|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Cholera-hit
Zimbabwe cuts water supplies to capital
AFP
December 01, 2008
http://www.africasia.com/services/news/newsitem.php?area=africa&item=081201155057.fbmdz0lc.php
Zimbabwe has cut water
supplies to the capital Harare, state media said Monday, as the
health minister urged the public to stop shaking hands in a desperate
bid to curb a deadly cholera epidemic.
The city has suffered
periodic water cuts for years as the crumbling economy has caused
widespread power shortages that often leave pumps idle.
But the city-wide cut
appeared aimed at stopping the flow of untreated water around Harare,
which is at the epicentre of the cholera epidemic that has claimed
425 lives since late August -- most in just the last month.
The complete shutdown
of water services caught many families by surprise, sending people
into the streets carrying containers to search for water from wells
or cisterns and adding to the hardships of daily life under President
Robert Mugabe's regime.
Some residents have resorted
to digging shallow wells in their yards in the hope of finding water,
while making another hole to serve as a latrine -- which could worsen
the sanitary conditions that caused the cholera epidemic.
The Zimbabwe National
Water Authority (Zinwa) stopped pumping because it had failed to
obtain chemicals to treat the water supply, the government mouthpiece
Herald newspaper said.
"Most parts of Harare
-- including the city centre -- did not get water yesterday amid
claims by Zinwa staff that the authority had stopped pumping after
it ran out of one of the essential chemicals," the Herald reported.
Health Minister David
Parirenyatwa, who said Sunday that the cholera caseload had topped
11,000, urged the public to stop shaking hands to prevent the disease
from spreading.
Shaking hands is an important
part of greeting in Zimbabwe, and the gesture can last for several
minutes when close acquaintances meet.
"Although it's part
of our tradition to shake hands, it's high time people stopped,"
Parirenyatwa said in the Herald.
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change again urged Mugabe's government accept large-scale
humanitarian relief to cope with the epidemic.
"My appeal to the
international community as a matter of urgency is for food and medicine
as the country is failing to cope with the humanitarian crisis that
has hit Zimbabwe," the party's deputy leader Thokozani Khupe
said.
Residents in Harare's
populous sister city of Chitungwiza told AFP that their taps had
also run dry, while some government offices closed due to the lack
of water and sanitation in the buildings.
Wealthier residents as
well as some churches and businesses have long ago installed deep
wells or cisterns.
Long lines formed around
the city anywhere that had water flowing, while vendors at the main
Mbare market were doing a brisk business in jerricans.
"Today is one of
my busiest days. I have sold more than 20 containers since morning,"
said George Munetsi, an Mbare vendor who charged 35 US dollars for
a 70-litre container -- a fortune in a country where 80 percent
of the population lives in poverty.
Cholera spreads through
the water, when human excrement mixes with drinking water or food.
The disease is a highly
contagious, but treatable illness that causes severe diarrhea and
vomiting that can kill a patient.
Although cholera is curable,
Zimbabwe's hospitals lack drugs, equipment and staff to care for
patients.
The disease has already
spread into neighboring South Africa and Botswana, raising fears
of a regional crisis. Seven people have died of cholera in South
Africa after leaving Zimbabwe.
The cholera epidemic
has compounded the daily misery faced by ordinary Zimbabweans, who
struggle to survive with the world's highest inflation, last estimated
at 231 million percent, while nearly half the population needs emergency
food aid.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|