India’s capital, more than 65 years after independence,
can’t provide drinking water to all its citizens. A quarter of Delhi households
get no piped water into their homes, forcing them to rely on ground water from
bore wells, or on tankers bringing supplies from outside. A 2013 audit of
Delhi’s water system found it provided 200 million gallons less per day than
its 17 million residents require. Opportunist businessmen cashed in on the
discrepancy, digging their own illegal wells or seizing official supplies to
resell at a higher price, often, some claim, in cahoots with the authorities. Many
bore wells are themselves running dry and much of the water pumped from
underground is contaminated, so unsuitable for drinking.
Lalita Yadav says her household, with a monthly income
equivalent to £90, has to pay £20 a month for water from a private well. “I
could put my children into a better school with that money,” she says angrily.
“If we complain, they will cut off our water. For them, it’s just a business.”
Across the country where 76 million people, the highest
number in the world, lack access to safe water, according to a report released
today by WaterAid.
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