Guest guest Posted October 2, 2006 Report Share Posted October 2, 2006 U N I T E D N A T I O N S Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN) - [These reports do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations] CONTENT: 1 - SOUTH AFRICA: HIV/AIDS and water privatisation - the human impact 1 - SOUTH AFRICA: HIV/AIDS and water privatisation - the human impact JOHANNESBURG, 2 October (PLUSNEWS) - " Water, gathered and stored since the beginning of time in layers of granite and rock, in the embrace of dams and the ribbons of rivers - will one day, unheralded, modestly, easily and simply flow out to every South African who turns a tap. That is my dream. " These were the words of novelist Antjie Krog on the promulgation of South Africa's post-apartheid national water policy in April 1997. Nine years later, her dream has not materialised; affordable water is not reaching the poor in the townships and informal settlements. Commodity for the privileged The government introduced limited free water and prepaid meters in many municipalities as part of its cost-recovery measures in 2002, but experts and affected residents argue that the 6,000 litres of free water per household per month is too little to meet the most basic needs. Besides the inadequacy of free supplies, the cost of supplementing supplies has shot up and fuelled a general resentment of the cost-recovery measures. " Water is now a commodity for the privileged. The 6,000 litres supplied free often run out in 11 days for those with big families like me. After that, the meter cuts the supply, and I have to pay more for additional water. On average, the household can go for up to six days per month without water because we do not have the money. We are all unemployed, " said Soames Manyathi, a resident of Phiri in Soweto. Manyathi said his 12-member family has adopted stringent water-conservation measures like flushing the toilet a maximum of two times a day, sharing baths and reusing water for washing clothes and kitchen implements. Before the arrival of water meters in 2002, many families in Phiri had adequate supplies for a flat rate of 110 rand (US $15) per month. " Water has become an expensive commodity for the poor people, but it remains cheap for the rich. It is surprising that costs that are being recovered from the poor are used to subsidise cheaper supplies to the rich, " he said. HIV/AIDS and special water needs Most of the families in Phiri are big, and there is widespread unemployment and poverty. Because of the high rate of HIV/AIDS in the community, restrictions imposed on access to water have badly affected the provision of care for the terminally ill. Phukubje, who cares for her ill sister, said the 590 rand ($82) foster-care grant she receives each month is insufficient to provide the basic needs and pay for adequate water supplies. " The free supply of water lasts only six days, but that is only if we try our best to save it. The patient needs more water for regular bathing, and they drink a lot per day. The grant cannot buy us enough food. Starvation is a big problem now because it has become impossible to operate the family gardens we depended upon for nutritional supplements, " Phukubje said. When the water runs out, residents are forced to hire vans for up to 20 rand ($2.75) per person to bring water from wherever they can successfully beg for it. However, the age-old tradition of community compassion has unravelled, and many neighbours are less willing to share. According to a report entitled 'The Struggle Against Silent Disconnections: Pre-Paid Meters and the Struggle for Life in Phiri', relations between neighbours have deteriorated as people have begun to steal water from each other. According to an assessment by Desmond , a doctor and the president of the Southern African HIV Clinicians Society, the high cost of water has far-reaching implications on HIV/AIDS prevention and care. said water is essential for the preparation of food to minimise the risk of intestinal infections, to which HIV/AIDS patients are more vulnerable. " Because PLWHA [people living with HIV/AIDS] are susceptible to frequent bouts of diarrhoea, infected individuals require additional drinking water to avoid dehydration. Frequent bathing is also necessary, because PLWHA are susceptible to a variety of skin infections. Additional drinking water is necessary for taking medicines and for making foods easier to patients suffering from mouth ulcers or thrush, " said. HIV/AIDS patients approaching the terminal stage often use toilets more frequently, a situation that demands frequent flushing. said patients in the advanced stage of illness soil their clothing and beds more frequently, imposing the additional needs of washing the patients and the laundry regularly. He added that the cultivation of nutrition gardens to provide a healthy diet, which is critical for the terminally ill, depended on decent access to sufficient and readily available water. " In HIV/AIDS-affected households, access to additional water is not only critical for the infected individuals, but also for caregivers and for the whole household in order to lessen the burden of caring for the ill and to ensure that other members do not have to forgo their basic water requirements in order to care for those infected with HIV/AIDS, " said. HIV/AIDS and water privatisation According to Dale McKinley of the Coalition Against Water Privatisation, privatisation has aggravated the suffering of HIV/AIDS patients and bred a number of social health problems in the townships and informal settlements. " The commodification of water also presents a serious challenge to underequipped HIV/AIDS caregivers working under difficult conditions in the poor areas, " commented McKinley. He said privatisation was in conflict with the notions of water as a human right, the provision of basic needs, and the stated goal of free basic services for all. McKinley said the poor had become " customers " intead of being protected by the government. " In addition to entrenching the logic of payment for a basic resource, the prepaid meter individualises the relationship of people to water and makes any notion of individual right to access dependent on individual ability to pay. Water provision has been made the responsibility of a private company, but only to a paying individual, " he said. Efforts to get a comment from the City of Johannesburg were fruitless, but a report posted on its website said the installation of water meters in areas defined as high-consumption zones would go ahead until 2007. The exercise is part of the city's cost-recovery measures being enforced under Operation Gcin'amanzi (Zulu for 'save water'). Soweto was targeted because it is a high-water-consumption area. " Total water loss in the high consumption areas is estimated at 82,000 mega-litres per annum, or 225 mega-litres per day. Approximately 83 percent of these losses occur in Soweto. Soweto also consumes 30 percent of the water purchased by Johannesburg Water from Rand Water and 90 percent of the water purchased for deemed high consumption areas, so targeting Soweto for the implementation of a Water Demand Project could yield significant savings in the future, " the report said. The report added that the city expected more than 160,000 households to be covered by Operation Gcin'amanzi when it ends in 2007. The only tangible benefit so far is that many households that were not paying for water previously are now being billed. However, the council is yet to investigate the full impact of the imposition of water meters on poor households. " What requires further investigation is whether the full level of service leaves sufficient water for health and hygiene purposes for poor households who may be unable to pay for water consumption above the Free Basic allocation. It is not clear whether the basic allocation of 6 kilolitres is too little, and whether this needs to be increased to 10 or 12 kilolitres per month, " read part of the council report. /This article is part of a series on HIV/AIDS and communities of humanitarian concern. Visit: www.plusnews.org/AIDSreport.asp/ [ENDS] This is non-reply e-mail. Please do not hesitate to contact us at Mail@.... Principal donors: IRIN is generously supported by Australia, Canada, Denmark, ECHO, Japan, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. For more information, go to: http://www.IRINnews.org/donors [This item comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian news and information service, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. All IRIN material may be reposted or reprinted free-of-charge; refer to the copyright page (Http://www.irinnews.org/copyright ) for conditions of use. IRIN is a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.] PLUSNEWS Tel: +27 11 895-1900 Fax: +27 11 784-6759 Email: Mail@... To make changes to or cancel your subscription visit: http://www.irinnews.org/subscriptions Subscriber: AIDS treatments Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 2, 2006 Report Share Posted October 2, 2006 U N I T E D N A T I O N S Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN) - [These reports do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations] CONTENT: 1 - SOUTH AFRICA: HIV/AIDS and water privatisation - the human impact 1 - SOUTH AFRICA: HIV/AIDS and water privatisation - the human impact JOHANNESBURG, 2 October (PLUSNEWS) - " Water, gathered and stored since the beginning of time in layers of granite and rock, in the embrace of dams and the ribbons of rivers - will one day, unheralded, modestly, easily and simply flow out to every South African who turns a tap. That is my dream. " These were the words of novelist Antjie Krog on the promulgation of South Africa's post-apartheid national water policy in April 1997. Nine years later, her dream has not materialised; affordable water is not reaching the poor in the townships and informal settlements. Commodity for the privileged The government introduced limited free water and prepaid meters in many municipalities as part of its cost-recovery measures in 2002, but experts and affected residents argue that the 6,000 litres of free water per household per month is too little to meet the most basic needs. Besides the inadequacy of free supplies, the cost of supplementing supplies has shot up and fuelled a general resentment of the cost-recovery measures. " Water is now a commodity for the privileged. The 6,000 litres supplied free often run out in 11 days for those with big families like me. After that, the meter cuts the supply, and I have to pay more for additional water. On average, the household can go for up to six days per month without water because we do not have the money. We are all unemployed, " said Soames Manyathi, a resident of Phiri in Soweto. Manyathi said his 12-member family has adopted stringent water-conservation measures like flushing the toilet a maximum of two times a day, sharing baths and reusing water for washing clothes and kitchen implements. Before the arrival of water meters in 2002, many families in Phiri had adequate supplies for a flat rate of 110 rand (US $15) per month. " Water has become an expensive commodity for the poor people, but it remains cheap for the rich. It is surprising that costs that are being recovered from the poor are used to subsidise cheaper supplies to the rich, " he said. HIV/AIDS and special water needs Most of the families in Phiri are big, and there is widespread unemployment and poverty. Because of the high rate of HIV/AIDS in the community, restrictions imposed on access to water have badly affected the provision of care for the terminally ill. Phukubje, who cares for her ill sister, said the 590 rand ($82) foster-care grant she receives each month is insufficient to provide the basic needs and pay for adequate water supplies. " The free supply of water lasts only six days, but that is only if we try our best to save it. The patient needs more water for regular bathing, and they drink a lot per day. The grant cannot buy us enough food. Starvation is a big problem now because it has become impossible to operate the family gardens we depended upon for nutritional supplements, " Phukubje said. When the water runs out, residents are forced to hire vans for up to 20 rand ($2.75) per person to bring water from wherever they can successfully beg for it. However, the age-old tradition of community compassion has unravelled, and many neighbours are less willing to share. According to a report entitled 'The Struggle Against Silent Disconnections: Pre-Paid Meters and the Struggle for Life in Phiri', relations between neighbours have deteriorated as people have begun to steal water from each other. According to an assessment by Desmond , a doctor and the president of the Southern African HIV Clinicians Society, the high cost of water has far-reaching implications on HIV/AIDS prevention and care. said water is essential for the preparation of food to minimise the risk of intestinal infections, to which HIV/AIDS patients are more vulnerable. " Because PLWHA [people living with HIV/AIDS] are susceptible to frequent bouts of diarrhoea, infected individuals require additional drinking water to avoid dehydration. Frequent bathing is also necessary, because PLWHA are susceptible to a variety of skin infections. Additional drinking water is necessary for taking medicines and for making foods easier to patients suffering from mouth ulcers or thrush, " said. HIV/AIDS patients approaching the terminal stage often use toilets more frequently, a situation that demands frequent flushing. said patients in the advanced stage of illness soil their clothing and beds more frequently, imposing the additional needs of washing the patients and the laundry regularly. He added that the cultivation of nutrition gardens to provide a healthy diet, which is critical for the terminally ill, depended on decent access to sufficient and readily available water. " In HIV/AIDS-affected households, access to additional water is not only critical for the infected individuals, but also for caregivers and for the whole household in order to lessen the burden of caring for the ill and to ensure that other members do not have to forgo their basic water requirements in order to care for those infected with HIV/AIDS, " said. HIV/AIDS and water privatisation According to Dale McKinley of the Coalition Against Water Privatisation, privatisation has aggravated the suffering of HIV/AIDS patients and bred a number of social health problems in the townships and informal settlements. " The commodification of water also presents a serious challenge to underequipped HIV/AIDS caregivers working under difficult conditions in the poor areas, " commented McKinley. He said privatisation was in conflict with the notions of water as a human right, the provision of basic needs, and the stated goal of free basic services for all. McKinley said the poor had become " customers " intead of being protected by the government. " In addition to entrenching the logic of payment for a basic resource, the prepaid meter individualises the relationship of people to water and makes any notion of individual right to access dependent on individual ability to pay. Water provision has been made the responsibility of a private company, but only to a paying individual, " he said. Efforts to get a comment from the City of Johannesburg were fruitless, but a report posted on its website said the installation of water meters in areas defined as high-consumption zones would go ahead until 2007. The exercise is part of the city's cost-recovery measures being enforced under Operation Gcin'amanzi (Zulu for 'save water'). Soweto was targeted because it is a high-water-consumption area. " Total water loss in the high consumption areas is estimated at 82,000 mega-litres per annum, or 225 mega-litres per day. Approximately 83 percent of these losses occur in Soweto. Soweto also consumes 30 percent of the water purchased by Johannesburg Water from Rand Water and 90 percent of the water purchased for deemed high consumption areas, so targeting Soweto for the implementation of a Water Demand Project could yield significant savings in the future, " the report said. The report added that the city expected more than 160,000 households to be covered by Operation Gcin'amanzi when it ends in 2007. The only tangible benefit so far is that many households that were not paying for water previously are now being billed. However, the council is yet to investigate the full impact of the imposition of water meters on poor households. " What requires further investigation is whether the full level of service leaves sufficient water for health and hygiene purposes for poor households who may be unable to pay for water consumption above the Free Basic allocation. It is not clear whether the basic allocation of 6 kilolitres is too little, and whether this needs to be increased to 10 or 12 kilolitres per month, " read part of the council report. /This article is part of a series on HIV/AIDS and communities of humanitarian concern. Visit: www.plusnews.org/AIDSreport.asp/ [ENDS] This is non-reply e-mail. Please do not hesitate to contact us at Mail@.... Principal donors: IRIN is generously supported by Australia, Canada, Denmark, ECHO, Japan, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. For more information, go to: http://www.IRINnews.org/donors [This item comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian news and information service, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. All IRIN material may be reposted or reprinted free-of-charge; refer to the copyright page (Http://www.irinnews.org/copyright ) for conditions of use. IRIN is a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.] PLUSNEWS Tel: +27 11 895-1900 Fax: +27 11 784-6759 Email: Mail@... To make changes to or cancel your subscription visit: http://www.irinnews.org/subscriptions Subscriber: AIDS treatments Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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