Environment & Energy
Related: About this forum3 Main La Paz Reservoirs Almost Entirely Dry; Cattle Dying, Crops Failing, Hospitals Halve Capacity
For weeks, hundreds of thousands of Bolivians have been stricken with drought, with some neighborhoods receiving water for only three hours every three days. Armed forces drive tanks into affected communities, where families form long lines to collect water. The drought became so fierce recently that schools in three regions of the country decided to cut the school year short two weeks before summer break.
The country is in the midst of its worst drought in 25 years, as three reservoirs that supply its largest city, La Paz, are almost entirely dried up. For the first time, the government has put into effect water rationing, affecting more than 177,000 families across the country, Reuters reported. In response, the government has provided aid, including bottled water, to about 145,000 drought-stricken families, Reuters reported.
The severity of the drought escalated last week, when President Evo Morales declared a national state of emergency, insisting that Bolivians have to be prepared for the worst. And earlier this week, Chiles government offered to provide humanitarian aid to help Bolivia confront the national emergency, El Deber reported.
Hospitals are working at half capacity, suspending non-emergency surgeries and dialysis, the Guardian reported. In the poor neighborhoods of southern Sucre, taps have run dry for three weeks, and in the southern highlands, where most of the countrys quinoa is grown, the 2016 crop has been slashed in half. Cattle have been wiped out, and two of the countrys lakes have run completely dry. The prolonged drought, and the governments response to it, have escalated tension and led to protests across La Paz and other regions. About two weeks ago, residents of the impoverished town El Alto held government officials and water authorities hostage after the minister of environment and water failed to turn up for a meeting to report on a water supply project in the area, Al Jazeera reported.
EDIT
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2016/11/30/prepared-for-the-worst-bolivians-face-historic-drought-and-global-warming-could-intensify-it/?utm_term=.eaf8504703d6
orwell
(7,773 posts)He'll save the quinoa eating climate change victims with tax cuts!
dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)What are those poor patients gonna do?
progressoid
(49,990 posts)They're going to die.