Kuwait Times

Malaysia’s ‘Silicon Valley’ hit by four-day water cut

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More than half a million households and businesses in northern Malaysia will be without water for up to four days from Wednesday due to engineerin­g works at a major treatment plant, officials said. The disruption has forced hundreds of manufactur­ers in Penang state - often dubbed the “Silicon Valley of the East” - to suspend operations. Most schools have closed and some hospitals have postponed minor surgeries. About 100 water tanks have been deployed to help ease the situation, but some residents expressed anger over the disruption.

“Four days without running water is absurd,” Ooi Chin Hock, a former investment banker who filled up six large plastic containers to stockpile water at his home, told AFP. “(This is) a black dot on the state,” he added. Technician­s carrying out the repair works at the Sungai Dua water treatment plant, which supplies water to about 80 percent of the state, were replacing two huge leaking and rusted water valves. Leaky pipes in other locations would also be replaced during the four-day interrupti­on. “Work is progressin­g as planned,” Penang Water Supply Corporatio­n chief executive K Pathmanath­an told reporters.

Pathmanath­an said they hoped for a gradual resumption of water supply from Thursday. Lee Teong Li of the Federation of Malaysian Manufactur­ers in Penang said most of its members would close for the first two days and hope for some partial water supply resumption after that. “We will run into millions of dollars in losses. We will lose revenue, since we have to pay for workers while being shut down,” he told AFP. Penang counts manufactur­ing and tourism as key economic sectors. It is home to global electronic firms like Intel, AMD, Hewlett Packard, Motorola, Clarion and Flextronic­s.— AFP

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