NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

NGO urges stop to water cuts

- BY SILAS NKALA Follow Silas on Twitter @silasnkala

AMATABELEL­AND non-government­al organisati­on has called on government to ensure citizens enjoy their right to water as households face water disconnect­ions by service providers due to failure to pay rates.

The Matabelela­nd Institute for Human Rights (MIHR) said water cuts were a gross violation of human rights, especially at a time United Nations protocols stipulate that government­s and sub-national government­s must prohibit any disconnect­ions of water to vulnerable people.

This also comes as most urban centres, especially Bulawayo and Harare are facing critical water problems.

Residents of the city have gone for six month or more without potable water.

“We wish to underscore the importance of the government and local authoritie­s to put in place mechanisms that protect vulnerable communitie­s from water disconnect­ions especially during this time of the COVID-19 pandemic,” the MIHR said in a statement.

“We note that water disconnect­ions do not happen to those who haven’t paid bills only, but there is a new phenomenon of disconnect­ions

at boreholes.

“This is where, in some urban and rural areas, those who haven’t paid for the borehole repairs are refused access to water and where borehole handles are removed to deny them access,” it said.

The human rights group also raised a red flag over gender-based violence at water points which has become rampant.

“Women and girls are being victimised at alternativ­e water points and their protection is very paramount especially considerin­g that the Constituti­on guarantees rights to personal security.

“This, therefore, calls for the police to patrol alternativ­e water points to protect women, girls, the elderly, people with disabiliti­es and children from unruly youths and men who victimise them,” MIHR said.

Their concerns also come at a time the world commemorat­ed the World Toilet Day on November 19 where the UN emphasised that government­s all over the world should guarantee access to water and stop water cuts in order to prevent diseases and to promote personal hygiene through hand washing.

In their statement on World Toilet Day, the UN said COVID-19 could spread easily if people did not have water and if people are not washing hands using soap and clean water.

“We emphasise that the hardest hit by COVID-19 are the poorest communitie­s, particular­ly some indigenous people, minorities and impoverish­ed rural communitie­s, as well as people living in crowded conditions and with difficulti­es in accessing adequate water, sanitation and hygiene services in refugee and internally displaced persons camps, informal settlement­s or temporary accommodat­ion for migrant workers, among others,” the UN statement read.

 ??  ?? Most residentia­l areas in Bulawayo have no access to water
Most residentia­l areas in Bulawayo have no access to water

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