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91% of Karachi’s water unfit to drink

MenInG

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In January, Mohammad Riaz, a chauffeur and father of five who lives in one of Karachi’s squatter colonies – Shirin Jinnah – decided to switch to bottled drinking water. A month before that, another resident had filed a constitutional petition in the Supreme Court of Pakistan against several government offices, saying that they “are required to ensure provisions of potable water, sanitation and hygienic atmosphere to the people, but they have individually and collectively failed to discharge such fiduciary, statutory and constitutional duty”.

Riaz’s 22-year-old daughter Aasia, who lives with her husband and three-month-old son next door, says they buy water from a tanker: 45,400 litres every month for PKR 4,000 (USD 37). What was wrong with the water the agencies supplied? “Often, we found insects crawling in it, and despite sieving it through the thinnest of muslins, we still found something passing through and getting into the filtered water.”

“Often the water tasted salty, or was cloudy,” adds her sister Rashida.

All of Riaz’s family members, including his wife, work as domestic help in homes around the more affluent area of Clifton, next to Shirin Jinnah. Their jobs mean that they can afford the more expensive bottled water for drinking, but only if they use it sparingly. “We are able to make the 25-litre barrel costing PKR 200 (USD 1.80) last two days, even in the scorching summer heat,” says Aasia. Their neighbours have also started buying filtered water “which comes sealed”.

The judicial route

On hearing the petition in December 2016, the Supreme Court had constituted a judicial commissionheaded by Justice Muhammad Iqbal Kalhoro of the Sindh High Court to investigate.

The commission submitted a report to the Supreme Court on the basis of which the court ordered the implementation of the commission’s recommendations by setting up a nine-member taskforce. One of the orders was “to observe the quality of water being provided to the people of Sindh for drinking from various sources including rivers, canals, reverse osmosis plants, water supply schemes”.

Earlier this month, the taskforce submitted its report stating that 83.5 % of water in 14 out of 29 districts in Sindh is unsafe for drinking.

When the report was presented to the commission, Justice Kalhoro was visibly perturbed. “He was livid and asked the head of the Karachi Water and Sanitation Board (KWSB), which is responsible for the supply of 90% of water in the metropolis, to show him one area which was supplied with clean water,” said Ghulam Murtaza, who was appointed the amicus curiae for the commission. The report has already been submitted to the Supreme Court.

Collecting the samples

A senior research officer of the Pakistan Council of Research in Water Resources (PCRWR), Murtaza, told thethirdpole.net that out of the 460 samples collected from all over Sindh, 232 (50.4%) were collected from surface water, 179 (39%) from groundwater, 46 (10%) from reverse osmosis filtration plants and three (0.6%) from mixed sources.

The samples were from 14 cities. Villages were left out because the taskforce was asked to only look into major urban centres where water was supplied by government agencies, so that the latter could be held accountable since they are “public-trustees”.

Thar was the only place that did not come under the definition of a big urban centre, being remote and under-developed. “That is because the government had invested huge amounts to set up reverse osmosis plants there,” said Murtaza. “We started collecting water samples from different sources, water supply schemes, canals, reverse osmosis plants, from public points, hospitals, schools, and bus stands in the urban areas.” Murtaza was also asked by the Sindh High Court to head the sampling teams.

Water samples were collected for physicochemical and microbiological analysis to check colour, odour, taste, pH, electric conductivity, total dissolved solids (TDS), arsenic, nitrate-nitrogen, fluoride (F-), iron, sulphate, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, hardness, bicarbonates, coliforms and E. coli. The analysis was carried out using the American Public Health Association (APHA) standard method.

Murtaza said all the standard precautionary measures were rigorously followed while collecting samples in the field. For example, boric acid was used as a preservative in sampling bottles for nitrate, ice boxes were used to transport certain samples to the lab for bacteriological testing, and the samples were incubated in the field immediately after the sampling.

Karachi most contaminated

Karachi has the highest water supply contamination score in the report.

In all, 118 drinking water samples were collected from Karachi: 99 from surface water sources like supply systems, filtration plants and pumping stations; 13 from underground water sources; three from reverse osmosis (RO) plants and three from other ground and surface water sources.

Based on physiochemical analysis, 21 (17.8%) water samples were found unsafe for drinking due to the presence of turbidity (cloudiness) values beyond the safe limits. From the bacteriological standpoint, 104 (88.1%) were found to have presence of coliform bacteria beyond the World Health Organisation values (0/100ml cfu) and 40 (33.4%) had faecal contamination (presence of E. coli). The overall data showed that 107 (90.7%) samples collected from various places in Karachi were unsafe for drinking purposes.

“The presence of E. coli indicated the mixing of sewerage and drinking water supplies,” said Murtaza.

Mohammad Yahya, chief chemist at the KWSB, conceded to the possibility of E. coli being present in the water supply, but added that there can be several other reasons for the presence of E. coli in such large numbers.

E.coli is a fast-growing bacterium; just one can multiply into an entire colony in 24 hours. In Karachi, water is not supplied 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

“Some areas get water after a week or even after 10 days,” says Yahya. “Even if one E. coli bacterium entered the dried-out pipeline, in a week it would have multiplied into trillions.” If there was water running through the lines all the time this wouldn’t happen, he said. In addition, the insides of some pipes develop biofilms which are “ideal” breeding grounds for bacteria. Karachi has 10,000 kilometres of both old iron pipelines and new ones made of high-density polyethylene plastic pipes snaking through the city.

The problems of supply and distribution

“With a requirement of as much as 1,100 million gallons per day (mgd) for a burgeoning population of 25 million, over half of whom live in squatter colonies, we are able to supply only between 450 to 480 mgd. In addition, KWSB also supplies water to nearby areas of Karachi like Dhabeji, Ghaggar and Gharo,” said Asadullah Khan, deputy managing director for technical services at the KWSB.

Women waiting for water in the village of Nagar khan brohi Manchar, in Jamshoro district, Sindh [image courtesy: PCRWR]

Karachi gets its water from the Keenjhar lake – sourced from the Indus – nearly 122 kilometres from the city, through a canal system. “The first drop of water that reaches Keenjhar lake from the Indus takes 17 days to travel to Karachi,” said Khan, emphasising the value of the water.

“Yes there is contamination,” he said and laid part of the blame on the residents, who “steal” water like they steal electricity. “When electricity is stolen, you can see the kunda [hooks] and can take action. When water is stolen from the mainlines which are underground and are punctured, you cannot,” he said.

Often it is through these punctured points that the sewerage gets mixed into the water, said Yahya. He said it was important that people also played their civic part by keeping their underground water storages clean. “How often do we hear of residents of high rises, mosques and hospitals getting their tanks cleaned?”

Another water board official requesting anonymity said: “The board does repair leaks, and even replaces pipes every now and then, but while a complete rehabilitation of the entire distribution network is needed, it is a huge undertaking and may require two to three years. It is also very expensive.”

Little proper treatment of water

Along with a messed-up distribution network, Karachi has six water treatment plants (one in the town of Gharo but under the KWSB) that are not working optimally.

In January, when Justice Kalhoro visited the treatment plants, Khan had admitted to him that “200 MGD is supplied unfiltered owing to a lack of capacity“.

“Yes some of the filtration plants are old and ailing; most work partially, one is now obsolete,” admitted the anonymous KWSB official. In fact, he said, there was only one (the NEK2) that was working at full capacity.

“Foreign companies come and install these plants and leave. Our own technicians cannot maintain them as they are not properly trained. So when faults arise, we make do with what little expertise we have. Eventually, having lived their life, the machines collapse,” he toldthethirdpole.net.

The water board, however, is in the process of adding another imported filtration plant to its system, which, Khan said, “will be able to supply 260 mgd of treated water when it is installed by June 2018”.

The shortfall

With unrestrained demand from Karachi’s galloping population, the water board is expanding the water supply system while failing to rehabilitate the existing one. However much they try, Khan admits, “there is still a shortfall of 50%”.

And this shortfall is met by the supply of water (stolen from the state) by thetanker mafia who work in collusion with those running the illegal water hydrants. “There is no better business than the water business. It’s something no one can do without and it’s right there. We need to manage and supply. We can become a prosperous department if we start admitting what’s wrong and who is doing wrong,” said the anonymous KWSB official. “Our own homes get contaminated water; who in their right mind would want their kids to drink unclean water?”

https://www.thethirdpole.net/2017/07/28/91-of-karachis-water-unfit-to-drink/
 
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more than that almost half the water in karachi has been diverted to the new bahria town

there is a shortage of drinking water even in good localities
 
more than that almost half the water in karachi has been diverted to the new bahria town

there is a shortage of drinking water even in good localities

This This This !!!!

I know cleanliness is an important factor however even in decent places in Karachi, that historically had no water shortage issues are facing acute shortage (SMCHS, PECHS, KDA, AREAS AROUND KARSAZ, RAFA-E-AAM SOCIETY (MALIR), PARTS OF JAMSHED TOWN) are some of the affected areas.

DEFENSE area entirely runs on Tankers and getting water line there is a huge hurdle.

I did not know that this was due to Baharia Town issue, any news source for this [MENTION=138463]Slog[/MENTION] ??
 
I did not know that this was due to Baharia Town issue, any news source for this [MENTION=138463]Slog[/MENTION] ??

Dont know if there is a source but way too many people in the know have said this. (a lot of property and real estate ppl as well as water tanker businesses)

In any case its not impossible if you just see ground situation. Somehow the new bahria town has no shortage and karachi's situation is terrible in this regard. like even the tankers are coming with khaara paani most of the time and are ridiculously priced
 
Koi nahi yaar Bhutto tou zinda hai kam se kam..
 
Desalination of the sea water and brackish underground water is must to fulfil the water requirements of Karachi.

This lack of clean water is one of the reasons that hundreds of people lose their lives to heat-wave every year.
 
It will only get worse if population keeps increasing. Coastal cities like Karachi and Gwadar should have their own water reservoirs and desalination planets. But who cares about that when we have to focus on more important stuff like war with neighboring countries.
 
This stuff should be running on news cycles but our media is obessed with sharifs and other politicians who do nothing, did nothing. People are dying daily because of pure negligence and we are expecting a saviour to save us. This type of stuff makes me be thankful that my family moved to the west when we did.
 
Shocks me PPP has been in party for nearly 3 decades and they could not provide a basic ammenity like drinking water to their people. It is strange and you really wonder do the people working for organisations like WAPDA even do any work.
 
Usually they say boil the hell out of the water to get rid of the germs.

But in Karachi if we boil the water we will get new germs somehow.
 
Karachi tap water appears like Pepsi and Coca Cola. I wonder how people living there survive drinking such unclean water?
 
Shocks me PPP has been in party for nearly 3 decades and they could not provide a basic ammenity like drinking water to their people. It is strange and you really wonder do the people working for organisations like WAPDA even do any work.

We are not their people. No matter how bad PMLN is they did do a lot of development in Punjab cities like Faisalabad etc PPP though wants to keep Karachi in Sindh for the money and power but does not really care about any kind of development,. Musharraf was from Karachi when he came to power we got a lot of development done first with MMA and then MQM mostly because army engineers etc were involved. Then Mr 10% came to power. The way these people treat poor people from interior Sindh us not being their people might even they treat us better as they dont have the same kind of power over us.
 
We are not their people. No matter how bad PMLN is they did do a lot of development in Punjab cities like Faisalabad etc PPP though wants to keep Karachi in Sindh for the money and power but does not really care about any kind of development,. Musharraf was from Karachi when he came to power we got a lot of development done first with MMA and then MQM mostly because army engineers etc were involved. Then Mr 10% came to power. The way these people treat poor people from interior Sindh us not being their people might even they treat us better as they dont have the same kind of power over us.

This is partially why martial law is justified. The corruption of civilian governments means poor management of water resources.

Here's a World Bank report from 2004:

"The facts are stark. Pakistan is already one of the most water-stressed countries in the world, a situation that is going to degrade into outright water scarcity due to high population growth. There is no feasible intervention which would enable Pakistan to mobilize appreciably more water than it now uses ...
There are no additional water resources to be exploited and agricultural water use must decline to enable adequate flows into the degrading Indus River Delta. Pakistan’s dependence on a single river system makes its water economy highly risky ...
Groundwater is now being overexploited in many areas, and its quality is declining ... There is little evidence that government (or donors, including the World Bank) have re-engineered their capacity and funding to deal with this great challenge. And here delay is fatal, because the longer it takes to develop such actions, the greater will become the depth [beneath the earth] of the water table. "

This was in 2004! When people raise concerns about martial law, they should realise any army around the world would step in during an existential crisis. Don't be surprised if they come again to replace Pakistan's failing democracy.
 
Shocks me PPP has been in party for nearly 3 decades and they could not provide a basic ammenity like drinking water to their people. It is strange and you really wonder do the people working for organisations like WAPDA even do any work.

Read properly. Roti Kapda Makaan. Not Roti Kapda Paani Makaan. :batman:
 
'Drinking water in Sindh contaminated with human waste'

Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Justice Saqib Nisar has expressed dissatisfaction over the prevalent conditions of availability water in Sindh.

He made the comments during a hearing regarding non-functioning water filtration and treatment plants in Karachi. Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah and Former Mayor-Karachi Mustafa Kamal were summoned, according to Express News.

“The situation [in Sindh] is very painful for me,” he said. “Human waste is being used in drinking water.”

Chiding Shah for the incompetence of Sindh government in providing clean drinking water, the CJP asked Shah if he was ready to drink the water.

In August, a report submitted to the judicial commission constituted by the SC to investigate authorities’ failure to provide clean drinking water and poor sanitation conditions in Sindh, headed by Justice Muhammad Iqbal Kalhoro, found up to 90 per cent of water supplied in Karachi is unfit for human consumption due to the presence of bacterial contamination.The report was based on laboratory analysis of water samples collected from surface and underground water sources from different parts of the metropolis.

The prosecutor presented court with a video showing the current state of treatment plants in Karachi. The CJP said that the video presented in the courtroom should be televised by all media channels to spread awareness among the masses.

However, the Sindh CM rejected the video, saying it exaggerated the conditions. “If I get the opportunity, I will present another video to court soon,” said Shah.

Responding to Shah, the CJP remarked that the Sindh CM may reject the video but he should read the commission report. “Review the gravity of the situation by reading the commission report,” he said. “Try to find solutions through it.”

“Do not take this negatively,” the CJP said. “We will find out who was responsible for past mistakes in the next phase.”

“I wish Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) chairman Bilawal Bhutto was present here to see and become aware of the situation in Larkana,” the CJP added. “You’re an elected leader. Only those nations succeed that believe in knowledge, leadership, and law,” he told Shah.

He ordered the provincial CM to to resolve the problem. “What future will we offer to our children if we provide them water with human waste?”

“Please tell us how long will you take to find a solution, one week or 10 days,” he asked.

He said once the plan was outlined, the apex court and the government could work together to solve the problem in six months. Shah, however, sought more time to resolve the issue.

The CJP said the period could be extended if the Sindh CM presented the court a timeline regarding the solution, adding that he was aware of corruption in the processes but was not going to make any accusations. “Give us a plan, and we will cooperate with you,” he said.

“We do not want to step on the government,” the CJP noted. “We are playing a constitutional role in public interest. Whenever there will be a void, the judiciary will continue to fill it.”

https://tribune.com.pk/story/157730...-sindh-sc-tells-murad-ali-shah-mustafa-kamal/
 
Nothing less than the PPP supporters deserve for their stupidity. Its like Nooras complaining about corruption and then voting for NS.
 
KARACHI, Pakistan - Orangi is a maze, a spider’s web of narrow, winding lanes, broken roads and endless rows of small concrete houses. More than two million people are crammed into what is one of the world’s largest unplanned settlements here in western Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city.

But Orangi has a problem: it has run out of water.

“What water?” asks Rabia Begum, 60, when told the reason for Al Jazeera’s visit to her neighbourhood earlier this year. “We don’t get any water here.”

It is so rare for water to flow through the taps here that residents say they have given up expecting it. The last time it flowed through the main pipeline in Begum’s neighbourhood, for example, was 33 days ago.

Instead, they are forced to obtain most of their water through drilled motor-operated wells (known as ‘bores’). Ground water in the coastal city, however, tends to be salty, and unfit for human consumption.

“When we shower, our hair [becomes] sticky [with the salt], our heads feel heavy,” says Begum.

The only other option for residents is to buy unfiltered water from private water tanker operators, who fill up at a network of legal and illegal water hydrants across the city. A 1,000-gallon water tanker normally costs between $12 and $18. Begum says she has to order at least four tankers a month to meet the basic needs of her household of 10 people.


Farzana Bibi, 40, says she has to ration out when she showers and washes her family's clothes, because she can not afford to buy enough water every month
But not everyone in this working class neighbourhood can afford to buy water from the tankers or to pay the approximately $800 its costs to install a drilled well for non-drinking water.

“I’m piling up the dirty clothes, that’s how I save money,” says Farzana Bibi, 40, who manages a household of five people on an income of roughly $190 a month. “We bathe two days in a week.”

Asked how she gets by, with so little water coming via the taps and no access to a saltwater source to clean dishes or laundry, she seems resigned.

When she washes her clothes, she says, she makes sure not to leave the tap on. She’ll fill a basin with water and wash her dishes in that, rather than under running water. She waits until there is at least a fortnight’s worth of dirty clothes before beginning to wash them. Every drop of water, she says, needs to be accounted for.

But despite all this rationing, the water tank at her home is almost dry.

“There is a small amount of water,” she says. “I am saving it to drink. When I have money in my hands, I’ll get a tanker.”

Orangi’s problems, while acute, are not unique in Pakistan’s largest city. Karachi’s roughly 20 million residents regularly face water shortages, with working class neighbourhoods the worst hit by a failing distribution and supply system.

Areas such as Orangi, Baldia and Gadap, some of the most densely populated in the city, receive less than 40 percent of the water allotted to them, according to data collected by the Orangi Pilot Project (OPP), an NGO that works on civic infrastructure and citizens’ rights in the area.

On average, residents in these areas use about 67.76 litres of water per day, according to data collected by Al Jazeera. That includes the water they use for drinking, cooking, cleaning, washing clothes, bathing and sanitary uses.

So what is going on here? How is it possible that in one of the largest cities in the world, there simply isn’t enough water being supplied? Is it because the reservoirs and water sources supplying Karachi just aren’t large enough for this rapidly expanding megacity?

https://interactive.aljazeera.com/aje/2017/parched-for-price/index.html
 
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