Iraq 10 years on: Are the taps flowing?
BAGHDAD/DUBAI, 22 April 2013 (IRIN) - For much of the
past decade, Iraqis have cursed about two things: 'maya' and 'kahraba' - water
and electricity.
These are more than petty complaints; they have become a
benchmark by which Iraqis judge progress in their country. A recent survey by
the National Democratic Institute (NDI) [ http://www.ndi.org/files/NDI-Iraq%20-%20April%202012%20National%20Survey%20-%20Report.pdf
] found that 42
percent of 2,000 Iraqis surveyed considered basic services - like water and
electricity - among the top two concerns they want the current government to
address.
In 2011, more than one-quarter of the population had
access to water from the general network for less than two hours a day, and
nearly half the population rated the quality of water services in their area as
bad or very bad, according to the Iraq Knowledge Network (IKN) [ http://www.iauiraq.org/documents/1677/IKN_Introduction_en.pdf
], a survey of nearly 30,000 households
conducted by the Ministry of Planning's Central Statistics Organization,
the Kurdistan Regional Statistics Office and the UN.
According to the UN, most Iraqis have limited access to
clean water because of poor infrastructure maintenance and inadequate funding
of the water supply system. One-fifth of Iraqis relied on bottled water as
their main source of water, and only one-fifth of people had access to water
from the general network all day long, the 2011 IKN survey found. The state of
disrepair forced significant numbers of people into using river water, despite
the health risks, IRIN reported in 2007 [ http://www.irinnews.org/Report/70243/IRAQ-Water-shortage-leads-people-to-drink-from-rivers
].
Still, statistics appear to show that access to clean
water has improved in the last decade.
But experts warn that statistics vary significantly by
region, and some Iraqis perceive there to be discrimination by sect. Just as
deposed former president Saddam Hussein politicized service delivery, the
current Shia-led government is seen, by some, to provide preferential service
to Shia communities. In recent months, for example, large-scale protests in
Sunni-led provinces have been partly inspired by dissatisfaction over service
delivery in Sunnis areas.
For some, like Mustafa Ahmed, a father of two from
Baghdad, the change in service provision has been negative. He told IRIN that,
before 2003, he could get clean water from the network, but now he has to buy
bottled water.
Meanwhile, water levels in Iraq's rivers, lakes and
reservoirs have decreased to "critical levels", according to the UN,
with the two main sources of surface water - the Tigris and Euphrates rivers -
down to one-third of their normal capacity [ http://www.iauiraq.org/documents/1866/Water-Factsheet.pdf
]. Resulting water shortages have affected Iraq's previously almost
self-sufficient agricultural sector [ http://www.irinnews.org/report/94921/IRAQ-Call-to-adopt-modern-irrigation-techniques
], which is now
depressed and underproductive, the UN says.
For more, check out this UN fact-sheet on water in Iraq [
http://www.iauiraq.org/documents/1866/Water-Factsheet.pdf
] and the Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys of 2000 [ http://www.childinfo.org/files/iraq1.pdf
], 2006 [ http://www.childinfo.org/files/MICS3_Iraq_FinalReport_2006_eng.pdf
] and
2011 [ https://www.yousendit.com/download/UVJneFlUY1M1bmo1SE1UQw
], which measure access to water and sanitation, among other things.
af/da/ha/rz
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Ten years after US forces toppled Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein, IRIN examines the impact of occupation on basic living standards.
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This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=97894
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