THE Bulawayo City Council has been fined $5 000, while a number of
companies have been fined up to $1 000 for environmental crimes that
result in the pollution of Umguza River.
The Environmental
Management Agency (EMA) also fined a number of leather tanning companies
in the Belmont industrial area, for releasing untreated toxic chemicals
directly into the environment.
The toxins reportedly end up in
Umguza River, via the city's storm drains, where they can cause cancer,
skin disorders and a number of water-borne diseases to villagers in
Umguza district.
They also kill fish and other marine life.
Leading bakeries that include Lobels and Bakers Inn were issued with warnings in an ongoing monitoring exercise by the agency.
Speaking
during a tour of illegal dumpsites and environmental hotspots in the
city, EMA's provincial environmental manager for Bulawayo, Mr Decent
Ndlovu, said the pollution at Umguza River had reached a crisis levels.
He
appealed to the judiciary to mete out stiffer sentences to offenders
saying at present, the country's legal system did not seem to take
environmental crimes seriously, although they had far reaching effects
that could affect people for generations.
"We issued BCC with a
ticket for $5 000 for discharging raw sewage directly into the
environment at a number of points, including broken pipes at Sidojiwe
Flats and another broken pipe that pours effluent directly into Umguza
River at Kingsdale suburb. The problem at Kingsdale has been around for
more than two years," said Mr Ndlovu.
He said council was contravening section 22 (1) of Statutory Instrument 6 of 2007.
"The
waste from other pipes in the city travels through storm drains and
eventually reaches Umguza River. It infects the water with faecal
colliforms that have pathogens that can cause cholera, dysentery,
bilharzia and typhoid. These diseases can be communicated to people who
drink the water downstream at Umguza," said Mr Ndlovu.
When Chronicle visited the discharge sites, an overpowering stench pervaded the areas.
Mr
Ndlovu said the Cold Storage Company (CSC), Belmont Leather and
Prestige Leather were fined $500 each for illegal dumpsites while
another tannery was fined $1 000 for deliberately channelling toxic
effluent into the city's storm drains.
"These companies were
dumping animal skins at unlicensed points, thereby contravening section 5
(1) of SI 6/07 of the Environmental Management Act Chapter 20:27. These
skins are treated with chromium 6, a highly toxic substance that can
cause cancer, skin disorders and irritation or ulcers in the stomach and
intestines. They also have dangerous acids which all find their way to
Umguza River. They also contaminate ground water when it rains," he
said.
The dumpsites had an acrid stench, suggestive of a high acid content as the skins decomposed.
The water in Umguza River had a black colour and a bad smell.
"Residents
have often complained of the smell that is caused by the smell from
Matsheumhlope and Mazayi Rivers caused by these chemicals and effluent
from council sewers. We have received a complaint from the Association
of Businesses in Zimbabwe and St Patrick's Hotel among others," said Mr
Ncube.
He said EMA suspected that a number of companies
deliberately dumped toxic waste into water bodies at night, adding that
investigations by the agency would expose them.
Mr Ndlovu said
EMA would compile a list of industries that were guilty of releasing
untreated waste into the environment and educate them on the dangers.
"Our
staff can assist them to come up programmes for safely disposing of
waste. We are prepared to carry out workshops with companies and
inspections for compliance are ongoing," he said.
"We appeal to
members of the public to report environmental crimes in Bulawayo to EMA
at (09) 64705. As an agency, we say environmental information should be
availed to anyone who needs it. Companies who cause pollution should be
able to explain their actions to the public."
Mr Ndlovu said
entities like BCC that had been warned a number of times risked being
taken to court or appearing before the EMA Board for stiffer sentences.
The city of Harare, Chitungwiza and Norton have appeared before the
board after repeatedly flouting environmental law.
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