BAGHDAD
(Reuters) - On a scorching summer day in Baghdad, Qassim Dakheel squats
in his yard and looks anxiously at his water hose, waiting for the
water to flow. In
Dakheel's poor neighbourhood, the International Committee of the Red
Cross delivers 140,000 litres of water a day by truck, without which
7,500 families would have no water. The government's network of water
pipes does not reach their homes.
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A worker fills storage containers with water in Baghdad's Sadr city June 7, 2010. (REUTERS/Mohammed Ameen)
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Dakheel's family of 27, which
includes 10 children and 15 grandchildren, consumes 1,000 litres of
water a day from the ICRC. But it barely meets their needs.
"We
depend on this water truck. If it did not come for any reason, on that
day a glass of water would be as precious as a human soul ... we would
be left without anything. No bathing and no drinking water," said
Dakheel, 47.
According to government statistics cited by the
ICRC, one in four of Iraq's 30 million people does not have access to
safe drinking water, a persistent problem seven years after the U.S.
invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.
Decades of war and
international sanctions left Iraq's infrastructure in tatters. In many
areas like Dakheel's, the government's water pipes do not reach newly
built neighbourhoods where residents have constructed their own homes.
Sectarian
strife in previous years left more than 1,500,000 Iraqis internally
displaced. Dakheel, a Shi'ite, left his home in the Sunni area of Abu
Ghraib, on the western outskirts of the capital, in 2006 to find safe
shelter in the mainly Shi'ite district of Baladiyat in eastern Baghdad.
The
ICRC water trucks start their mission early in the morning and run
until 6 p.m. to make up for water distribution systems that are old or
badly maintained, and further weakened by illegal connections and
substandard plumbing in households.
"Reliable access to enough
water of sufficient quality remains a major challenge for large parts
of the population," Julien Le Sourd, the ICRC's water and habitat
coordinator in Iraq, said in a report.
GOVERNMENT DERELICTION
According
to Iraq's Planning Ministry, 84 percent of the water that emerges from
taps is clean enough to drink and the other 16 percent is contaminated.
"The
national development plan for the years 2010-2014 will achieve a good
amount of development concerning the safe drinking water, hopefully the
percentage will rise to more than 90 percent," Deputy Planning Minister
Mehdi al-Alak said.
The ICRC started supplying Baladiyat in 2004
but with growing numbers of residents, its situation is worsening.
Residents have asked for an additional 80,000 litres a day.
Raid Muhsin, mayor of Dakheel's neighbourhood, said little of Iraq's oil wealth trickles down to its people.
"This
is a dereliction of no one but the government and its officials because
so far not one of them takes care of us. As if we are not Iraqis,"
Muhsin said, looking at the ICRC truck as it began pumping water into a
10,000-litre tank in the street. Each tank serves about 10 houses.
"Unfortunately,
we got rid of one oppressive situation to fall into another ... we
expected things would be better than before only to find ourselves
sinking in misery," Muhsin said.
Baghdad officials say they face
problems producing water as well as distributing it. The city's 7
million people need 3.5 million cubic metres of water a day but the
city government supplies only 2.7 million.
Baghdad municipality
last month said the scarcity would end within two years. A deal with
Degremont, a subsidiary of Suez Environment, to reconstruct the city's
dilapidated water system started eight months ago and is scheduled to
be finished within 20 months.
Inside the kitchen of Dakheel's house, life seems frozen in a wait for water to wash breakfast dishes and clean the floor.
"We
wait for the water truck to come, so we can start our work. The amount
is barely enough for the whole day," said Sanaa, Dakheel's daughter,
looking uncomfortably at piles of dirty dishes in the sink.
Dakheel
does not expect any improvement even after the formation of a new
government, following an inconclusive parliamentary election more than
three months ago.
"I have been displaced for four years. I live
now in a desert and it (the government) has not done anything," he
said. "Thanks to the people outside (Iraq) who have mercy on us."
(Editing by Jim Loney)
Copyright © 2010 Reuters
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