The Star Malaysia

In a war and without water

Nearly two million people affected after attacks damage supply

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Nearly two million civilians left high and dry in Aleppo.

BEIRUT: Nearly two million civilians were without water in Syria’s second city of Aleppo after regime bombardmen­t damaged one pumping station and rebels shut down another in retaliatio­n, the United Nations said.

Rebel-held districts in the east of the city came under intense air and artillery fire for a fifth night yesterday as the army prepared a ground offensive to recapture the whole of the divided city.

“Intense attacks last night have damaged the Bab al-Nayrab water pumping station, which supplies water to some 250,000 people in the eastern parts of Aleppo,” the UN children’s agency Unicef said yesterday.

“Violence is preventing repair teams from reaching the station. In retaliatio­n, the Suleiman al-Halabi pumping station – also located in the east – was switched off, cutting water to 1.5 million people in the western parts of the city, which are held by the government.”

Unicef said the loss of mains supply posed serious health risks in rebel-held areas as the only alternativ­e source of drinking water was from highly contaminat­ed wells.

It added that safer alternativ­es were available in government-held areas where there were deep groundwate­r wells.

The agency also said it would expand emergency water trucking throughout the city, but warned that it was only a temporary solution that was unsustaina­ble in the long term.

“It is critical for children’s survival that all parties to the conflict stop attacks on water infrastruc­ture, provide access to assess and repair damage to the Bab al-Nayrab station and switch the water back on at the Suleiman al-Halabi station,” it cautioned.

Aleppo was once Syria’s pre-war commercial and industrial hub, but it has been devastated by endless fighting since the rebels seized eastern districts of the city in 2012, turning it into a frontline battlegrou­nd.

The denial of access to food, water and medicines has been used repeatedly as a weapon by all sides in Syria’s brutal five-year-old civil war.

Nationwide, hundreds of thousands of civilians are living under siege.

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 ?? — AFP ?? Cost of war: A Syrian boy receiving treatment at a make-shift hospital following airstrikes on rebel-held eastern areas of Aleppo.
— AFP Cost of war: A Syrian boy receiving treatment at a make-shift hospital following airstrikes on rebel-held eastern areas of Aleppo.

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