Water supply resumes to Delhi

Some water supplies have resumed to northern parts of New Delhi after protesters damaged a key canal, highlighting the vulnerability of the city.

 Indian people fill up canisters and containers with water from a tanker in New Delhi, India, 22 February 2016.

Indian people fill up canisters and containers with water from a tanker in New Delhi, India, 22 February 2016. Source: AAP

Engineers are working to restore New Delhi's full water supply after protesters damaged a key canal in a neighbouring state and disrupted supplies over the weekend - highlighting the extreme water vulnerability faced by the Indian capital's 18 million residents.

Some supplies resumed to northern and central parts of New Delhi, and will hopefully reach western neighbourhoods by Tuesday evening, said Delhi's water minister, Kapil Mishra.

In the meantime, 70 water tankers have been sent to western areas of the city where taps have been dry for up to two days.

The destruction of the Munak canal link by protesters in the state of Haryana has focused attention on New Delhi's precarious water supply.

The canal, which channels water from north Indian rivers, accounts for about 60 per cent of the city's water supply. Another 25 per cent comes from groundwater, while the polluted Yamuna River supplies about 12 per cent.

Yet even when the Munak canal flow is unimpeded, the overall water supply is not enough to meet New Delhi's needs, and shortages are common during the dry seasons.

The situation is especially bad for the most marginal communities living in slums or riverside shanties, where many rely on sewage-tainted river water, leaks from broken pipes or deliveries by municipal water trucks. Others in New Delhi draw heavily from the ground, leading the city's aquifer levels to decline by 4m in the last decade, according to the Central Ground Water Board.

When protesters from the underprivileged Jat community breached the canal wall on Saturday, they effectively cut off about two-thirds of New Delhi's water. The Jats, traditionally a farming community within India's ancient system of caste hierarchy, were demanding quotas in government jobs and educational institutions.

Clashes between the protesters and government forces left 12 people dead before Jat leaders agreed Monday to end the demonstrations while negotiating with officials, and the army took control of the canal.

Delhi water board authorities were working with experts in the army and Haryana state on Tuesday to repair the damage done by the protesters, said Mishra, the Delhi water minister. Of the city's three water treatment plants, one was again working at full capacity, while the other two had resumed operations at 50-60 per cent capacity.


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3 min read
Published 23 February 2016 1:52am
Updated 23 February 2016 11:00pm
Source: AAP

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