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Harare
cuts all water supplies to residents
IRIN News
January 14, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=76227
Residents of the Zimbabwean
capital, Harare, and Chitungwiza, a dormitory town 35km to the southeast,
are to be without water for seven days because of persistent power
cuts that have affected bulk water treatment and distribution, the
authorities have announced.
A spokesman for the Zimbabwe
National Water Authority (ZINWA), the parastatal responsible for
national water treatment and distribution, told local media at the
weekend that the frequent power failures at Harare's Morton Jaffray
Waterworks would mean that "Harare and Chitungwiza will, this
whole week, experience a loss of water supplies due to problems
beyond our control."
An outbreak of more than
400 diarrhoea cases - markedly more than expected for this time
of year - in two low-income suburbs, Mabvuku and Tafara, during
the recent holiday period were attributed to Harare's already erratic
water supplies.
There are fears that
the week-long blanket water cut could lead to increased health risks
from waterborne diseases, although many residents in the capital
have been receiving heavily discoloured water for the past month.
ZINWA's general manager,
Lisben Chipfunde, said the week-long water cut was because "Unlike
in situations of power cuts, whereby everything returns to normal
after reconnection, it takes a bit of time to reset the pumps and
have them channelling water to the other pump stations."
However, ZINWA employees
who declined to be identified told IRIN that the water shortages
had nothing to do with power cuts, but were because "We have
run out of chemicals to treat the water. Water treatment chemicals
will be sourced from Zambia and Malawi and, within a week, we hope
to have received the chemicals."
A senior ZINWA official,
who declined to be identified, told IRIN that "Residents have
been receiving strange muddy water because chemicals were running
out."
Health
concerns
The
lack of access to potable water is raising serious concerns among
humanitarian and advocacy organisations. "It's particularly
important for children to have access to clean safe water but these
water cuts will make the task of availing safe water to children
very difficult," James Elder, spokesman for the UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF) told IRIN.
Elder said UNICEF was
providing water tanks in Harare suburbs affected by outbreaks of
diarrhoea and also to Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo, in the southeast
of the country. The children's fund was also distributing water
purification tablets.
"The water cuts
in Harare and Chitungwiza come at a time when we are already responding
to water shortages in Bulawayo and Harare, and diarrhoea outbreaks
in some outer Harare suburbs."
Precious Shumba,
spokesperson for the Combined
Harare Residents Association (CHRA), a civic organisation advocating
good local governance, said the weeklong water cut was likely to
result in serious health issues, and blamed the absence of an elected
city authority. In 2001, the ruling ZANU-PF government replaced
Harare's elected city authority with a government-appointed commission.
"ZINWA can bring
a long list of excuses for poor delivery, but water shortages were
never experienced under a democratically elected local authority,"
she said.
"The current government-appointed
commission running the city of Harare has also failed to deliver,
as refuse has not been collected for several months, making it possible
for waterborne diseases to spread."
Johnny Rodrigues, chairman
of the watchdog organisation, the Environmental Taskforce, said
waterborne diseases was not the only threat to the health of residents,
and that "ZINWA is discharging raw untreated effluent from
industry and residential houses into Harare's main water supply
dam. The heavy lead metals in industrial effluent expose residents
to other diseases, such as cancer."
ZINWA has argued that
the release of raw untreated sewage was a consequence of being unable
to perform maintenance work on sewage treatment plants because of
a shortage of foreign currency.
Zimbabwe is suffering
the world's highest inflation rate, officially cited at 8,000 percent
but estimated at 25,000 percent by independent economists.
Many Harare residents
told IRIN they had been filling every available container with water
in preparation for the water cut. Cuthbert Tambe said he had instructed
his children to harvest as much rainwater as possible while he was
at work, by collecting runoff from the roof and other buildings.
"Over the past month, where possible, we have been harvesting
rainwater, and of course it has turned out to be much cleaner than
treated water."
Bottled water appears
to be in short supply in Harare, and only affordable to a few. Hotels
have begun limiting their number of guests in anticipation of the
weeklong water cut.
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