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Kabul copes with lots of people, little water

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Kabul copes with lots of people, little water
Afghans see a possible livelihood in the city, despite its crumbling infrastructure.
By Mark Sappenfield | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor Page 1 of 3
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Monitor photographer Andy Nelson on respecting culture in Afghanistan. (0:53)KABUL, AFGHANISTAN - This is a city under siege, not from the Taliban, but from itself.

Kabul is home to 3.4 million people but has no public sewage system. Piped city water reaches only 18 percent of people. Daily power cuts last from dawn until 4 p.m. in the winter – longer in the summer.

Once renowned for green gardens and quirky bazaars, Kabul is sinking under the weight of its own citizens. More than a million migrants have flooded into the capital city since the 2001 fall of the Taliban, seeking a job and a better life in the big city.

In all, the population of Kabul has nearly doubled in seven years, straining a metropolis still riddled by the bullet holes and bombed-out roofs of many years of civil war.

Larger than the next 10 largest Afghan cities combined, Kabul estimates its most basic needs require $55 million this year; its budget is $4.5 million. Residents complain, but they cope. Despite the smell of sewage and mile-long walks to get drinking water, Kabul finds ways to function.

Yet more than five years after the international community pledged to help rebuild this tattered capital, the hard work has hardly even begun.

"Thirty years ago, everything seemed to work here, but there were not the population pressures we see now," says Pushpa Pathak, an adviser to the Kabul Municipality. "And since then, there has only been destruction, not construction."

Thirty years ago, Kabul was a charming city of 750,000 that drew hippies and exotic travelers to its quiet streets lined with pines and poplars. By 1999, however, the population had hit 1.8 million, and from 1999 to 2004, the city grew at a rate of 15 percent a year, according to World Bank estimates.
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I wonder what happened to the wells and bottling plant we left behind in Camp Julien??????

I agree the city is a filthy hole.
 
a78jumper said:
I wonder what happened to the wells and bottling plant we left behind in Camp Julien??????

It, along with the entire camp, were handed over to the Ministry of Defence.  Ministry personnel were trained in the use of both the filtration and bottling plant - in fact a large quantity of blanks for the bottles were handed over as well.  No idea if it is still in operation.
 
The bottling plant shut down very shortly after it was handed over due (in my guess) to some pretty extreme incompetence in the MoD. The camp is still there but it was empty when I left in August of last year.

As for there not being enough water in Kabul: BS!!! Maybe the people there will have to learn to stop washing their driveways every day! As someone from the Ministry of Urban Development told me: there is no shortage of water in Kabul, just very poor water management.

MG
 
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