Oman Daily Observer

Deal reached to fix Damascus water supply, says Syrian official

The UN warned shortages could lead to waterborne disease outbreaks

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BEIRUT: A Syrian provincial governor said on Wednesday the government and rebels had agreed on a plan to repair damage to a spring in the Wadi Barada area that supplies water to the capital, state television reported.

The report could not be immediatel­y confirmed with rebel fighters. The local media office for activists in rebel-held Wadi Barada, where the spring is located, denied any agreement had been reached between rebels and the government.

The spring was knocked out of service in late December, reducing water supplies to the 70 per cent of residents of Damascus and surroundin­g areas that it serves.

The government and rebel groups in Wadi Barada, a mountainou­s valley about 20 km northwest of Damascus, agreed for technician­s to enter the damaged spring facility, state television said.

The United Nations has said the spring was damaged because “infrastruc­ture was deliberate­ly targeted”, without saying who was responsibl­e, leaving 4 million people in Damascus without safe drinking water supplies.

The UN warned the shortages could lead to waterborne disease outbreaks, and a spokesman has said sabotaging civilian water supplies constitute­d a war crime.

Rebels and activists have said government bombardmen­t damaged the spring. The government said insurgent groups polluted the spring with diesel, forcing the state to cut supplies.

The governor of the Damascus countrysid­e province said in comments published on state news agency SANA on Wednesday, that a preliminar­y agreement had been reached with local fighters in parts of Wadi Barada to hand over their weapons to the government.

Fighters not originally from the valley will be evacuated out of the area.

The Syrian army will then enter the areas to remove explosives and technician­s will repair damage to the spring, governor Alaa Ibrahim said.

“In the coming hours it will become clear if it is possible to implement the agreement,” SANA quoted Ibrahim as saying.

Rebels in the area could not be reached immediatel­y, but local activists denied that any agreement had been reached.

Through a series of local deals, sieges and army offensives, the Syrian government, backed by Russian air power and militias, has been steadily suppressin­g armed opposition around its heavily-fortified capital.

The Syrian army and allied fighters from the Lebanese group Hezbollah launched an offensive in late December to capture Wadi Barada, overlooked by pro-government military positions.

 ?? — AFP ?? Syrian men and Civil Defence volunteers, also known as the White Helmets, search for survivors amid the rubble of a building following a reported air strike on the town of Taftanaz, in the northern province of Idlib, early Wednesday.
— AFP Syrian men and Civil Defence volunteers, also known as the White Helmets, search for survivors amid the rubble of a building following a reported air strike on the town of Taftanaz, in the northern province of Idlib, early Wednesday.

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