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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Paying
the water bill prevents cholera
IRIN News
July 31, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=85529
Zimbabweans have been
given the good news and bad news about their water supplies. First,
the government declared the end of the devastating cholera outbreak;
then, residents in the capital, Harare, were told to expect widespread
cut-offs of water supplies over unpaid bills.
When the last case of
the waterborne disease in the Harare township of Budiriro was recorded
on 3 July 2009, the cholera epidemic that began in August 2008 had
claimed the lives of more than 4,200 people out of about 100,000
known cases.
Health and child welfare
minister Henry Madzorera told local media: "The nation experienced
the worst cholera outbreak between August 2008 and June 2009, but
the epidemic has been successfully contained and has ended."
Zimbabwe's dilapidated
water reticulation system and decaying sanitation system were widely
blamed for Africa's worst outbreak in 15 years. The collapse of
infrastructure mirrored the country's rapid economic descent, when
routine maintenance of the water and sanitation networks was neglected
and the scarcity of foreign currency meant water treatment chemicals
could not be imported.
The Zimbabwe National
Water Authority (ZINWA) was unable to provide clean water - or any
water at all - so residents took to digging shallow wells, which
were contaminated by the raw sewerage spilling into the city's streets.
The responsibility for water provision has now reverted to local
municipalities.
Analysts link the fading
away of cholera to the onset of the dry season, which reduces favourable
conditions for the waterborne disease to spread, and to widespread
education programmes.
"All districts,
provinces and cities will conduct post-mortems of the epidemic in
their areas, evaluating their responsive strategies, and plan forward
for future outbreaks, which have a strong likelihood of recurring
in view of continued sewerage and water problems," Madzorera
said.
Raw sewage still spills
onto the streets of some suburbs, providing a dank reminder of the
danger that cholera could return with the coming rainy season, but
work on restoring the city's water and sanitation systems has begun.
No free
water
Harare's municipality
this week placed a slew of adverts in the local media, warning residents
that the water supply would be disconnected if they did not settle
US$23 million in outstanding accounts, and has since made good on
their threats.
"Harare Water would
like to inform its valued customers that with effect from Monday,
27 July 2009, there will be a massive disconnection of water in
the low-, high-density, commercial and industrial areas to all those
consumers with outstanding water bills," the adverts said.
The mayor, Muchadeyi
Masunda, dismissed complaints by residents and insisted that all
monies owed be paid. "I have not received water at my house
for more than four years but I still pay my bills. No one is going
to be relieved of their obligation to pay their dues to council,"
he told IRIN. "What we may consider is to reduce the amounts,
but not total waiver."
Unemployment is estimated
at 94 percent, and since the local currency, the Zimbabwean dollar,
was withdrawn as an antidote to hyperinflation, the accounts are
expected to be settled in US dollars.
"We have held several
meetings with residents, who have said they are prepared to pay
outstanding bills so that we can restore service delivery. I think
we are winning the heart-and-minds war after explaining to residents
that our coffers are dry," Masunda said.
"I have been assured
by senior staff that as things stand, they are ready for any cholera
outbreak, and that they learnt their lessons in the last outbreak,"
he said.
However, the government
minister responsible for water, Sam Sipepa Nkomo, disputed the mayor's
claim. "The residents cannot be expected to pay for water which
they did not receive or use."
There was concern that
cutting off water supplies could fuel another cholera epidemic.
"Instead of disconnecting water supplies to residents and commercial
interests with genuine outstanding bills, the Harare authorities
should negotiate easy payment methods, otherwise we will have another
cholera disaster," he said.
"Remember, cholera
killed more than 4,000 people and infected close to 100,000 people.
Water is life, because everything that we do revolves around water,"
Nkomo pointed out.
"If clean water
is cut off, then it will force residents to look for alternative
sources, which will obviously be dirty. Disconnecting water is like
cutting off life."
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