India
suffers through worst drought in nearly 50 years: warns of famine if
rains fail
Millions
of people in western India are suffering their worst drought in more
than four decades, with critics blaming official ineptitude and
corruption for exacerbating the natural water shortage.
6
March, 2013
Central
areas of Maharashtra state, of which Mumbai is the capital, are
facing a water shortage worse than the severe drought in 1972, the
state's chief minister Prithviraj Chavan told AFP.
"In
recorded history the reservoirs have never been so low in central
Maharashtra," he said. "With every passing day the
reservoirs are drying up."
Chavan
blamed the crisis on two successive poor monsoons, although others
say a public policy failure is also responsible.
Nearly
2,000 tanker trucks are being used to transport drinking water to the
needy, while hundreds of cattle camps have been set up to keep
livestock alive until the monsoon, which usually arrives in June.
"With
every passing day, the tankers have to travel a greater distance.
It's a huge logistical issue," Chavan said.
The
chief minister's office could not put an exact figure on the
population in the 10,000 villages affected, but said it ran into
millions.
Christopher
Moses runs a charitable hospital in Jalna, one of the worst-affected
districts. He said many people had lost their livelihoods as
companies shut down and farmers' crops wither.
"This
is a famine. Villagers have nothing to eat, they are scraping
literally the bottom of their pot," Moses told AFP by telephone
from Jalna.
"Water-related
diseases are on the up, starvation will start coming up, malnutrition
will start coming up now," he said.
He
said the crisis may force him to shut down parts of his Jalna Mission
Hospital for the first time in its 117-year history. It has not yet
seen any emergency water supplies from the government.
With
nearly three-quarters of Indians dependent on rural incomes, the
yearly monsoon is a lifeline -- especially given that about
two-thirds of farmland is not irrigated and depends entirely on rain.
The
1972 drought led to a massive shortage of food grains and prices of
all commodities rocketed, forcing India's government to increase
imports, while another widespread drought in 2009 also inflated
prices and hardship.
While
last year's monsoon picked up late in western parts of India, low
rainfall in the crucial month of June led to water deficiency
throughout the season, according to Medha Khole at the India
Meteorological Department.
Chavan
warned there would a "very serious problem" if the rains
fail this year.
An
alleged irrigation scam has been blamed for worsening Maharashtra's
crisis, with politicians and bureaucrats accused of wasting vast
public funds on unfinished projects in the state through corruption
and nepotism.
Maharashtra's
proportion of irrigated land grew by just 0.1 percentage points
between 2000 and 2010, an official economic survey said, despite
billions of dollars being spent on it.
A
controversial government white paper has disputed the statistics and
Chavan declined to comment on graft allegations involving other
ministers because the courts are investigating.
He
acknowledged that the government "could have planned better"
on irrigation schemes and was now trying to complete projects meant
for agriculture to provide drinking water in deficient areas.
Professor
H.M. Desarda, an economist in the drought-hit region, said corruption
was a "very significant part of the problem", but a lack of
understanding of how best to harvest rainwater was also to blame.
He
believes better water management is needed and a shift of focus from
expensive projects, such as giant dams, to smaller and more efficient
community-level methods for storing water.
Regulations
on groundwater extraction, which is exacerbating the water scarcity,
also need to be more stringently enforced.
"It's
not a failure of rain, it's a failure of public policies," said
Desarda.
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