BFF-70 Water wars in India’s hillside getaway Shimla as taps run dry

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INDIA-WATER-POLICE-TOURISM

Water wars in India’s hillside getaway Shimla as taps run dry

SHIMLA, India, May 30, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Indian police on Wednesday were
forced to escort water tankers through the streets of Shimla as an
unprecedented shortage sparked brawls and desperation in the Himalayan
hotspot popular with the rich and famous.

The mountain getaway is generally crowded with vacationers but hotels are
closing and tourists being told to stay away as a crippling water shortage
pinches the picturesque retreat.

Anxious residents have been waiting for hours in queues hundreds deep to
collect water, filling buckets at tankers guarded by police.

“We all know for the past fortnight the situation is so bad that people are
getting water barely once in a week,” Sanjay Chauhan, a former mayor of
Shimla, told AFP.

Shimla, the erstwhile summer capital of British India, requires around 42
million litres per day but often suffers water shortages in the summer.

But supply has dipped by nearly half this year, sparking what residents say
is the worst shortage in living memory.

The mountainous northern state of Himachal Pradesh endured record-low
snowfall during the winter which experts say is responsible for taps running
dry earlier than usual.

But some residents in Shimla, the state capital, say water has been
syphoned off to hotels for the well-heeled or to VIP estates.

Protests outside the chief minister’s home late Tuesday turned violent,
with demonstrators clashing with police and chanting slogans against the
local government.

The state’s highest court has asked for an explanation from authorities and
a plan for managing the crisis.

But critics say the water scarcity underscores the strain placed on Shimla
every summer as tens of thousands descend on it.

A social media campaign urging tourists to avoid Shimla until the crisis
passes has gone viral online.

“Don’t visit Shimla this year, let the place breathe for a while, it’s
overcrowded and exploited to the limits,” reads the campaign slogan
circulating on social media platforms like WhatsApp.

Many hoteliers and travel agents say the bad publicity is already having an
impact.

Shimla is usually brimming with tourists in summer as temperatures on
India’s lower plains hover around 46 degrees Celsius (115 Fahrenheit).

But visitors were cancelling bookings or shortening their trips, said
travel agent Mohit Sharma.

“Booking inquiries for June have dried up. Those who had booked rooms are
asking to be shifted to other places outside Shimla or cancelling their
bookings,” he told AFP.

BSS/AFP/MRI/1804 hrs