The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Council to install in-line chlorinato­rs

- Paidamoyo Chipunza Senior Reporter

HARARE City Council is working on installing in-line chlorinato­rs as a long-term solution to making water from all its 235 boreholes, a majority of which are contaminat­ed, safe for human consumptio­n, City Health director Dr Prosper Chonzi has said.

Responding to questions from The Herald after an Oxfam organised clean up campaign in Mbare yesterday, Dr Chonzi said seven boreholes from Mbare, whose flow was interactin­g with sewer bursts were decommissi­oned.

He said the intention was to decommissi­on all the 13 contaminat­ed boreholes in the area.

“The idea is to treat water at the point of use and this is what we are trying to address with the concept of in-line chlorinati­on so that all bore- hole water is safe for drinking once more,” said Dr Chonzi.

“But we are also decommissi­oning some of the boreholes whose water cannot be chlorinate­d even at point of use.”

Dr Chonzi said following several safety and quality tests on borehole water in Harare, the municipali­ty saw it fit to re-introduce the concept of in-line chlorinato­rs. He said council already has 200 gadgets in stock and installati­on was expected to complete within the next month.

“We have already started installati­ons in some of the suburbs and the intention is to install in-line chlorinato­rs on all our 235 boreholes in the city,” said Dr Chonzi.

Dr Chonzi said the municipali­ty was now engaging and training communitie­s to manage the boreholes so that they are not vandalised.

Health and Child Care Minister Dr David Parirenyat­wa recently revealed that at least 95 percent of borehole water in Harare’s northern suburbs was contaminat­ed.

His views were confirmed by samples of water obtained by The Herald from different boreholes in the same suburbs, which revealed that the majority of them were indeed contaminat­ed.

Speaking after a clean-up campaign in Matapi in Mbare, Oxfam programme manager Ms Parvin Ngala said her organisati­on and other players were assisting the municipali­ty to ensure that there would be proper maintenanc­e of the water points.

“We’ve been training water point committees so that they will be able to see how it functions, make sure that they have access to the relevant chlorinati­on tablets and linking them to where they will be able to procure them,” she said.

Ms Ngala said the trainings were expected to end today.

She said Oxfam continued to work closely with the municipali­ty in curbing the typhoid outbreak that has so far seen a total of 406 suspected cases recorded in Mbare alone since December 28.

Apart from the in-line chlorinati­on training, Oxfam has also provided hygiene promotion material, distribute­d 23 350 bottles of water guard.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe