The Borneo Post

Tempers fray, fists fly in India’s daily battle for water

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NEW DELHI: When the water truck finally chugged into the Delhi slum, there was a stampede. It is a scene repeated daily across India as temperatur­es rise and the vital resource gets ever scarcer.

Young men clambered onto the roof and jammed a tangle of multicolou­red hosepipes inside, passing the other ends to friends waiting with containers in the shouting crowd below.

All 10,000 litres were gone in minutes, lugged away in jerry cans and buckets dangling on bike handlebars. As the lorry left, people ran after it, desperate for any last drops.

“It’s a real battle, every man for himself,” Raj Kumari, one of dozens of people in the Sanjay Camp slum who wait hours for this brutal daily ritual, told AFP.

“There are fights and arguments, even injuries,” the young woman said. “We have to get (our containers) filled even if someone gets crushed or loses an arm or leg.”

No one was hurt this time but injuries are common and anger is growing at the authoritie­s.

In the northern city of Jammu this week, scores of people blocked an express train to Delhi in a protest against water shortages.

And in the Himalayan hill resort of Shimla, the former summer capital of the British Raj, residents staged street demonstrat­ions after water ran out. Foreign tourists were asked to cancel bookings, hotels began closing and police had to escort water tankers through Shimla’s winding streets.

Summer temperatur­es in parts of India are currently passing 45 degrees Celsius and data show that the country of 1.25 billion people is getting hotter.

A 2017 study by the Indian Institute of Science said that the frequency and magnitude of heatwaves accompanie­d with drought had increased over the past three decades.

The India Meteorolog­ical Department said in 2017 that 2016 was the warmest year since 1901.

India’s top five hottest years have been recorded in the last 15 years.

Experts blame the shortages not just on the changing climate but also on inadequate planning, especially in India’s fast-growing cities whose aged infrastruc­ture cannot cope.

Experts also say that waterinten­sive farming, especially for rice and sugar cane to feed India’s growing population, has depleted and polluted the undergroun­d water table.

Studies by the United Nations and other groups have warned that the country’s water crisis will worsen unless action is taken.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Residents of a slum push a bicycle loaded with jerry cans filled with water as they return home in a low-income colony in New Delhi.
— AFP photos Residents of a slum push a bicycle loaded with jerry cans filled with water as they return home in a low-income colony in New Delhi.
 ??  ?? Indian residents use hoses to fill jerry cans with water from a distributi­on truck which arrives daily, in the low-income eastern neighbourh­ood of Sanjay camp.
Indian residents use hoses to fill jerry cans with water from a distributi­on truck which arrives daily, in the low-income eastern neighbourh­ood of Sanjay camp.

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