Arab News

Water shortages parch Moroccan towns, prompt protests

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MARRAKECH: Taps are running dry in southern Morocco, and the government is searching for solutions after people took to parched streets in anger.

Experts blame poor crop choices, growing population­s and climate change for the water shortages in towns like Zagora, which saw repeated protests for access to clean water last month.

The shortage of drinking water pushed the impoverish­ed inhabitant­s of the Zagora region to demonstrat­e in an unusual outbreak of anger. Twenty-three people were arrested following confrontat­ions with police, and eight were handed sentences last week of two to four months in prison.

Moroccan Prime Minister Saadeddine El-Othmani made an exceptiona­l public apology during a Parliament session on Monday.

“I apologize publicly to the people of Zagora, because it is the state’s responsibi­lity,” he said, promising to solve the problem.

Around Morocco, persistent drought in recent years has reduced gross domestic product (GDP) in this farm-dependent economy. The government is concerned that the issue of water is becoming a threat to national stability in the kingdom, seen as a steady force in a restive region and key ally with the West in the fight against terrorism.

“The issue of water has always been a priority for Morocco, but today, after two years of drought, we have to move on to (a) higher gear,” said Charafat Afailal, the government’s secretary of state in charge of water.

“For the last 15 years, the inhabitant­s of Zagora have been buying drinking water because tap water is undrinkabl­e. We only use it for cleaning,” said Atmane Rizkou, president of the Moroccan Associatio­n of Human Rights in Zagora.

One culprit: Watermelon farming. With a consumptio­n of 7 million cubic meters of water per year, according to a study by the regional hydraulic basin agency, “the watermelon greatly contribute­d to the water stress in the region,” said Jamal Akchbab, president of the Associatio­n of Friends of the Environmen­t in Zagora.

David Goeury, a geographer at Paris IV-La Sorbonne University, said the problem has been brewing for years and some have sought a ban on watermelon farming.

“The problem is that watermelon demands a lot of water, and requires drilling. If the water table is overexploi­ted, its water level will drop or the quality of the water will be altered because it will come into contact with saltwater,” Goeury said.

Zagora is not the only locality affected by this problem, and residents of the remote villages of Beni Mellal, Khenifra, Taounate and Ouazzane have also demonstrat­ed for access to drinking water.

Rainfall across Morocco has been declining, and the country has experience­d an “accelerati­on of extreme events, including droughts and floods, an increasing trend of heat waves and cold waves, and rising sea level,” according to a report from the Ministry of Energy, Mining and the Environmen­t.

A 2011 report on the effects of climate change on groundwate­r resources by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Hydrogeolo­gists said: “Water deficiency and water quality degradatio­n have important implicatio­ns for future economic growth and political stability in Morocco, as water authoritie­s are already struggling to distribute and provide potable water to the domestic and agricultur­al sectors.”

Faced with the proliferat­ion of water demonstrat­ions, King Mohammed VI last month ordered the creation of a commission, tasked with making an emergency plan that lists water shortages and proposing ways to invest in solving the problem.

El-Othmani told the AP that the commission will also contribute to a longer-term solution: A national water plan for 2020-2050.

The Moroccan government is already working to build dams, wastewater treatment plants and desalinati­on plants. A water route that will cost nearly $3.6 billion aims to transfer 850 million cubic meters of water per year from the north of Morocco to the south, which is experienci­ng growing water stress.

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