Oman Daily Observer

As summer heat looms, post-IS Mosul faces water crisis

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SAYRAMUN, Iraq: In the battle against militants in northern Iraq, the village of Sayramun was recaptured in February but remains as isolated as ever and crucially still has no drinking water.

“There’s no water in the area,” Said Ahmed Fathi, a resident of the village nestled in a picturesqu­e meander of the Tigris River but marooned in a key military staging area on the edge of the targeted city of Mosul.

The nearest water treatment plant has not functioned in months and restrictio­ns on civilian movement in this area used by dozens of daily military convoys mean private vehicles are banned in Sayramun.

“So here are our children collecting water from the river... and river water really isn’t suitable for human consumptio­n,” Fathi said.

Ruqaya, wearing pink trainers and a bright orange dress, walks down the hill with a dirty plastic jerrycan to fetch water from the river, a task that falls on the five-year-old girl because her father is sick.

She pauses by the roadside as a convoy of Iraqi Humvee vehicles hurtles past and then resumes her daily march to the Tigris while helicopter­s buzz overhead.

Electricit­y has not been restored to Sayramun and the local water treatment plant also remains offline, forcing residents to drink boiled river water.

“How do we even boil the water — until now, we’re still using fire wood and small kerosene heaters. We don’t have gas either,” said Fathi.

“We’ve had some bad cases... no deaths but poisoning because of the water,” he said.

“Nobody knows about us here in this village... We just want the plant to be fixed,” said Thannun Yunis, a 14-year-old boy from Sayramun.

Some 70 families have returned to the village since the area was retaken from the IS group by Iraqi security forces, but the lack of water is an obstacle.

“Even 60 years ago, our situation wasn’t this bad, we have regressed dozens of years,” said mayor Hajj Abu Mohammed, who was among the villagers who decided not to stay in the tented camps they were taken to by the military when the Mosul offensive was launched.

Access to water isn’t always much better in the many camps that have mushroomed around Mosul since Iraqi forces launched their operation to retake the IS last major bastion in the country.

The camps are overcrowde­d, there isn’t enough bottled water for everybody and the water that is trucked in hasn’t always been adequately treated because too few plants are operationa­l.

At one of the largest displaceme­nt camps in the area, in Hammam al Alil, Yasser Ahmed is filling a jerrycan from a tank.

“They give us water bottles but not enough for drinking and cooking, so we use this water after filtering and boiling it,” the 37-year-old man said.

He explained that he then uses purificati­on tablets distribute­d by the camp authoritie­s to improve the quality of the water and use it for cooking.

Going back with his family to his neighbourh­ood of Maamun in west Mosul is not an option, he said, because the water situation there is even worse and people are using polluted wells.

Apart from direct clashes, the combinatio­n of air strikes and the countless bombs set off by the militants often cause significan­t damage to the water distributi­on networks.

 ?? — AFP ?? People leave their homes as Iraqi forces advance in the northweste­rn Al Haramat neighbourh­ood of Mosul on Thursday during the ongoing offensive to retake the area from IS fighters.
— AFP People leave their homes as Iraqi forces advance in the northweste­rn Al Haramat neighbourh­ood of Mosul on Thursday during the ongoing offensive to retake the area from IS fighters.

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