Pressure is piling on Harare City Council to decisively
deal with the perennial typhoid outbreaks with Health minister David
Parirenyatwa calling for the demolition of Mbare’s Matapi hostels.
This follows an outbreak of typhoid in the highly-congested
hostels early this week with 21 cases detected so far.
Parirenyatwa said he was shocked at the filth and poor
services in the area. “There is uncollected garbage, overflowing raw sewage and
no running water. This is a conducive environment for diseases like typhoid to
thrive,” he said during a tour of the hostels on Thursday.
Parirenyatwa said the hostels should be demolished as they
were now inhabitable. “Yes, we will treat and put measures to deal with the
cases, but if situations like this persists, we will not win this war,” he
said.
The Community Working Group on Health (CWGH) challenged the
city to urgently address the key drivers of typhoid in order to permanently
stop future recurrence.
“The situation on the ground indicates that while
infrastructure is present, it is old, poorly functioning and poor availability
of safe water leads to sourcing of water from less protected, informal
sources,” said CWGH director Itai Rusike.
He said it was surprising that council was planning to
introduce a typhoid vaccine in a bid to prevent future infections without
adequately addressing the key drivers of the disease.
“It has been noted that the recurrent outbreaks of typhoid
in Harare are being caused by erratic supply of clean water, supply of
contaminated drinking water, burst sewer pipes and poor hygiene,” Rusike said.
He said the typhoid vaccination should only complement
service provision and should not be taken as the main intervention strategy in
the fight against the outbreak.
The Combined Harare Residents’ Association (CHRA) also
implored Harare City Council to address the major drivers of typhoid and
prevent needless loss of lives in the capital.
“CHRA is concerned that typhoid continues to spread across
Harare mainly as a result of acute water shortages, poor sanitation, raw sewage
spillages and uncollected garbage,” the residents’ group said.
“Of major concern is the fact that Harare City Council has
apparently failed to prioritise service delivery with $10 million out of the
$12 million collected monthly going towards obscene salaries for council staff.
Service delivery has largely suffered due to the fact that council is
allocating most of its financial resources to overpaid salaries.”
CHRA said as a result of council’s failure to prioritise
service delivery, residents had been exposed to diseases such as typhoid and
cholera.
“This unfortunate development comes at a time Harare City
Council has proposed an increase in water tariffs, a development that is likely
to worsen the already dire situation for residents especially given the current
economic environment,” CHRA said.
The Community Water Alliance also argued the problem was
linked to the quality of water the council is supplying to residents.
But council insisted the fresh typhoid outbreak reported in
Mbare early this week was not linked to the city’s erratic water supplies but a
direct result of unhygienic conditions in the suburb.
“The outbreak has nothing to do with chemicals, if anything
our coverage of water delivery has improved. Typhoid is all about hygiene,”
council spokesman Michael Chideme said, adding there was no need for residents
to panic as the local authority had stocked adequate water treatment chemicals.
Newsday
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