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Pathway :: Home
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Good intentions plus poor implementation equals dry taps |
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Contributed by Jim Elliott
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Monday, 30 June 2008 |
IPS Date posted:Wed 2-Jan-2008
Where
Zinwa has taken over, rates have increased ten-fold, taps run dry,
sewage and water pumps burst regularly, while waterborne diseases have
become part of urban life.
Written by Tonderai Kwidini
Harare - A
20-litre bucket in hand, Abigail Shonhiwa ponders the stretch ahead in
her journey to the next watering hole, a distance of about seven
kilometres. Her suburb has been facing recurrent water shortages since
2000, in part because it is built on a plateau in the Zimbabwean
capital, Harare. The ageing treatment plant at the Morton Jeffrey Water
Works, located about 20 kilometres outside of the city, has difficulty
building up enough pressure to push the water through to the tap at
Shonhiwa’s house. The British colonial administration put the water
works infrastructure in place several decades ago, and the current
government has not adequately maintained or replaced the equipment.
Shonhiwa can say little about the Water Act of 1998, which the
government introduced in an effort to ensure that all its citizens
would have sufficient access to water. "I know nothing about that. All
I know is that Zinwa is now in charge of water affairs," Shonhiwa told
IPS with an expression of resignation as she set out on the remainder
of her journey.
Zinwa, the Zimbabwe National Water Authority, a
parastatal organisation, is tasked with managing the country’s water
affairs. It was set up in terms of the Zimbabwe National Water
Authority Act at the same time as the Water Act of 1998 was passed by
parliament. The two acts together replaced an earlier Water Act of
1976, because government wanted to provide the people of Zimbabwe with
more equitable access to water. At the Zambezi Basinwide Stakeholders
Forum held in the resort town of Victoria Falls in northern Zimbabwe
last month, the country’s minister of water resources and
infrastructural development, Munacho Mutezo, said that the previous
legislation had made water provision and management an impossible task
- and that broader consultation was needed in this regard. In terms of
the two acts of 1998, Zinwa would take over the running of water
affairs and infrastructure at all levels of government, including those
of municipal authorities. The parastatal was to assume responsibility
for the construction and maintenance of dams, for all systems required
to ensure the distribution of water and for billing operations.
"The
main purpose of the creation of Zinwa was to make water available to
all the people throughout the country, as previously some people in the
rural areas were still using water from unprotected sources like
rivers. Now there are boreholes and dams almost everywhere," Mutezo
told delegates at the Victoria Falls conference. However, certain water
experts have a different viewpoint on the way water resources are being
managed in Zimbabwe. In a 2006 paper titled 'Water sector reforms in
Zimbabwe', Hodson Makurira and Menard Mugumo acknowledged that
"Although Zimbabwe has the legal framework for integrated water
management, the situation on the ground does not reflect the policy."
The process of taking over the various water authorities has been slow
and fraught with controversy. Zinwa was supposed to ensure that water
was affordable and accessible even to the poorest communities in the
country; yet where it has taken over, rates have increased ten-fold,
taps run dry, and sewage and water pumps burst regularly -while
waterborne diseases have become part of urban life. To date, the agency
has not built a single dam, while three major dams supplying water in
the southern region of the country were decommissioned after drying up.
Zinwa has met with grim resistance from residents of Harare
since it assumed control of water management in the capital - also
Zimbabwe's largest city. The Combined Harare Residents Association
(CHRA) says there is no difference between the Water Acts of 1927 and
1976 and that of 1998. "This talk about introducing pieces of
legislation aimed at improving water availability is bar talk. The
coming in of these new laws has actually worsened the problem of water
shortages, particularly the vesting of all water powers in the hands of
Zinwa. In all fairness, the coming in of Zinwa heralded a new era -
that of water shortages," said Jabusile Shumba, CHRA senior programmes
and advocacy officer. The distressing experiences in Harare have caused
residents of other towns and cities to oppose Zinwa’s bids to take over
water management in their respective areas. For example in Gwanda,
about 125 kilometres south of Bulawayo, in southern Zimbabwe, Mayor
Thandeko Zinti Mnkandla says his municipality will not hand over its
sewer reticulation system to Zinwa because of that organisation’s
reputation for incompetence.
Some commentators speculate that
the national government has insisted on turning over water management
in urban areas to a bungling parastatal because the cities and towns
tend to support the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
"There is no hope for the future. We don’t really know what’s happening
at Zinwa. Maybe the parent ministry knows, but the past two years have
been appalling," MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa told IPS. Zinwa often
attempts to defend itself by saying that it does not have enough
foreign currency to purchase essential water equipment. A Zinwa
official who spoke to IPS on condition of anonymity explained, "We have
been bashed left, right and centre. People blame us for the water
shortages, but we have only been operational for less than two years.
There is no money to finance major projects such as the rehabilitation
of water works, which we inherited in obsolete state." The past few
years have seen a deepening crisis in Zimbabwe, where government has
come under fire for economic mismanagement and widespread human rights
abuse."
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