Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Water and sanitation relief for Matobo communitie­s

- Lovejoy Phiri Features Correspond­ent

MRS Sinikiwe Nkomo (44) has been married in Malaba Village in Matobo district for the past 11 years. She has managed to survive in her village despite water challenges they have been facing.

Those that have lived in the village longer have even been contending with the problem, almost owning it.

The district lies in the Matabelela­nd South province which by any measure is a little too arid compared to other provinces in the country although pockets of Matobo are not as dry as much of the province.

Mrs Moyo says she has seen all the levels of poverty and hardships that have hit her village mostly due to the scarcity of the precious liquid that has been exacerbate­d by the phenomenon of climate change.

The challenge of having to wake up at 4am and walk a distance of 5km to fetch water at Madletshe Dam so that her children can bath before they go to school was a necessary but torturous exercise always accompanie­d by backaches, headaches and sore feet which were now becoming minor sicknesses to her and other villagers.

“Access to water had been a huge problem for us because we used to travel almost up to 5km just to fetch water. Sadly we were now drinking from the same open dam with livestock from the surroundin­g communitie­s,” she said.

She is among villagers in Matobo district who have shared the worries and challenges they used to face before Moriti OA Sechaba, a Non-Government­al Organisati­on, came to their rescue by drilling a borehole near their homes.

The borehole was a big relief to the villagers who expressed their excitement at the new developmen­ts in their villages gratifying what Moriti OA Sechaba had done for them. According to villagers in Matobo district, the project by Moriti OA Sechaba has come as a blessing to them at a time when they were facing challenges of easy access to water, lack of knowledge on sanitation and hygiene.

Mr Alphias Maphosa, a 55-year-old villager from Ward 23 in Woodlands in Matobo calmly stressed out his observatio­ns on the new developmen­ts by Moriti laying bare his past experience­s before the borehole was drilled.

He said it was very hard for them because they had to walk very long distances just to get water. He said little attention was paid to how safe the water was, stressing that all they needed was water.

“We had a big challenge when it comes to water for drinking and for domestic use. We used to dig up wells along the river but due to siltation the wells collapsed and at times dried very fast, leaving us and our livestock with no option but to share the dirty dam water as we wait for the rainy season to come.”

He lauded the borehole drilling saying it was a milestone developmen­t in the area and a big relief to the women whose burden had been lifted.

Matobo district administra­tor Mr Obey Chaputsira commended the good work that Moriti was doing in the district saying the projects were part of developmen­t partnershi­ps that they entered into.

He said Moriti constructe­d more than 150 squat hole toilets (Blair toilets) at different schools and drilled boreholes and repaired those that were affected by Cyclone Dineo.

“We are happy that the partnershi­p we entered with Moriti has seen us covering a lot of ground in a very short space of time. We have managed to replace part of the infrastruc­ture that was destroyed by Cyclone Dineo-induced rains. Boreholes were drilled, toilets were built at different schools while health clubs are arming our communitie­s with the requisite knowledge to fight diarrheal diseases.

“The long and short of it is that we are happy with the progress so far made. Our communitie­s were facing water problems while a number of schools were short of toilets after they were destroyed by Cyclone Dineo. In some areas people were walking more than 5km to the nearest water source which sometimes would be a dam where livestock would also be drinking,” said the Mr Chaputsira.

A woman who identified herself as Mrs Esnath Nyathi said words could not express her happiness at the life changing developmen­t.

Articulati­ng her joy about the new borehole, Mrs Nyathi said: “I’m very happy because now we can even wash our blankets, our kids had suffered a lot as they used to push wheelbarro­ws for long distances on a daily basis. They used to complain about sore feet and hurting backs but all that is history.”

Moriti OA Sechaba has been instrument­al in improving provision of water, sanitation and hygiene in selected schools and communitie­s in Matobo.

They have offered their support to Mahetshe Primary, Shashani Primary, Hlupho Primary and Shashani Primary just to name a few.

They have worked in communitie­s such as Woodlands Village, Ndiweni Village and Zamadube Village and said they were rolling out more programmes in the district. Moriti constructe­d 15 Blair toilets at Mahetshe Primary School and is constructi­ng more after some were destroyed by the rains that were associated with Cyclone Dineo early last year.

Moriti OA Sechaba has establishe­d 40 health clubs in Matobo district in their quest to improve sanitation and hygiene. The programmes have extended to primary and secondary schools as they aim to educate children about health and environmen­t issues.

The Executive Director of Moriti, Mrs Sefelipelo Bhehe said it was important to improve sanitation and hygiene at grassroots level.

She said they have adopted the catch them young aphorism where children have to learn good hygiene so that they could go home and teach others who do not have a chance to benefit from these programmes.

“The Health Clubs aim at promoting good learning spaces for hygiene as the children would further go and transmit hygiene education to their households thereby improving the community health standards. This is a good opportunit­y for children to learn good hygiene.”

However, villagers in Matobo district also gave future recommenda­tions on what they expect Moriti to help them with in the coming years. FREEZING in political Siberia owing to treacherou­s traits, a supposedly very witty mind called Professor Jonathan Nathaniel Moyo wrote of the then head of state and government in a lengthy, bitterness­propelled diatribe:

“Perennial wisdom from divine revelation and human experience dictates that all earthly things great or small, beautiful or ugly, good or bad, sad or happy, foolish or wise must finally come to an end.

It is from this sobering reality that the end of executive rule has finally come for Robert Mugabe who has had his better days after a quarter of a century in power.”

For those of us who added choosing God during the days of their youth, as well took the enlightenm­ent route, the now bitter Professor’s words did not fall on a thorny path and were prickled, instead they fell on an academical­ly fertile soil, and thanks to divine guidance!

We paid attention, he continued: “Given the foregoing, President Mugabe has no reason whatsoever to continue in office as that is no longer in his personal interest and is most certainly not in the national interest.

He just must now go and the fundamenta­l law of the land gives him a descent constituti­onal exit that he must take while he is still able to do so to save the nation and his legacy.”

The certified deserter, who allegedly deserted the war of liberation and recently reportedly deserted his own family, clearly said former President Mugabe had overstayed and had to go, as a way of saving his legacy!

So why the brouhaha and hallabaloo since Mugabe’s legacy has been saved? We hastened to agree in unison that for someone who humiliated Cde Mugabe on numerous occasions to shift the “humiliatio­n” mantra to some good Samaritans, who actually saved the former President from a humiliatin­g political freefall last November, is actually an insult to these very literate Zimbabwean­s and the entire globe.

The very people the bitter Professor is today demonising for “humiliatin­g” Mugabe, actually went out of their way to save the legacy of the former President, consequent­ly restoring that of the entire nation.

Added to vehemently refusing to accept that his political sun has set, it’s so appalling how someone once considered a spin-doctor by many, can take his ignorance to the global podium, failing to understand the meaning of “resignatio­n”.

Or probably as the better-than-everyone fundi, notorious for pouring out his vitriol in so many words and in loud-sounding-nothing format even to the ordinary men’s ears, he prefers to borrow “abdication”?

All the same, the beleaguere­d Prof should know that both terms allude to voluntaril­y relinquish­ing or handing over ownership of something, including power. For the record; as a result of “criminal” elements who had sent our great nation to the economic, political and even social dungeons, former President Mugabe was left with no option but to voluntaril­y resign (and may the icon have a good rest).

Today Prof Moyo walks on a black carpet of shame, on a path strewn with treachery, broken hearts and dreams of some individual­s which he politicall­y chewed and spit, as he egoistical­ly set out to manoeuvre his way up the political ladder.

How he doesn’t tire at leaving a trail of broken hearts wherever he goes boggles the mind. Many were misled by the false political prophet, from the Tsholotsho declaratio­n to the ambitious and misguided Generation 40 cabal.

Up to today, many innocent souls are still bleeding from the bruises of that fateful #DinyaneHig­hSchoolCur­se and the G40 doomed train, when the political chameleon had made them think they had made it.

At a time when the nation is thirsty for progress he, still in gross cowardice, preaches divisivene­ss and violence from his hideout.

His bitterness can surely not be a security threat for millions of peace loving Zimbabwean­s who need nothing besides socio-economic transforma­tion. We are primarily concerned with meeting our political and economic objectives, coupled with upholding the principles of the revolution.

In case his memory is short-changing him owing to geographic­al confusion, in November 2017, Zimbabwean­s in their totality and from all walks of life, including political, marched in solidarity in quest of saving our nation from people who had found pleasure in spreading political, social and political rot.

Ah! And who can dare forget the wild celebratio­ns on the streets, including Twitter, when news that “criminals” who had surrounded former President Mugabe had eloped, filtered through?

Looking lost, miserable and sounding bitter, Prof Moyo didn’t waste time in venting his frustratio­n. Making noise on BBC’s Hardtalk, he threatened to take Zimbabwe and the world aback to the 19th and 20th Centuries when violence was the answer.

Prof Moyo will always go down memory lane as the purported spin doctor who spinned his political career to nothingnes­s. All the same, wanderer, wanderer, please come home!

 ??  ?? Women draw water from a borehole in rural Zimbabwe
Women draw water from a borehole in rural Zimbabwe
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