A
woman and her children carry water buckets fetched from a tank installed at a
church at Luveve on the outskirts of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe on November 24, 2016 ©Zinyange
Auntony (AFP)
|
From jobless youths hired
to dig wells to illegal sellers supplying water in buckets and large tanks,
some enterprising Zimbabweans are cashing in on the country's desperate water
shortages.
Women
pump water from a bush pump installed at a school at Luveve on the outskirts of
Bulawayo, Zimbabwe on November 24, 2016 ©Zinyange Auntony (AFP)
|
Zimbabwe's
long-standing water supply problems have been worsened by a severe drought
ravaging the southern African region.
Taps
in large parts of the country run dry for several days in a week, including the
capital Harare, as part of government imposed restrictions.
In
suburbs around Bulawayo, the country's second city, scenes of people carrying
20-litre (5.3 US gallon, 4.4 UK gallon) buckets of water on their heads or
pushing wheelbarrows laden with water drums from mobile tankers are a daily
occurrence.
Although
authorities prohibit the private selling of water, the ban has done little to
discourage the business.
Poor
and desperate residents fork out between US$0.50 cents and US$1 for a 20-litre
bucket of water sold by illegal water dealers. According to World Bank figures,
average income per person in Zimbabwe in 2015 was less than US$2.50 per day.
"As
Zimbabweans we have gone through a lot of suffering that has made us very
creative as we look for solutions," said water seller Mandla Dungeni.
"It's
just a matter of capitalizing on the situation to make extra cash," he
told AFP.
"I
find ways of delivering the water either at night or during the day but in a
clever way."
Dungeni
says he collects the water from the city centre and industrial areas in
Bulawayo, where cuts are not regularly imposed.
With
Zimbabwe's economy in the doldrums, the government has struggled over the last
decade to maintain the crumbling water infrastructure.
The
water supply crisis in 2008 was marked by a deadly cholera outbreak which
killed at least 4,000 people.
The
disaster, which is still fresh in the minds of many Zimbabweans, took place at
the height of the country's economic and political crisis as the government
failed to service ageing infrastructure, with sewage contaminating water
reservoirs.
- Stockpiling -
Spending
extra money to buy water has presented an additional burden for many households
who rely on meagre income to feed themselves.
Many
residents have resorted to keeping stockpiles of water in small barrels
whenever the taps are running.
Soneni
Ndiweni, 54, a resident of Bulawayo's Magwegwe suburb, told AFP that she has
turned one of the rooms in her house into a water storeroom, just to avoid
buying from "water merchants" roving the town.
"The
prices range from 50 cents to a dollar per bucket, so one family can spend
between US$3 and US$5 a day on water," she said.
"What
worries me is the health aspect," she lamented. "It is never safe to
use water from unknown sources so we try to keep enough drinking water. If we
have to buy water it will be for laundry and bathing."
Several
international aid organizations have raised the alarm over Zimbabwe's water and
sanitation crisis which has been exacerbated by the devastating El Nino
drought.
According
to the UN, the drought which has affected some 18 million people across the
southern African region, will be at its worst around January.
As
the dry conditions persist, more illegal water sellers in Zimbabwe look set to
cash in on the crisis.
Another
seller, Bernard Phiri, said he sells as much as 1,000 litres of water on a good
day, charging US$1 for a 20-litre bucket of treated water, while the same size
bucket of untreated water goes for 50 cents.
"We
just saw a gap in the market and residents appreciate our service," said
Phiri.
Phiri,
who does not own a car, said he had to hire a pick-up truck to deliver water to
his customers across the city.
"My
profit is marginal, but at least we get something at the end of the day, since
most of us are unemployed."
Local authorities insist that anyone caught selling water without a licence would be arrested.
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