Zimbabwe’s second largest city, Bulawayo, warned residents on Wednesday to guard against outbreaks of disease as it was forced to cut their water supply.
Authorities said they had decommissioned one of Bulawayo’s three remaining dams because water levels were too low, leaving in operation only two of the five dams that supply the southern city of about one million people.
Bulawayo has faced water problems before but this is the first time it has had to issue a health warning and officials said the water shortage was likely to get worse.
”The city council is aware that water cuts may result in the outbreak of diseases and we wish to advise members of the public to take preventive measures,” Bulawayo spokesperson Pathisa Nyathi was quoted by the state-owned Chronicle newspaper as saying.
”Water will be available for seven hours in every two days and during that time people are advised to fill their containers and cover them up,” Nyathi said.
Last month more than 20 children died from a diarrhoea outbreak in a Zimbabwe mining town over a two-week period after drinking suspected contaminated water, official media reported.
Urban areas in Zimbabwe are struggling to provide services due to ageing infrastructure, including burst sewer pipes, and because foreign currency shortages have hampered imports of raw materials such as water treatment chemicals.
Earlier this year several people contracted cholera in two Harare townships after drinking contaminated water from shallow wells due to a breakdown in municipal services.
Inflation in Zimbabwe has risen above 4 500%, the highest in the world, while an eight-year economic recession has hit urban workers and resulted in shortages of fuel and food. — Reuters