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Engulfed
by sewage
IRIN News
March 14, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=77288
Bulawayo - To
get to Sinikiwe MaKhumalo's doorstep in Zimbabwe's second largest
city, Bulawayo, visitors have to step on a thin plank perched precariously
over a trench that prevents sewage from flowing into her house.
The 57-year-old grandmother
has endured this arrangement to access her home in the city's Old
Magwegwe working class suburb for the past five months after a sewer
burst close to her residence.
Service delivery
has collapsed in Bulawayo, after local authorities recently announced
that the municipality
was insolvent and unable to cater to the needs of its almost
two million residents
"The disgusting
odour is awful and becomes more unbearable by the day," she
lamented over the city municipality's failure to repair burst sewers
in her locality.
"I just hope a new
team that cares about residents' welfare will be elected to take
over the running of the city at the end of the month".
Zimbabwe is scheduled
to hold presidential, provincial and municipal polls on 29 March.
MaKhumalo's neighbour,
Ingrid Mayobodo, fearful that her two children would contract communicable
water-borne diseases, sent them to live with her sister in another
suburb. "I could not stand them playing 'hop-skip-and-jump'
over pools of sewage effluent to get into the house from the street."
She feared her children
risked contracting diseases in such an unhealthy environment. "Mosquitoes
are a menace at night. We keep doors and windows shut at all times,
living like we are in prison to avoid mosquitoes getting indoors."
Mayobodo suggested the
council should at least spray the pools of sewage effluent with
insecticide to control mosquito breeding or use disinfectants to
suppress the nauseating stench. "We can no longer enjoy our
meals in such conditions."
Possible
disease outbreak
The
city's unsanitary conditions has left residents fearful of a fresh
outbreak of cholera. The last outbreak occurred at the height of
a water crisis in 2007 when close to 300 people were hospitalised
and 11 died as a result of drinking contaminated water.
The region's consistently
low rainfall in the last few years had led to dwindling water levels
in the city's dams. Heavy seasonal rain in December 2007 and January
2008 has filled up most of the city's supply dams, allowing for
water restrictions to be lifted and enabling residents to flush
their toilets after use.
However, the sewer pipes
remain blocked, resulting in sewage overflowing into the streets
from manholes: "Our major problem is a shortage of manpower
to deal with more than 500 reported cases of sewer bursts,"
Phathisa Nyathi, the city municipality's spokesman, told IRIN.
Expensive
toilet paper
Council
workmen at work on a burst sewer in Old Magwegwe told IRIN that
maintenance of the aging sewerage system was a daunting task, but
it was aggravated by residents flushing down solid objects, causing
sewer pipe blockages.
"At times we retrieve
stones, broken glass, spoons, rags or mops and other hard objects
when clearing blockages in the system," council worker Jotham
Ncube said.
Ncube said most of the
families could no longer afford standard toilet paper and have had
to resort to newspapers or torn pieces of cardboard boxes for their
ablutions.
"It is no longer
unusual to find entire sheets of a newspaper, used sanitary pads,
children's shirts or shorts among items blocking the system",
he said.
Zimbabwe is grappling
with a more than 100,000 percent annual inflation rate - the highest
in the world - and unemployment levels of about 80 percent.
Blockages were also occurring
from the accumulation of sand in sewer pipes. "People use river
sand to clean their soot-covered pots because they cook over wood
fires when electricity is cut off during load shedding [a euphemism
for electricity outages] instead of commercial scouring powders
that are soluble," Ncube said. The dirty water was then flushed
down the toilet.
Magwegwe Residents Association
chairman Bazara Banyana rejected the argument that apportioned blame
on residents and said people had always used the same methods of
ablutions and cleaning of their utensils.
He said residents cannot
be expected to condone the absence of services when the residents
pay rates and taxes to the council in the expectation of the provision
of those services.
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