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India-Pakistan
Drought threatens Pakistan; reservoirs run low
2006-05-09
ISLAMABAD - Reservoirs in Pakistan are drying up, temperatures are soaring and there is little chance of significant rain for at least the next few months, a top weather official said on Monday.

In some areas, taps have already run dry and people are worried about whether they will find enough water for their families. “As I wake up, the first thing I worry about is getting water. I have to fetch water from other streets as the water tap in my street has dried up,” Mohammad Zafar, a resident of Tench Bhatta, a low-income neighbourhood in Rawalpindi, said.
Sucks to live in a failed state, doesn't it.
The wilting heat is adding to the nationÂ’s misery. In Turbat, a town in Baluchistan, temperatures reached 48 degrees Celsius (118 Fahrenheit) on Monday.

Pakistan, a country of 150 million people, relies heavily on winter rains and snow in the northern mountains to fill rivers and reservoirs to stock up for the long, hot dry months ahead of the July-September monsoon. “There is a likelihood of a severe water shortage in the coming months because of this drought,” Qamar-uz-Zaman Chaudhry, Director-General of the Meteorological Department, told Reuters. He said the country received 40 percent less than normal winter rains and up to 25 percent less snowfall. Water levels in major reservoirs were now critically low, he said.
Thanks, Halliburton.
Rawal Lake, the main source of water supply to Rawalpindi, a city of nearly two million people, has largely dried up. Drought conditions already prevailed in the southwestern province of Baluchistan and neighbouring Sindh province, and Chaudhry expected other parts of Pakistan to be affected.

A severe drought between 1999 and 2002 affected Pakistan and parts of Afghanistan and India. Agriculture accounts for 24 percent of Pakistan’s mediocre gross domestic product and marginally employs about 42 percent of its labour force. “Right now, the situation is not very bad and the adverse impact of the drought could be minimised through proper planning,” Chaudhry said.
'Proper' planning. Yep, you find that everywhere you look in Pak-land. It's a veritable planned nation.
“At this stage, we don’t foresee any major impact on our agriculture sector ... but the situation could get out of hand if we don’t handle it properly,” he added.
They're screwed.
Apart from rainfall, Pakistan relies on irrigation water from two huge reservoirs, the Tarbela and Mangla dams. As of May 8, the water level at Tarbela Dam, 50 km (30 miles) north of Islamabad in the North West Frontier Province, was just 20 feet (6 metres) above the point where water cannot be discharged. The level of water at the Mangla Dam, PakistanÂ’s second-largest, about 85 km (53 miles) southeast of Islamabad, was 74 feet (25 metres) above the cut-off point.
Posted by:Steve White

#5  Apart from rainfall, Pakistan relies on irrigation water from two huge reservoirs...

Apart from rainfall? Where do they think the reservoirs get it? From the water factory?
Posted by: tu3031   2006-05-09 16:19  

#4  Infrastructure instead of terrorism?
Posted by: DarthVader   2006-05-09 10:20  

#3  Maybe should've concentrated on infrastructure instead on Nukes?
Posted by: gromgoru   2006-05-09 05:50  

#2  Maybe they could work a trade: send Palestine some $$ and they can ship some 'humanitarian' water that Israel allows in. 'Course it will need repackaged, being infedel water and all....
Idea needa a bit of work, like how to transport, but I am sure they can figure it out. They can hide Binny, so this should be a cake walk.
Posted by: USN Ret.   2006-05-09 01:00  

#1  You can alway pray to Allan. But you still need water.
Posted by: newc   2006-05-09 00:49  

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