Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Resident sues council, minister over water connection delays

- Mashudu Netsianda Senior Court Reporter

A RESIDENT from Bulawayo’s Pelandaba West suburb has taken Environmen­t, Water and Climate Minister Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri and the Bulawayo City Council (BCC) to court over delays in connecting water and sewer to some parts of the suburb.

Mr Nylon Gatsheni (50) has through his lawyers Dube Banda, Nzarayapen­ga Legal Practition­ers, filed a court applicatio­n at the Bulawayo High Court citing Minister Muchinguri-Kashiri, BCC and Mr Edmund Campion Takawira Shonhiwa, the land developer of Pelandaba West Housing Project, as respondent­s.

In papers before the court, Mr Gatsheni is also seeking leave to institute a class action in terms of section 3 of the Class Actions Act and section 85 of the Constituti­on allowing him to rope in 37 other residents to collective­ly mount the legal challenge.

Mr Gatsheni wants the court to direct the respondent­s to speed up the connection of water and sewer, arguing that the delay was a health time bomb ready to explode.

In his founding affidavit, Mr Gatsheni said due to the respondent­s’ delay to connect water, he is now forced to buy water from neighbouri­ng suburbs at an average cost of $15 per month.

“The lack of water and sewer connection at Pelandaba West is a recipe for a health disaster. They are 37 individual­s who are members of the class of persons aggrieved by the actions of the respondent­s in failing or neglecting to connect water to the residents of Pelandaba West Housing Project,” he said.

“I am a pensioner and will mostly encounter serious challenges to enforce my claim as an individual since I do not have enough resources to mount a legal challenge against the respondent­s. A class action is the appropriat­e recourse to enforce my right.”

Mr Gatsheni said the respondent­s’ actions were a violation of his fundamenta­l right to safe, clean and potable water.

“The State is obligated to take reasonable legislativ­e and other measures within the limits of the resources available to it, to achieve the progressiv­e realisatio­n of this right. The positive duties are imposed on the State by section 7 (a) of the constituti­on as read with section 6 of the Water Act and section 183 of the Urban Councils Act,” argued Mr Gatsheni. He said Minister Muchinguri-Kashiri is expected to fulfil her obligation by taking meaningful steps to address the issue of water. “The Government must ensure that organisati­ons such as BCC that has a responsibi­lity to supply and distribute water in accordance with the law are afforded the resources to enable them to do so. The Minister has the primary responsibi­lity to ensure that the institutio­n that she delegates to supply water is equipped to carry out the mandate,” he said. Mr Gatsheni said the class of people whom he is representi­ng in this case, are low income earners. “I submit that in the circumstan­ces of this case a class action is appropriat­e and I pray for an order in terms of the draft,” he said. Mi n i s t e r Muchinguri­Kashiri, in her notice of oppos i t ion filed through all the Civil Division in the Attorney General’s Office, said the applicant ought to have exhausted internal remedies first before engaging the courts.

She said it is BCC’s obligation to supply treated water to its residents although the Zimbabwe National Water Authority (Zinwa) plays a restricted role of providing raw water.

The Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Environmen­t, Water and Climate, Ms Grace Tsitsi Mutandiro said her ministry has taken steps to improve the provision of water services and is negotiatin­g several agreements on the constructi­on of dams and water projects.

She said Mtshabezi Dam and pipeline project, which was commission­ed in October 2016, will help further boost supply to Umzingwane Water Treatment Plant thereby improving BCC’s water supplies.

“It is on that basis that the Minister cannot be said to have failed to avail water in terms of the Water Act, the constituti­on and internatio­nal law,” said Ms Mutandiro.

She said her ministry has initiated Command Water Harvesting by drilling boreholes across the country to alleviate water challenges.

“The first respondent (Minister Muchinguri­Kashiri) is seized with the plight of Pelandaba West residents and would intervene accordingl­y as well as engage BCC to address the water crisis,” said Ms Mutandiro.—@mashnets

 ??  ?? Minister Muchinguri-Kashiri
Minister Muchinguri-Kashiri

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