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Water
in short supply despite rain
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Joseph Nhlanhla, IWPR (AR No. 156, 12-Feb-08)
February 12, 2008
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=342610&apc_state=henh
A young woman stoops
by the roadside in one of Bulawayo's poor, high density townships
where a huge water-filled crater extends into the road.
The sight of this woman
scooping water into a pail highlights the plight of many in this
city of more two million, where mains water cuts have continued
this year despite the heavy rains that have been pounding Zimbabwe
since last year.
"I use the water
for ablution purposes," she said after another round of heavy
rains hit Bulawayo recently.
While motorists curse
the coming of the rain because of the deep potholes it leaves in
its wake, the craters have become a lifeline, of sorts, for others.
Bulawayo is facing its
worst water crisis in years, and the city authorities say they are
not about to lift the stringent system of water rationing, even
though heavy rains are now filling up the reservoirs which supply
the city.
At the council-run boreholes,
long queues have become the order of the day and tempers flare.
Recently a man was struck on the head with a beer bottle as residents
fought over who should get water first.
While families have resorted
to using rainwater from standing pools, it is too dirty to be used
for drinking or cooking.
Officials say the shortages
are caused not by the lack of water as such, but by the lack of
foreign currency needed to purchase purification chemicals.
The shortage of potable
water in Bulawayo is closely connected with a standoff between the
city authorities and the Zimbabwe National Water Authority, ZINWA.
ZINWA is a recently-formed
agency which is supposed to be taking from municipal authorities
as the supplier of water to all urban centres in Zimbabwe. However,
its performance to date has been heavily criticised, and Bulawayo
City Council - controlled by the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change, MDC - has resisted the takeover. The government in Harare
has made it clear that as long as the takeover is resisted, the
local authority will not get any assistance from the centre.
"This is unprecedented,"
a councillor told IWPR, speaking on condition of anonymity. "The
council is now begging for money from companies so it can purchase
water purification chemicals. This is a local authority and rightly
should get a government grant to deal with such issues."
Council officials say
it is government departments based in the city that are the major
defaulters, having run up trillions of Zimbabwean dollars -
or millions of US dollars - in unpaid water bills.
The city is also under
pressure from the National Incomes and Pricing Commission to keep
water charges low, as part of the price-fixing policy the government
imposed to combat inflation last summer. The authorities in Bulawayo
say the resulting low revenue levels have also affected their ability
to treat and deliver water.
Further highlighting
the extent of the city's water woes, Bulawayo council clinics
are now asking expectant mothers to bring their own water with them
when they come in to give birth.
"What has compounded
the matter for the pregnant women is that they now spend days detained
at the clinics as they cannot be released to return home without
fully paying the clinic bills," said a nurse in one the council
clinics situated in one densely populated working class suburb.
Hospitals and clinics
in Zimbabwe have resorted to detaining patients who have not paid
their bills, as a way of trying to recoup their costs. But the longer
the patients spend at clinics with no running water, the more they
expose themselves to infection, which can lead to an even longer
stay in hospital, the nurse added.
A city council spokesman
said he was not aware that women were being asked to bring their
own water.
The lack of water has
only compounded the power cuts that have caused chaos at the city's
health institutions. There are reports that the outages have proved
fatal for patients at the city's largest state-run hospital
after life-support machines have ground to a halt.
Zimbabwe imports electricity
from countries like the South Africa, Mozambique and the Democratic
Republic of Congo, and owes substantial sums in back-payments to
these countries.
In January, ZESA started
supplying electricity to Namibia, aggravating the power shortage
on the national grid. It might seem strange that an export contract
should take precedence over domestic need, but the authorities point
out that the Namibians are investing large sums of money in refurbishing
Zimbabwe's Hwange coal-fired power station, and the country
badly needs this foreign currency injection.
As the energy crisis
deepens, both ZINWA and ZESA have refused to accept responsibility.
In other cities where
ZINWA has taken over mains water and sewerage, it blames the shortage
of electricity for its failure to maintain the waterworks. For its
part, ZESA says it has its own problems, including vandals damaging
substations.
Wherever the blame lies,
Bulawayo's residents are experiencing deprivations that many
say are the worst they can remember. It is something of a vicious
circle - with no electricity or fuel, many opt to cook meals
outside on open fires. But with the downpours continuing, it is
often impossible to light a fire.
As one resident told
IWPR, "We cannot afford paraffin that would enable us to prepare
meals, so for us the power blackouts mean long hours without eating
anything as we do nothing but wait for the rain to stop."
*Joseph Nhlanhla is the
pseudonym of an IWPR reporter in Bulawayo.
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