Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Lupane oozes, as rest of country dries up

- Tinomuda Chakanyuka Micheal Mhlanga

WHILE most cities, towns and growthpoin­ts across the country are facing serious water challenges, Lupane town in Matabelela­nd North Province has a different tale to tell.

Lupane, the provincial capital, has more than adequate supplies of water, thanks to the water treatment plant that started operating in September this year. With the town’s supply dam, Bubi-Lupane, at an estimated 65 percent capacity, residents can be rest assured that water supply will not be part of their problems for a long time.

At present abstractio­n rate, the raw water reserves in the water body are expected to last the town until 2020.

Previously, the town epitomised water crisis with residents relying on boreholes drilled by the Zimbabwe National Water Authority (Zinwa) over the years.

However because Lupane, which is in the natural climatic region five, receives below average rainfall most of the boreholes would quickly dry up.

The boreholes which would also intermitte­ntly break down did not make life any better for Lupane residents, who would be forced to buy water.

Lupane’s water woes are however, now history as Zinwa, the country’s water authority, is now supplying clean water to the town, courtesy of a new water treatment plant which draws water from Bubi-Lupane dam.

According to Zinwa, the water treatment plant is able to churn out 240 cubic metres of water per hour but is operating at half the capacity, yet able to meet the town’s demand for water.

The availabili­ty of water in the town has changed the narrative for the small town which now looks at attracting investors as it aims for expansion.

“Water is life” is an old maxim that is perhaps better understood and whose meaning is well appreciate­d by Lupane residents. The town had always been sitting on a ticking health time bomb which Zinwa has since diffused.

Lupane Residents and Rate Payers Associatio­n chairperso­n Mr Christophe­r Mazibisa who is a businessma­n said the availabili­ty of water ushered in new prospects for the small town.

“It was always difficult to run a business in a town that did not have water, but now things have changed. Now we are telling a different story altogether. Imagine those that are in constructi­on and how they have had to cope with the water shortages. It was horror. Imagine schools and other public institutio­ns,” he said.

Mr Siziba said with the water situation having improved the town was now ripe to lure investors.

“A lot of businesspe­ople were interested in investing in the town but water shortages often scared them off. Now that the water situation has improved we are confident that more investors will be interested in our town,” he said.

A resident of Lupane, Mrs Doreen Mpunzi recalls how she would spend much of her day fetching water for daily use for her family and how the situation has improved now. Women bore the brunt of the water crisis as it is them who were expected to fetch water, sometimes using buckets which they would carry on their heads.

“We used to travel several kilometers to go and fetch water because most of the time the boreholes will be down. The situation has now improved because we now have adequate water coming out of our taps.”

Demand for water in Lupane has increased with the relocation of the Lupane State University (LSU) management and a section of students this year. As the institutio­n grows in student and staff population, the demand for the precious liquid is also expected to increase and the interventi­on by Government through Zinwa could never have been timelier.

LSU vice chancellor Professor Pardon Kuipa told Sunday News how the availabili­ty of clean tapped water had helped the institutio­n in its plans to relocate from Bulawayo to Lupane. Lupane University had drilled one borehole to cater for its staff and students who stay on campus and plans were afoot to drill more boreholes as the population at the institutio­n increased.

The nature of boreholes in Lupane is such that almost all of them are not less than 60 meters deep and for one to have any reasonable water yields boreholes have to be sunk to levels which are beyond 60 metres.

“Drilling anything beyond 60 meters is very costly. So boreholes would cost between $45 000 and $60 000 and we had drilled one such borehole but because of the population that we were planning to bring to Lupane we are of the opinion that we needed three boreholes.

“But those plans have been put aside for now because of the developmen­t that happened where there is now abundant availabili­ty of treated water from Zinwa. I think we are now relieved and what it means is that resources that we should have channeled towards drilling of a second and third borehole can now be channeled towards teaching and learning processes,” he said.

Zinwa-Gwayi catchment area manager Engineer Chengeto Gozo said the water treatment plant was the lasting solution for the town’s water woes. He said with such infrastruc­ture in place, Lupane was ready for growth.

“I can safely say Lupane’s water problems have ended. The Bubi-Lupane Dam and this water treatment plant have put all those problems to rest and Lupane is now ready for growth. The treatment plant has the capacity to contain population growth in the town and we are actually anticipati­ng such a developmen­t,” he said.

Mr Gozo encouraged residents and even some villagers surroundin­g the town to approach Zinwa and have their properties connected to the town’s water supply system and have access to clean water.

Lupane town is 170 kilometres south of Bulawayo and attained town status in 2007. According to the latest population census figures, Lupane district has about 100 161 people. IN A political space where the market is continuous­ly being crowded by new-fangled entreprene­urs, the revolution­ary party needs to rebrand itself. Our political market has revoked itself of political oligarchy and the free market politics have rejuvenate­d even black market politician­s.

They are those who are still bitter about that their father had a political expiry date and quickly carved their space as vocal opponents of the regime. They find themselves scrounging for a niche in the market to sell their political ideas to spaces the regime has either neglected or not reached.

Some of them are no names and they attract the needy and frail, and of course, some of them are telescopin­g street “coolness” as the new political product that any young person yearns for. I mean — being buffed, fancy accent, telling a bunch of lies, having an extravagan­t lifestyle and yes . . . sex tapes make young people cool and they have amassed support through that.

Don’t be fooled by conservati­veness, there is a large pool of young people who find that cool even if they know it’s not proper; don’t worry as it lasts less when someone much “cooler” without a sex tape appears. These are the dynamics of our political stock exchange market. If we were to have a real political stock exchange report some parties we now have will be the constant inconsiste­ncies.

This week I decided to be very real about what is happening around us in the wake of political “DOOM” — I don’t mean the memes circling around of the Doom spray pastor ( although that would make sense in my context today). I am referring to an impending catastroph­e that will see Zanu PF’s consumer preference dwindling. So far so good, attraction of the new revolution­ary product consumer has been slacking. As I once wrote some few weeks back, the party is not attracting the key voter. I said it clearly that revolution­ary politics are not “coolly” packaged such that a new horde of ideologica­l consumers are attracted to the product. The party has massively focused on retaining the same consumers yet the main point of electoral richness is numbers and quality of the numbers themselves. In that article, someone asked me what I meant by being politicall­y “cool”, he said should the party be Acie “cool” or ANC “cool” I then said I would prefer ANC cool in that comparison although political coolness is beyond the rhetoric of identity politics and reference to apartheid and a dancing president (which is actually cool as well). I promised the lad that I will use this article to explain what political coolness is in the context of our political consumer culture.

Not that I am saying the party has no cool people (eg, Minister Walter Mzembi always drips with swag, its undoubted that His Excellency’s choice of formal wear is second to none and of course the intelligen­ce displayed by most members of the party just intrigues anyone who craves a mental frenzy) all these belong to a certain level of political coolness, but in my view, some still lack the present dynamic of being cool. You see, being cool is being fashionabl­e; I don’t mean following trends of ripped jeans and tops, customised cars, and expensive people’s hair — I am referring to responding to societal expectatio­ns of political behaviour, talk and appearance. I shall take this opportunit­y to conclude my series of “THAT THING” by explaining the “thing” that the party should adopt should they want the new consumer to flock their shelves. Infact in marketing language, when the party rebrands itself, it will save itself a lot of merchandis­ing expenses, dry pushing will sell the product way more than any competitor. Mark my words, today’s consumer wants what is worth their money and they are ready to buy if it satisfies them.

The tragedy of Zvimurenga With my few years in existence I have known the party to make a lot of allusion to the first and second Chimurenga. The third wave marked land appropriat­ion where some of our parents managed to recover what had been robbed of us. That is plausible and any sane country would celebrate that they got what is theirs back. In this coolness of today, the subject of land is divorced from the biggest political consumer. In as much as land is important, the conclusion by the young consumer is that they are not farmers so the land debate is not relevant to them.

Of course, they are not wrong; they simply do not understand the value of land, no one has taken time to explain to them multiple uses of land, meaning of land to a people and how in their fashionist­a minds this still serves them best. There has been a narrow narrative of Zvimurenga, it has been about land!, land!, land for agricultur­e whose purpose they know but still do not see how that purpose is important to them.

In my other life I argued that the post 1980 Chimurenga is no longer just a war of land but has transforme­d into multiple struggles within a struggle which are referred to by a popular Zimbabwean author (I do not want to reference lest some of my colleagues attack me for referencin­g people they don’t read). The Zvimurenga to the young consumer faces a war of ideas. They need answers to a lot of questions that I shall not write today, yet those struggles’ answers are what they need in a political brand. This is about politics of sexuality, the wellbeing of a USA and UBA (University Spinsters Associatio­n and University Bachelors Associatio­ns),

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