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Whither
Zim on water situation
Chipo
Masara, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
November 03, 2013
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/2013/11/03/whither-zim-water-situation/
Water scarcity
has to be the biggest survival challenge Zimbabweans are facing
at the moment.
One shudders
to think what would happen if the problem were left to deteriorate
even further.
Water is the
most important resource on earth, a fact that many in Zimbabwe should
be well aware of by now.
But maybe the
realisation sunk in a little too late, as apparent efforts to improve
the management of water resources at the top level have only just
begun to gain some sort of momentum, only after it has become glaringly
clear that there is a big problem.
So much time
is spent by the ordinary Zimbabwean gathering any type of water
available for daily use, time that might have been better used on
more productive endeavours, had the water situation not been so
dire.
Women and children
mostly bear the brunt of the country’s collapsed water management
system, as gathering water for domestic use is considered their
responsibility.
Water scarcity
is especially a challenge for urban dwellers, the bulk of whom used
to depend on the once dependable but now rarely available tap water.
Because many people in Zimbabwe’s urban areas cannot remember
when last they had running taps, many have had to turn to wells,
most of which are unprotected, for their daily water supply.
For those “lucky”
enough to have been getting a regular supply of the municipal water,
a recent laboratory report supplied by the Standards Association
of Zimbabwe that revealed that Harare’s tap water contained
pathogens, should be a cause for concern.
Although the
test results were specifically for Harare’s municipal water,
chances are that if tested, tap water being supplied in other urban
areas in the country will not fare any better.
Typhoid and
cholera, diseases that were done away with a long time ago in most
parts of the world, are a constant threat to the Zimbabwean community.
In fact, there is currently an outbreak of dysentery cases, amid
fears that it might precipitate the resurgence of typhoid.
The diarrhea
cases have been blamed by the Health ministry on contaminated water.
But many people continue to find themselves with no choice but to
keep turning to the contaminated water sources, as the next option
would be not getting any water at all.
But just how
did the situation deteriorate to such dangerous levels? Although
it would seem the problem stems more from the responsible authorities’
inability to properly plan, develop, distribute and manage the optimum
use of the precious water resource, the government blames it on
the lack of funds, in turn blamed on the West-imposed sanctions!
But playing
the blame game will certainly not make the problems go away.
Rivers and dams,
the main sources of water, have been polluted to unprecedented levels.
Waste from industrial processes, litter and raw sewage, are some
of the matter that fills up the water sources today.
As if all that
was not enough, ecologically-sensitive areas like wetlands that
exist to help ensure a future supply of water are under imminent
threat in the country. Most have been destroyed and the few that
are left are in grave danger. According to the convention on wetlands
of international importance the Rasmar Convention to which Zimbabwe
is a signatory, wetlands include swamps and marshes, wet grasslands,
oases, estuaries, mangroves and coral reefs, and human-made sites
such as fishponds, rice paddies, reservoirs, and saltpans, among
others.
They act as
storage for rainwater and as a result, water supply to people depends
on the conservation of the wetlands. But they are rapidly being
destroyed and thus, the country’s future water supply is in
what seems to be even bigger trouble.
Successful management
of any resource requires knowledge of that resource.
The extent of
the water problem in the country requires that people that actually
know what they are doing tackle it. It is time the revamping of
the water resource management structures was prioritised.
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