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Syria's ailing water network could spark epidemics: Red Cross 3/9/2015
Syria's water network, heavily damaged by bombs and shelling, is at risk of collapse as its civil war drags on, increasing the threat of deadly typhoid or cholera outbreaks, the International Committee of the Red Cross said on Wednesday.
 
Millions of people in Aleppo and Damascus are cut off from water supplies for days at a time, a tactic used by all warring sides to exert control in divided cities, the ICRC said.
 
ICRC aid workers have helped water boards and engineers to maintain and repair aging pumping stations throughout Syria since the conflict began in March 2011.
 
"But now with the problems of electricity and with the damage being sustained by them as a result of the conflict, there is the risk from here on that these big networks do begin to fail on a permanent basis, on an irreparable basis,"
 
Patrick Hamilton, ICRC operations coordinator for the Near and Middle East, told Reuters at ICRC headquarters.
 
"And over the next two years we will begin to see in cities like Aleppo potentially the rise of these big health epidemics that we haven't seen in this context until now - typhoid, cholera and so on," he said.
 
Despite a crippled health system, Syria's population has remained "comparatively healthy" due to access to clean water, but the failure of water supply networks would spell disaster.
 
Many of the two million residents in Aleppo, a major northern city, have "severe difficulty" in accessing water since pumping and electricity stations are controlled by different warring parties, the ICRC said in a statement.
 
The ICRC and engineers have restored 56 boreholes across Aleppo, Hamilton said. "We've been trying to alert the population through social media to the presence of these boreholes. We put out a map on Facebook and Twitter telling people in this place they can find clean water."
 
 
PHOTO: Residents fill containers with water in Aleppo's eastern district of Tariq al-Bab, Syria, August 1, 2015.
CREDIT: REUTERS/ABDALRHMAN ISMAIL.
 
 
 
 
 
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