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Typhoid spreads amid water shortage

Urban Zimbabweans are struggling with water shortages. IRIN
A shortage of clean water and adequate sanitation in one of the most populous townships in Harare, Zimbabwe’s capital, have caused an outbreak of typhoid. Experts warn it could herald the resurgence of cholera.

The Director of Health Services for Harare Municipality, Prosper Chonzi, told IRIN that 36 people were being treated for typhoid at the Beatrice Infectious Diseases Hospital, just outside the capital, and more than 200 suspected cases have been reported.
No deaths have so far been linked to the outbreak and health authorities have indicated that they have adequate medical supplies to treat those infected.

However, Chonzi said his department was on “red alert” and may be forced to ban public gatherings and close schools in affected areas.

Typhoid and cholera are both bacterial diseases transmitted by consuming contaminated food or water, but cholera has a much shorter incubation period and is more deadly.

Zimbabwe suffered a cholera epidemic that claimed over 4,000 lives and infected nearly 100,000 people between 2008 and 2009.

Most of the typhoid infections have occurred in the highly populated township of Dzivarasekwa, where untreated sewage flows in the streets, creating ideal conditions for the disease to spread.

While talking to IRIN, Farai Mbizi, a Dzivarasekwa resident, pointed to a group of children skipping across flowing sewage just a few metres from where the adults were selling vegetables.

“It is not surprising that there should be a typhoid outbreak because we are living in an extremely unhygienic and dirty environment,” Mbizi said.

The onset of Zimbabwe’s rainy season last week coincided with a national power failure that disrupted water supplies and enhanced the conditions conducive to the spread of typhoid.

Intermittent water supplies caused by the city’s dilapidated water and sanitation infrastructure, and the inability of many poor families in Harare to pay their water bills, have caused a large number of households to resort to sinking shallow wells that are susceptible to being flooded with contaminated water. According to Chonzi, some of the wells in Dzivarasekwa have tested positive for typhoid.

Read more
 Making the water safer
 Cholera keeps a low profile
 Threat of waterborne disease from unsafe water
 Cholera is not going away anytime soon
The outbreak started just weeks after the city’s engineering director, Christopher Zvobgo, warned that the failure to supply adequate clean water to the capital and its environs could trigger a cholera outbreak similar in scale to that of 2008.

A local newspaper, the Daily News, reported that Zvobgo had told a Harare City Council meeting at the end of October: “We have to start planning now because the situation is getting out of hand and we risk having another cholera outbreak while we are busy talking here.”

Harare’s sewerage and water purification systems are outdated and subject to frequent breakdowns, often caused by the power cuts that plague the city.

Water Resources Management Minister Samuel Sipepa Nkomo told IRIN that the government would be providing Harare with US$50 million, as part of a water crisis budget aimed at preventing the spread of waterborne diseases like typhoid and cholera.

“This is essentially a short-term intervention,” he said. “We expect Harare Municipality to rehabilitate or replace parts of their water purification infrastructure and sewerage systems.”

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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