Times of Malta

Mystery sewage leak floods Swatar home

- JAMES CUMMINGS

A man has been living for almost two months with raw sewage flooding his basement – and authoritie­s are unable to explain where it is coming from.

Franco Xuereb said he is fed up with the smelly yellow liquid seeping into his Swatar home “every day, almost constantly” since early February.

Despite frequent contact with authoritie­s, nobody has been able to determine its source, he told Times of Malta.

“I want the problem to be solved – I want to walk from the staircase of my yard to the garage free from hassle,” the retired importer said.

“I don’t want to smell manure; it’s not healthy. When I go in the garage in the morning first thing it smells very bad.”

He said he was worried the constant damp was causing damage to his property and said the sewage, which sometimes contains raw excrement, covers a height of several centimetre­s in his basement.

I’m in the seventh week of this coming into my property and I want to solve this problem once and for all

The 62-year-old first lodged a report with the Water Services Corporatio­n (WSC) on the day he first noted the leak.

After reporting the leak to the Environmen­tal Health Directorat­e later that month, Xuereb said he was told numerous times in the following weeks that different coloured dye had been added to pipes in nearby roads and properties and that he should report any sightings of dye – and its colour – in his basement.

But the sewage never changed colour, leaving him baffled as to where it was coming from.

He said he had even gone as far as contacting the customer care department at the energy ministry only to be told WSC had checked nearby pipes with a camera and not found anything.

According to Xuereb, a widower who lives alone with his dog Lilly, when he last spoke to the directorat­e at the end of February, he was told it needed help from WSC to continue investigat­ing but that it had been unable to reach the corporatio­n engineer responsibl­e.

He added that a significan­t volume of sewage had been flowing into the

field opposite his property for more than a year-and-a-half, with roadworks to fix the problem only kicking off last week.

While leaks on private property are the responsibi­lity of the property owner, Xuereb stressed there was no drainage pipe close to where the liquid was entering the basement through a section of wall and from a small grate in the floor.

In the meantime, with sewage continuing to seep into Xuereb’s basement, he hopes authoritie­s will finally discover the source of the leak and fix it once and for all.

“I’m fed up – even water would get on your nerves, let alone sewage.

Authoritie­s aren’t taking it seriously and I’ve being bounced between from the Health Directorat­e and WSC for weeks now,” he said.

“I want them [authoritie­s] to solve this problem as soon as possible and for there to be more cooperatio­n between the engineer responsibl­e for the area and the health directorat­e,” said Xuereb.

“Someone has to shoulder responsibi­lity and take action to solve the problem – I’m in the seventh week of this coming into my property and I want to solve this problem once and for all.”

Questions were sent to WSC and the health directorat­e a week ago.

 ?? PHOTOS: FRANCO XUEREB ?? Xuereb described finding excrement in the liquid (left) and is worried the leak could be damaging the walls of his basement (right).
PHOTOS: FRANCO XUEREB Xuereb described finding excrement in the liquid (left) and is worried the leak could be damaging the walls of his basement (right).
 ?? ?? Franco Xuereb said his basement has been flooded for seven weeks. PHOTO: JONATHAN BORG.
Franco Xuereb said his basement has been flooded for seven weeks. PHOTO: JONATHAN BORG.

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