Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Struggle for water intensifie­s as taps run dry in India

- By Roli Srivastava

BEED, India, June 21 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Residents of the drought-hit Indian village of Salegaon are so desperate for water they have started lining up their pots two days before the tanker is due to arrive.

When it does, the neatly lined up pots go flying as the villagers rush forward. Usually only about half get water, leaving the rest to make the 3km journey to the nearest well. Salegaon is in Beed district in western Maharashtr­a state, home to India's bustling commercial capital Mumbai, but also to vast tracts of farmland battling years of drought - a double whammy for villagers, who depend on agricultur­e for work.

“There is no rain, so there is no work on farmlands, and no money,” said 1 9 - ye a r- old Ashwini Galphade, who moved to Salegaon village after marrying last year, covering her head with a scarf to protect herself from the noon sun. “How can we afford water?” Beed is among eight districts in Maharashtr­a 's Marathwada region, where poor rainfall has ravaged crops, dried up reservoirs and forced people to migrate from their villages.

Many have gone to work farming sugar cane -a thirsty crop that accounts for 4% of agricultur­e in Maharashtr­a, but devours two-thirds of its irrigation water, exacerbati­ng the problem.

The struggle for water has intensifie­d in many parts of India, where villages and cities have run out of water - a problem campaigner­s have said is due as much to years of poor groundwate­r management as to a lack of rain.

“Over 60% of nearly 17,000 groundwate­r wells monitored to check ground water level showed a decline compared to the average level of the last 10 years,” said Kishore Chandra Naik, chairman of India's Central Ground Water Board.

“The decline is because of extraction, whatever may be the purpose for it,” Naik said, warning some wells would eventually dry up.

India faces the worst longterm water crisis in its history as demand outstrips supply, with millions of lives and livelihood­s at risk, the government think-tank Niti Aayog warned last year.

Chennai was one of 21 cities the think-tank said could run out of ground water by 2020 and this week, taps ran dry as water levels in its four major reservoirs fell to one-hundredth of what they were this time last year.

The crisis in the southern coastal city has pushed schools, hotels and commercial establishm­ents to close, while hospitals have put off non-essential surgeries.

The Madras High Court on Tuesday demanded to know why the state government had not worked through the year to avoid it. “Don't blame the hand of God, what did the hand of man do?” the court said.

India uses more ground water than any other country, a problem successive government­s have failed to tackle, said campaigner Himanshu Thakkar.

“We use more groundwate­r than what China and the United States collective­ly use. Countries like the US identify and protect their groundwate­r recharge zones. What have we done?” Thakkar said.

The crisis has hit rural and urban Indians alike.

On the outskirts of Marathwada's Aurangabad city, children as young as 10 were being sent to fetch water a train ride away, hauling back containers of water almost as big as they were.

“I feel scared travelling on the train. People also stop us from filling water at the train station,” Siddharth Rahul Dhage, 10 and small for his age, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation at the station as he balanced a 20- litre water can.

 ??  ?? Women fetch water from an opening at a dried-up lake in Chennai. (Reuters/P Ravikumar)
Women fetch water from an opening at a dried-up lake in Chennai. (Reuters/P Ravikumar)

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