While many countries appear to have met the U.N. Millennium
Development Goal (MDG) of halving the proportion of people without
sustainable access to safe drinking water, rights activists say that
African countries which have taken to installing prepaid water meters
have rendered a blow to many poor people, making it hard for them to
access water.
“The goal to ensure that everyone has access to clean water here in
Africa faces a drawback as a number of African countries have resorted
to using prepaid water meters, which certainly bar the poor from
accessing the precious liquid,” Claris Madhuku, director of the Platform
for Youth Development, a Zimbabwean democracy lobby group, told IPS.
Prepaid water meters work in such a way that if a person cannot pay in advance, he or she will be unable to access water.
As a result, African rights activists like award-winning Terry
Mutsvanga from Zimbabwe and other civil society organisations are
against the idea of prepaid water meters.
“If one has to pay upfront before accessing water, then it would mean
those in most need would be denied access,” Mutsvanga told IPS, adding
that water is a global human right.
Mutsvanga was echoing the United Nations General Assembly which, in
July 2010, emerged with a binding resolution on the human right to water
and sanitation – but for Africa, the human right to water may be far
from reality.
Laden with a population of approximately 1.1 billion, Africa’s 300
million people have no access to safe drinking water, according to the
U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP).
Many rights activists on the continent attribute Africa’s mounting
water challenges partly to the advent of prepaid water meters.
“We already have hundreds of millions of people without access to
clean water, and imagine the severity of the water challenge if water
prepaid meters would reach everyone on the continent,” Mutsvanga said.
Over the years, prepaid water meters have been widely used in African
countries like Namibia, Nigeria, Swaziland and Tanzania, as well as
South Africa, where the meters which were rolled out in 1999 are
currently in low-income areas.
Zimbabwe is currently conducting a pilot project aimed at installing
the prepaid water meters, in towns and cities to begin with. And the
country’s impoverished urban dwellers like 51-year old Tinago Chikasha
are in panic mode, fearing the worst may be coming their way.
“Local authorities are pressing ahead with the idea of prepaid water
meters, but jobless people like me have no money to make prepayments for
water while we already have unpaid water bills running into thousands
of dollars, which local authorities say they will deduct through all
future water prepayments, meaning we run into the danger of having dry
water taps for as long as we owe local authorities,” Chikasha told IPS.
In non-African countries like the United Kingdom, prepaid water
meters are no longer being used after they were declared illegal in 1998
for public health reasons.
They were also abandoned in South Africa at one stage following a
massive cholera outbreak, but were reintroduced and have replaced
previously free communal standpipes in rural townships.
Despite U.N. recognition that water is a human right, international
financial institutions such as the World Bank argue that water should be
allocated through market mechanisms to allow for full cost recovery
from users, and civil society activists like Melusi Khumalo in South
Africa blame capitalist tendencies for necessitating the advent of
prepaid water meters.
“Prepaid water meters are a result of such negative policies by
institutions like the World Bank and they [prepaid water meters] deny
water access to those in most need,” Khumalo, who is affiliated to
Parktown North Residents’ Association in Johannesburg, told IPS.
In Zimbabwe, Mfundo Mlilo, chief executive officer of Combined Harare
Residents’ Association (CHRA), told IPS: “We are vehemently against the
prepaid meter project because it will not solve the problems of water
delivery, and these prepaid water meters will not lead to residents
receiving adequate safe and clean water, while the same prepaid water
meters will also not lead to increase in revenue flows as the City [of
Harare] claims.”
Last month, Harare’s Town Clerk Tendai Mahachi was reported by
Zimbabwe’s Weekend Post as saying: “With these meters we expect roughly
to save about 20-30 percent of the current costs we are incurring.”
According to Mahachi, at least 300 000 households in the Zimbabwean
capital are scheduled to have prepaid water meters installed, while all
new housing projects will be obliged to install meters.
Meanwhile, with prepaid water meters set to rake in big money for
some of Africa’s local authorities, there are those like Nathan Jamela,
an urban dweller in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second largest city, who fear
the health consequences.
“We experienced the worst cholera outbreak in 2008, and we fear that
if prepaid water meters are installed in every household here we will
slide back to the crisis, with many people unable to afford to pay for
water,” Jamela told IPS.
from here
Commentary and analysis to persuade people to become socialist and to act for themselves, organizing democratically and without leaders, to bring about a world of common ownership and free access. We are solely concerned with building a movement of socialists for socialism. We are not reformists with a programme of policies to patch up capitalism.
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