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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Declaring
health emergency not enough
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
December 04, 2008
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Introduction
The outbreak of cholera in epidemic proportions has brought Zimbabwe
back to the attention of the region and the world. Zimbabwe's
complex emergency, which is now causing so much suffering, taking
lives and breaking the society apart at its seams, has been several
years in the making. A key factor in creating a perfect environment
for the breeding and spread of the cholera bacterium has been the
neglect of essential services by the ZANU PF government over the
years. But this has only been one effect of complete mismanagement
and deliberate disregard for the lives of ordinary Zimbabweans.
ZANU PF rule
has brought a decline in basic standards of living for many years
now; but in the months while Robert Mugabe has clung to power in
the face of rejection by the people at the polls in March this year,
the downward spiral has changed into a precipitous plunge.
In August this
year, just when the first cases of cholera were being reported in
Harare and Chitungwiza, WOZA undertook research designed to present
a picture of the living standards of our members in Harare-Chitungwiza
and Bulawayo. Some of the results of that study are now available,
and present a stark demonstration of the circumstances, which have
provided the backdrop for the cholera epidemic.
Water
and sanitation
Cholera thrives where there is inadequate provision for sanitation
and inadequate supplies of pure water for household use such as
drinking, cooking and bathing. The germs breed in human faeces and
are spread through ingestion, when contaminated water or foods are
used. Thus, it spreads easily where a sewage system is not functioning
and raw sewage is present, or people are forced to defecate on the
ground when toilets are blocked. The absence of purified water has
also become a critical factor in the spread of cholera in the urban
areas of Zimbabwe.
The results
of WOZA's survey highlight all of these problems in relation
to water and sewage. The survey sampled just over 1,000 of WOZA's
members from Bulawayo, Harare and Chitungwiza. Of these, virtually
all depend on their city council for water. 31% stated that they
usually get their water from a council tap inside their house, while
62% use a council tap outside their house; 5% use a public tap,
and 1% a borehole. 50% use a borehole sometimes (mainly in Bulawayo
where many boreholes were drilled in response to recurring drought
conditions in previous years) - suggesting that half are forced
to use a borehole when the water is not flowing in the tap. 97%
stated that they have experienced water cuts, with 60% having gone
for a week or more without water. This masks some who have gone
for much longer, many for weeks and months.
Of those surveyed,
only 6% said they usually had access to clean water, while 77% sometimes
had such access, and 16% never did. Obviously, during the time of
water cuts residents are at serious risk as they seek water from
sources other than their taps. However, what is not clear from the
statistics, because residents cannot know the facts from day to
day, is that even when water is present, it has rarely been treated
with all the chemicals required to make it safe.
The other serious
implication of failing water supplies is the dysfunction of the
sanitation and sewage system. 88% of the respondents stated that
they depend on flush toilets with, on average, 9.8 people using
each toilet. 5% use a pit latrine and 4% a Blair toilet. When the
water is cut off for days or weeks at a time, toilets do not function.
Even when the water is on, the frequency of cuts means that the
pipes have become clogged, resulting in many leaks and breaks, with
sewage flowing all over. 11% of the respondents indicated that they
had experienced burst sewers, which took more than six months to
repair, while 23% had waited more than a month for repairs. When
toilets are not working, people begin to use the bushy areas between
residential suburbs as a toilet, with all that implies for attraction
of flies and spread of any germs, including cholera. Such practices
also have security implications as a teenage WOZA member was recently
raped in Bulawayo whilst using the bush as a toilet.
In August, when
the survey was conducted, 20% already reported cholera or some other
form or diarrhoeal infection had affected their families during
sewer bursts. Heavy rain, which began only in November, takes the
human waste both over the ground and down to the underground water
table while many people are looking for useable water in shallow
wells; it then becomes clear that contaminated water is the norm.
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