Khaleej Times

Thirsty Afghans dig deep to combat drought, overuse

- AFP

kabul — A growing population is straining water supplies in Afghanista­n’s capital, forcing those who can afford it to dig unregulate­d wells ever deeper to tap a falling water table.

Finding water in arid Afghanista­n is virtually always a challenge, but a drop in the groundwate­r level in Kabul caused by overuse and drought is making it even more difficult for residents, especially the poor.

Modern Kabul was originally planned to support about 1 million people, but is now home to more than 4.6 million, according to US government estimates, with people fleeing violence and seeking jobs thronging into urban centres.

Several unseasonab­ly dry winters, with little rain and a dusting of snow, have exacerbate­d the problem. Heavy rain and snow this year has raised hopes that groundwate­r can be replenishe­d, at least for a while.

“The increase in population and drought has resulted in a shortage of water in Kabul, so more people are demanding deeper wells to get it,” said Aslam Khan, who runs a well-digging business.

Since 2001, Kabul’s sprawl has expanded by 2,500 square kilometres, according to the World Bank, with some of the poorest arrivals perched in homes on rocky hills around the city, where wells are generally non-existent.

At the base of the hills, children cluster-around-hand-operated-pumps, filling buckets and cans before climbing back up to their homes.

“We have lots of problem in getting water,” said 15-year-old Mohammad Jaweed, bent under a load for his family. People who can afford it usually dig a well rather than depending on the city’s limited water system, but they are having to go ever deeper to reach the receding water. The depth of a well varies across the city, but Khan said many residents are being forced to dig 10 to 20 metres deeper than in the past. In some cases, wells have to go down 150 metres to reach clean water, at a cost of more than $5,200, he said.

Officials say well digging has spiralled out of control, with little or no regulation of how the ever more scarce water is exploited.

“Unfortunat­ely there hasn’t been any serious attention to this,” said Hamidullah Yelani, director general of the government’s Urban Water Supply and Sewerage Corporatio­n.

In the past, residents have been banned from digging wells within 100 metres of each other, but wells are now dug 5 to 10 metres apart, sucking ever more water from the aquifers, said Khan.—

 ?? Reuters ?? An Afghan girl carries water on her back as she climbs a hill in Kabul, Afghanista­n. —
Reuters An Afghan girl carries water on her back as she climbs a hill in Kabul, Afghanista­n. —

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