easy thing to do."
Health services director
Stanley Mungofa confirmed that the diarrhoea outbreak was attributable
to sewer blockages, unreliable water supplies and uncollected domestic
refuse. The city is also experiencing unusually high levels of seasonal
rainfall.
The diarrhoea outbreak
has finally moved the authorities to pump water to the affected
suburbs, but at a cost: according to ZINWA chief engineer, Albert
Muyambo, "We have prioritised Mabvuku and Tafara areas and
cut off other areas," leaving most of Harare's other suburbs
without water.
Health and Child Welfare
minister David Parirenyatwa told IRIN that health personnel had
been deployed to affected suburbs to monitor the situation. "As
far as I know, there have been no deaths caused by the diarrhoea
outbreak, although some people have been hospitalised."
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