http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=NDU2NzM2OTM1

Water woes could undermine Yemen's drive against Qaeda
Published Date: January 25, 2010 



SANAA: Impoverished Yemen is reeling under the threat of Al-Qaeda, northern 
Shiite rebels and southern secessionists, but a lack of water is putting its 
ancient capital at even greater risk, experts say. Within a decade-or even 
less-Sanaa could become the first waterless capital in the world, they warn, 
adding the outlook is also bleak for the rest of this parched country where 
wells in some regions are already dry. A conference in London on Wednesday will 
discuss Yemen's anti-terrorism drive, but it is un
clear whether the water woes that experts say are likely to fuel more 
insecurity are on the agenda.

Water disputes and riots in this largely tribal nation could squeeze Yemen's 
struggling government, undermining its ability to remain focused on an 
increasingly alarming security situation. The United States and major European 
powers, concerned about the possible fallout from a resurgent Al-Qaeda, have 
been pressuring Sanaa to uproot the Islamic militants. Yemen says it needs 
arms, training and funds to do that. "The situation in Yemen is rapidly 
deteriorating in the face of several challenges, all of which have the 
potential to develop into a serious crisis within the next five years," the 
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace said in a report last year.

It said roughly 80 percent of conflicts in Yemen are over water, which is being 
used more rapidly than it can be replenished. Water extraction rates in Sanaa 
are estimated at four times that of replenishment, it added. "Sanaa will be the 
first capital in modern history to run dry," the Carnegie report said. Dierk 
Schlutter, a water specialist with the humanitarian German Development Service, 
said that could happen in less than a decade. The groundwater feeding Sanaa 
"will be exhausted in 2015 or 2017, one cannot say exactly," Schlutter said.

He added the government could decide to supply the capital with water tankers, 
but that would raise water prices, which in some districts are already as high 
as in European cities like Paris. Experts warn prices rises are likely to 
ignite public anger. For the past few years water, riots have been common, 
especially in the south. Yemen is one of the driest countries on the planet, 
with per capita water share at about 125 cubic meters, against a global average 
of 7,500 cubic meters.

Per capita water share under 1,000 cubic meters retards development, according 
to the United Nations. Yemen remains the poorest and most underdeveloped 
country of the Arabian Peninsula. Sanaa, built at an altitude of 2,300 meters, 
has a notoriously precarious water supply. Some districts have no supply at 
all, and others have taps that stop every 20 days. As a result, hundreds of 
private drillers suck out water from depleting wells and sell them in water 
tankers and jerry cans big and small.

Mohammad Maayad, a 27-year-old private driller, said that "now I drill at 
depths of 480 meters (1,574), but when I started I only used to drill down to 
400 meters" to find water. Yemen's water table is dropping at about two meters 
per year, the Carnegie report warned. "As of January 2009, Water and 
Environment Ministry officials estimate that more than 800 private drill rigs 
are operating in the country," the report said. It added that in contrast, 
there are only three in all of Jordan and just 100 in India, whose population 
is more than 50 times that of Yemen's 24 million people. Pulling the water from 
the ground is all but free for drillers like Maayad, because the diesel fuel 
they need for their pumps is subsidized by the government and sold for a paltry 
17 cents a liter.

Officials and international experts blame Yemen's water problem largely on qat, 
a mild narcotic plant that is chewed by the majority of Yemeni men. "The 
problem is qat," said a European expert who did not wish to be identified, 
adding about half the water used for agriculture goes to growing qat. Water 
used for agriculture accounts for about 90 percent of all consumption, he said. 
"Qat fetches four times more than coffee, and the plantations are often in the 
hands of tribal chiefs or the so-called 'qat mafia,' who are too powerful for 
the government to go after," he added. A 2002 law aimed at curbing water 
depletion bans private drilling, but it is rarely applied, Schlutter said.

He said the solution to the water issue was to ban qat cultivation, but 
acknowledged that would be impossible because qat is so entrenched in Yemeni 
society. "It's like trying to ban beer in Germany or wine in France," he added. 
"But five to 10 years from now they will have to decide: chew qat or give water 
to their children," Schlutter said. "The government is between a rock and hard 
place: If they reduce qat production they will have violent reactions from 
tribes and producers, but if they don't they will have demonstrations over 
water," he added. - AFP


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