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From Springs To Taps: Stepanakert Municipality Promises Residents Wa

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  • From Springs To Taps: Stepanakert Municipality Promises Residents Wa

    FROM SPRINGS TO TAPS: STEPANAKERT MUNICIPALITY PROMISES RESIDENTS WATER SUPPLY

    KarabakhOpen
    17-05-2008 13:11:42

    In early May Stepanakert municipality announced a tender for a
    reconstruction project of the city's water supply system and promised
    the residents to have all the documents ready for modernization of
    the system within the coming months.

    Stepanakert's water supply system, inlayed in the 1930s, has long
    ceased to meet the needs of the city with a population of 50,000. The
    majority of residents have running water for 2 hours every other
    day. In rainy weather water gets turbid, in winter pipes freeze,
    in summer, when rivers becomes shallow, the city is left without water.

    Four Armenia-based organizations applied for the tender, with their
    projects of how to provide Stepanakert with steady water supply.

    A joint project of Yerevan Engineering University and Armvodproekt
    Institute won the tender, however it's not clear yet how the project
    is going to be funded. It is only known that the project will be
    carried out by state budget and other means.

    This year the water situation in Stepanakert has been especially
    bad. Most of the city hasn't had water since the New Year- when
    the weather got unusually cold for Karabakh. Not only pipes, but
    water mains froze. It was only after the spring thaw that people had
    water again.

    "We carry water from nearby springs," says Narek Grigoryan, a resident
    of Armenavan region in Stepanakert. "We have two 40-liter canisters
    ready in our basement. We use them both in summer, when we have running
    water only once a week, and in winter. This winter we didn't have
    tap water for two and a half months. Then the whole street was dug,
    and never asphalted again. Now we are waiting for summer again. They
    say it's going to a hot one."

    The presence of water tanks on roofs or in basements, as well as
    of pumps, has become a symbol of prosperity and comfortable life
    in Stepanakert.

    However even those are of little help in a winter as severe as the
    past one.

    Frozen tanks broke, and water burst out, flooding upper stories of
    the houses.

    During every election or appointment of the capital's mayor loud
    promises were made about water. Some 10 years ago the municipality
    tried to solve the issue by means of creating a circular plumping
    system and construction of new pump stations. But no tangible results
    have been felt so far.

    Vodokanal (water channel) company has drawn the authorities' attention
    to the dilapidation of the whole system (some facilities were built
    in 1930) and spoke about a cardinal solution of the problem.

    Mayor of Stepanakert Vazgen Mikayelyan stressed that works will be
    carried out at the filtering stations, reservoirs, as well as the
    main Gaybalin water supply system. All the pipes will be replaced by
    new ones. The open sectors of Gaybalin water supply system will be
    inlayed on a depth that matches defined norms.

    Recently businessmen from Moscow visited Stepanakert and promised
    to make major investments in the water supply system. "Hayastan"
    All-Armenian Fund also promised to assist the project.

    The city authorities promise that by summer residents will have
    running water every day for 6 hours, and round-the-clock supply-
    sometime in the future.

    The director of Vodokanal Vladimir Arzumanyan says that Stepanakert
    water comes from rivers Traget, Meghraget, Vararakn. Besides, the
    city has 3 pump stations supplying water to several districts of
    Stepanakert.

    "The city gets from 78-80 liters of water/second, residents have 1,5
    hours of running water per day," he says.

    Arzumanyan says that the population uses water wastefully: "Of
    course people have tap water only every other day and have to store
    water. They install tanks, don't watch how much water they use, and
    water goes to sewage, when a part of the population doesn't get water
    at all."

    "The issues can be solved by installing mass water meters," he says.

    "We haven't managed to complete the installation process yet, as the
    pipes are old, and accidents happened at the water stations all the
    while." Loss of water makes 70-80 percent because the pipes are in
    a pitiful state.

    During the war (1991-94) subversive acts were one the means of
    putting pressure on Stepanakert. All water sources (river heads)
    were located near Azeri villages. Or, rather those villages were
    built near the sources.

    Before Shushi was reclaimed by the Armenians, the Gaybalin filtering
    station was blown up three times. People were forced to carry water
    from springs under the hail of shells and bullets.

    "We would reuse the same water 3 times. First we bathed our children,
    then made the laundry in that water, then washed the floors with
    it. Later the situation improved, but I am dreaming of a day, when
    I don't have to run home from work at 6 p.m. because it's a 'water
    day'," says a resident of Stepanakert Anna Avagyan.
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