Thieves strip Bulawayo Mpilo Hospital of copper pipes

Someone keeps farming Mpilo Central Hospital for copper, and the fallout keeps smacking doctors, patients, and budgets where it hurts most.

What just blew up
  • So yeah, the junior doctors' housing at Mpilo Central Hospital keeps getting looted.
  • Since doctors moved back in May 2023, thieves have been running a rinse-and-repeat routine.
  • Copper pipes, electrical cables, brass taps, basically anything shiny and sellable keeps vanishing.
Why this place mattered
  • The quarters were rebuilt after nasty fires in 2018, 2019, and 2021 wrecked things.
  • Reconstruction wrapped up about two-and-a-half years ago, so this was supposed to be a fresh start.
  • Junior doctors only got back in after long rehab work, which makes this sting extra hard.
How the thefts actually go down
  • Criminals yank copper piping tied to solar geyser systems, then dip.
  • Electrical components and fittings also get ripped out and flipped to scrap dealers.
  • A chunk of the palisade fence was cut, which screams organized crew, not random nonsense.
What hospital leadership is saying
  • Phineas Sithole basically says the damage just keeps stacking up.
  • Copper pipes have been stolen multiple times, not once, not twice, multiple.
  • To slow the bleeding, the hospital is swapping copper for PVC, which says everything about how bad it got.
Damage beyond the housing
  • The mess spilled into the hospital laundry, because of course it did.
  • Specialized electrical cables were taken, and switchboards were wrecked.
  • Linen washing got disrupted, which is not a small thing in a hospital.
How criminals got inside
  • During window frame replacements, thieves spotted their moment.
  • While contractors worked, the laundry room got hit.
  • Opportunistic, calculated, and zero shame.
Why this is actually dangerous
  • Money meant for medicines and supplies keeps getting rerouted to repairs.
  • Patients end up paying the price for someone else chasing scrap cash.
  • Scarce resources get burned on fixing sabotage instead of saving lives.
This already happened before
  • Last year, thieves hit a substation run by Zesa Holdings that feeds the hospital.
  • The hospital had to go full generator mode, no backup.
  • At peak chaos, 10 generators were guzzling around 300 liters of diesel each day.
  • That tab landed near US$4,800 daily, which is pure financial pain for any hospital.
Bottom line vibe
  • This is not petty theft anymore.
  • It is infrastructure sabotage with real-world consequences.
  • And yeah, the hospital keeps paying for it, again and again.
 

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