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WATER WORLD
Donetsk queues for water as fighting shuts off supply
by Staff Writers
Donetsk, Ukraine (AFP) Aug 18, 2014


Mosul dam: A life source in northern Iraq
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 18, 2014 - The Mosul dam is the biggest in Iraq and a strategic site that provides water and electricity to more than a million people in the north of the country.

Islamic State (IS) jihadists seized the dam on August 7 but Kurdish peshmerga fighters took it back on Sunday with support from US air strikes.

Completed in 1984, it suffers from structural problems that caused the US Army Corps of Engineers to once call it "the most dangerous dam in the world," an accusation rejected by Iraqi authorities.

It is built on water soluble soils that must be constantly reinforced to prevent a collapse that could send a wall of water 20 metres (65 feet) high surging towards Mosul, a city of some 1.7 million inhabitants.

The dam lies about 50 kilometres (30 miles) north of Mosul on the Tigris River and can provide up to 1,010 megawatts of electricity according to the BBC, which cited the Iraqi State Commission for Dams and Reservoirs.

A 2007 study by US inspectors rated its output at a more modest 750 megawatts, said then to be enough power for 675,000 Iraqi homes.

The dam also holds back more than 12 billion cubic metres (425 billion cubic feet) of water needed for drinking and irrigation throughout the Nineveh province, and forms part of a regional flood control system as well.

One of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's prestigious projects, the dam is the fourth largest in the Middle East according to an investment study presented to the OECD in 2010.

The main dam is 3.4 kilometers (2.1 miles) long and stands 113 metres (370 feet) high according to an October 2007 report by the US Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction.

Construction required approximately 37.7 million cubic meters (1.3 billion cubic feet) of materials, mainly earth and concrete.

That paper and the study presented to the OECD underscored the dam's structural instability, because it was built on gypsum and limestone soils that erode with exposure to water, leaving cavities underground.

Leaks must be filled almost constantly with grout, estimated in 2007 at 200 tonnes per year.

Since US forces invaded Iraq in 2003, the United States has invested more than $30 million (22 million euros) in surveillance and maintenance by Iraqi personnel, the BBC said.

Iraqi officials dismissed the US report as alarmist however, with the dam's manager telling AFP at the time that "the overall structure is sound."

The OECD report three years later nonetheless concluded that "a need for total reconstruction cannot be ruled out."

Anastasiya clutches two empty five-litre bottles as she joins a queue of Donetsk residents buying water in the rebel-held east Ukrainian city where supplies were abruptly cut off by shelling damage.

"We hope it's not for long," says the 32-year-old as she waits for her turn to fill the bottles with mineral water sold at one of many stalls around the city for .75 hryvnia ($.06) a litre.

She says she saw the urgent message from the Donetsk mayor Sunday evening warning of the shut-off one hour in advance, but complained that her own tap had already run dry.

"We didn't have time to draw any water. I found out at 8 pm and there was already no water."

A bustling city of one million before becoming gripped by fighting, Donetsk is now a victim of clashes between pro-Russian insurgents and Kiev's army closing in on the rebel-controlled hub.

The city warned residents that water would be turned off Sunday at 9 pm, saying the shelling had damaged a powerline feeding the main Donetsk water filtering station, urging everyone to stock up.

City authorities said they were trying to "urgently" organise delivery by cisterns and asked those with water wells to share with neighbours, but by Monday evening the city council only announced that non-potable water was being handed out in seven city districts.

Lyubov, a pensioner waiting in line to buy water, says in Donetsk most people only have access to water through the faucet. "Within the city there are no wells, this is a city, it's civilisation," she tells AFP

Around 40 people carrying five-litre plastic bottles waited to fill them in the densely-populated Kalininsky district northeast of the centre.

The rebel government's press service said it would "do everything possible to transfer water supply to another filtration plant and not leave Donetsk people without water."

The city encircled by Ukraine's army is now largely deserted in the centre where the wealthier residents live, but many less well-heeled residents are staying on in other districts, saying they have nowhere else to go.

- Store rush for water -

Standing with Lyubov with two bottles in her wheeled shopping bag, another pensioner Lyudmila says the city must find a solution.

"They can't switch off the whole city," she says, but adds that the authorities might have to find someone to repair the pumping station "under bullets."

Most Donetsk residents live in Soviet-era apartment blocks, while the rest reside in small private houses that are connected to mains water.

In a large supermarket in the Kalininsky district, customers had swept up all the five-litre bottles.

"There was a bit of a rush on them," says a female member of staff, who declined to give her name. "We stocked up on water of course. The rush was in the evening when they announced it on television. We won't leave people without water."

One customer was filling his trolley with six-packs of bottles of fizzy water. "Just in case," he says.

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