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Darkness
falls on southern Africa
Associated
Press
January 20, 2008
http://www.news24.com/News24/Africa/News/0,,2-11-1447_2255318,00.html
Harare - Nationwide
power outages shut down basic services across Zambia and Zimbabwe
for hours on Saturday and Sunday as anger mounted in South Africa
over power cuts that have wreaked havoc in the continent's economic
hub. There was no immediate explanation for Saturday night's blackout,
which hit Zambia and neighboring Zimbabwe almost simultaneously
in the early evening, and it was unclear whether there was any connection.
Power was restored in Zambia about eight hours later, but long-suffering
Zimbabweans remained without electricity, water, telephones and
traffic signals for much of Sunday. Power and water outages occur
daily in Zimbabwe's crumbling economy but not on a national scale.
Zimbabwe state radio, running on generators, reported the outage
was caused by a major breakdown but did not elaborate. The state
power utility gave no explanation as power returned in some areas
Sunday afternoon. In one apartment district in central Harare, cheering
erupted when the electricity came back on, replaced by jeering and
catcalling when it went off again a few minutes later. The outage
shut down automated teller machines and checkout tills at stores
and pharmacies, forcing some to close their doors an hour after
opening Sunday. Check and local credit card transactions could not
be processed. Harassed officials in Harare said a fault "tripped"
the national power grid, plunging the entire country into darkness
Saturday night. Unofficial reports in Zambia - which relies on hydroelectricity
- said there appeared to be turbine problems at one of the country's
dams. Both countries have been hit by exceptionally heavy seasonal
rains, which is affecting equipment.
Power and water
outages have worsened in Zimbabwe dramatically in recent weeks.
The Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority said earlier this month
it had no hard currency for imported spare parts to repair equipment
dating back up to 40 years. Zimbabwe imports about 40% of its power
from regional neighbors and is in arrears in hard currency for most
of the imports. It is suffering chronic shortages of hard currency,
local money, food, gasoline and most basic goods. One of its main
suppliers, South Africa, is having its own acute problems with large
parts of the country suffering blackouts often lasting several hours.
State utility company Eskom says demand is simply too high for it
to keep up with, but there is mounting fury that the power cuts
are unpredictable and are causing unnecessary economic losses and
personal misery. Outraged commuters set fire to six trains near
the capital Pretoria on Friday evening after being delayed for two
hours due to power outages. South Africa's opposition Democratic
Alliance said on Sunday that Eskom should cancel supply contracts
with its neighbors while its domestic market was in such turmoil.
"Regardless of our contractual obligations, there can simply
be no reason for South Africa to supply Namibia, Zimbabwe and Mozambique
when there is such a desperate lack of reserve capacity in our domestic
market," it said. Veteran Zimbabwean journalist Peta Thornycroft,
who is now based in South Africa, expressed surprise that South
Africans should be so upset about "only
six power cuts in the last five or six days, and none longer than
five hours," - compared with the eight years of disruption
in Zimbabwe. She had words of advice in the Sunday Argus newspaper
for suffering South Africans, such as installing solar panels on
the roof connected to a large car battery; buying paraffin fridges;
and switching to gas. "Want to know how to cope in this time
of gloom?" she said. "Ask a Zimbabwean."
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