In South Africa, water shortages are the new reality

In South Africa, water shortages are the new reality
“It’s been going on for five days,” she said, lamenting shortages affecting South Africa’s largest city where temperatures are rising with the beginning of summer. (AFP)
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Updated 23 October 2024
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In South Africa, water shortages are the new reality

In South Africa, water shortages are the new reality
  • “It’s been going on for five days,” she said, lamenting shortages affecting South Africa’s largest city where temperatures are rising with the beginning of summer

JOHANNESBURG: Joyce Lakela runs a nursery in Tembisa, a Johannesburg township, but these days she spends most of her time trying to find water.
“It’s been going on for five days,” she said, lamenting shortages affecting South Africa’s largest city where temperatures are rising with the beginning of summer.
“This is a big challenge,” the elderly woman said, after filling up a large bin with water from a tanker. “The kids have to wash their hands, we have to flush the toilets, and we also have to wash the kids.”
The crisis is the result of daily restrictions imposed by the city to stop what they say is over-consumption and to allow maintenance work.
While there is enough water in the country’s reserves, for individuals like Lakela, who already faced months of electricity shortages last year, the reality is that taps are going dry for hours and sometimes days.
Last week, residents of Westbury and Westdene, suburbs to the west of the central business district, blocked the streets in protest against water outages. They burned tires and blocked a road with rocks and debris.
Businesses and services have also been affected, including at least one hospital in northern Gauteng, the province of 16 million people which includes Johannesburg and the capital, Pretoria.
This comes after Rand Water, the water supplier for Gauteng, this month warned over high water consumption and instructed municipalities to impose daily limits.
“Water storage could soon be depleted if municipalities do not implement our recommendations. It is essential to act now to prevent the impending disaster,” Rand Water said in a statement on October 12.
The water company is not just worried about consumers leaving taps on. There are also leaks and “illegal connections,” or theft by individuals who divert pipelines and do not pay bills.
“We are losing an average of over 40 percent (of our water) if you look at it in Gauteng,” Makenosi Maroo, a spokeswoman for the utility, told AFP.
Municipalities often cite leaks as a reason for maintenance-related outages.
“We’re not replacing anywhere near as much infrastructure as we should be,” said Craig Sheridan, director of the Center in Water Research and Development at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg.
For Chris Herold, another water expert, “one of the main problems is that they (the municipalities) are incompetently run, and there’s also a lot of corruption which is hindering the efficient running of water systems.”
Municipalities insist that they are doing what they can with the resources they have. According to at least one city in the province, Ekurhuleni, it is the utility that is not providing enough water and leaving the reservoirs empty.
But Rand Water is only licensed to withdraw a fixed amount approved by the Department of Water and Sanitation.
Already back in 2009, it was clear that more was needed as Gauteng’s population was rapidly expanding. The government made a deal with neighboring Lesotho to expand the bulk water supply to Rand Water.
The project initially meant for 2018 has been delayed until 2028 and as a result, sporadic restrictions to reduce demand are likely to continue.
The rules could become more severe if South Africans do not change their habits, authorities have warned, adding that there could also be “financial implications.”
The country is already considered water scarce, with an average annual precipitation of 495mm compared to the global average of around 990mm per year, and a warming planet will exacerbate the issue.
Under a moderate climate change scenario, in which global emissions peak around 2040 and then decline, the amount of precipitation could fall by as much as 25 percent in South Africa by the end of the century.
The estimates were released in a report published this month by the Global Commission on the Economics of Water.
“There’s definitely a sense of urgency,” said Sheridan, who is particularly concerned by the health risks linked to turning water systems on and off, which has been South Africa’s short term solution.
“When a pipe is full of water, the water leaks out of it. If the pipe is empty, then a leaking sewer next to it can potentially contaminate the supply.”


No indications employees from defense secretary’s office are being investigated for Israel leak, Pentagon chief says

No indications employees from defense secretary’s office are being investigated for Israel leak, Pentagon chief says
Updated 2 min 49 sec ago
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No indications employees from defense secretary’s office are being investigated for Israel leak, Pentagon chief says

No indications employees from defense secretary’s office are being investigated for Israel leak, Pentagon chief says
  • Social media posts, without evidence, have singled out a US Defense Department employee as being under investigation for the leak

ROME: There are no indications any employees from the Office of the Secretary of Defense are being investigated for the leak of US intelligence about Israel’s preparations to strike Iran, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said on Wednesday.
“There’s no OSD official being named as a part of this investigation,” Austin said while speaking to reporters in Rome.
The FBI said on Tuesday it was investigating the public disclosure of a pair of highly classified documents describing Israel’s preparations for a retaliatory strike on Iran.
Austin added that he did not have any indication that “any OSD official will be implicated as a part of this.”
Social media posts, without evidence, have singled out a US Defense Department employee as being under investigation for the leak.
The leaked documents appear to have been prepared by the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, describing US interpretations of Israeli Air Force and Navy planning based on satellite imagery from Oct. 15-16. They began circulating last week on the Telegram messaging app.
Israel has been planning a response to a ballistic-missile barrage carried out by Iran on Oct. 1, Tehran’s second direct attack on Israel in six months. Israel has intensified its offensive in Gaza and Lebanon, days after the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar.
White House spokesman John Kirby said on Monday that it has not been determined whether the disclosure was a hack or an intentional leak by a US person with access to the sensitive intelligence.


Thousands rally in Mozambique ahead of election results

Thousands rally in Mozambique ahead of election results
Updated 17 min 19 sec ago
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Thousands rally in Mozambique ahead of election results

Thousands rally in Mozambique ahead of election results
  • Opposition candidate Venancio Mondlane has called for 25 days of protests over the killing of his attorney
  • The government of Mozambique has called for calm as the country awaits official election results

MAPUTO: Thousands of people gathered Wednesday outside Mozambique’s capital to bury the murdered lawyer of an opposition candidate, as tensions grew ahead of the imminent release of election results.
Venancio Mondlane has called for 25 days of protests over the killing of his attorney as results from the October 9 ballot likely on Thursday were expected to show the ruling Frelimo party winning.
Mondlane warned the results would be “false” and said his lawyer Elvino Dias was killed by the security forces alongside another ally, Paulo Guambe, as they were preparing a case to contest the vote.
Before Dias’ burial at Michafutene cemetery outside Maputo, large crowds were seen assembling at a church, according to an AFP reporter present.
In a message on Facebook, Mondlane, who accused security forces of ambushing the duo in the early hours of Saturday and shooting at them 25 times, said he would unleash “25 days of terror” in reprisal.
Police said it had launched an investigation into the killings, while Frelimo party which has been in power for 49 years “vehemently” condemned the “macabre act.”
The government of Mozambique has called for calm as the country awaits official results.
Mondlane was among a group of protesters tear gassed by police on Monday after he had called for a general strike to protest against Dias’ murder as well as perceived electoral fraud.
Election observers from the EU have also raised concern about the legitimacy of the polls, noting “irregularities during counting and unjustified alteration of election results at polling station and district level.”
Initial indications of a low turnout in the coastal country of some 33 million people could further erode the vote’s credibility.
President Filipe Nyusi, 65, is stepping down after his two terms allowed by the constitution but his party’s candidate, 47-year-old Daniel Chapo, was widely expected to win.
Other presidential candidates included Ossufo Momade, 63, of the Renamo party, and Lutero Simango, 64, of the Mozambique Democratic Movement.
While Renamo has traditionally been the main opposition group, the emergence of Mondlane and the Podemos party was a new development in this election.
“Mondlane and Podemos have leveraged social media to connect with Mozambique’s large youth population who are seeking a change to the status quo,” said Emilia Columbo of the DC based Center for Strategic and International Studies.


Riots rock Lisbon after police shoot dead black man

Riots rock Lisbon after police shoot dead black man
Updated 26 min 23 sec ago
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Riots rock Lisbon after police shoot dead black man

Riots rock Lisbon after police shoot dead black man
  • Young rioters from poorer neighborhoods sparked unrest, Portuguese media say, in a rare spike in violence in the southern European country
  • The violence erupted after police shot dead Odair Moniz, a 43-year-old man from Cape Verde, overnight Sunday to Monday

LISBON: Portuguese authorities on Wednesday said they had arrested three people after a second night of violence in Lisbon unleashed by police shooting dead a black man.
Young rioters from poorer neighborhoods sparked unrest, Portuguese media said, in a rare spike in violence in the southern European country.
Police reported three arrests and around 60 incidents in and around Lisbon, with two officers injured by stones and two other people stabbed without serious wounds.
Two police vehicles were damaged while two buses and nine other vehicles were burned, the force added in a statement.
The violence erupted after police shot dead Odair Moniz, a 43-year-old man from Cape Verde, overnight Sunday to Monday.
Police said he tried to flee and attacked their officers with a bladed weapon. Anti-racism organization SOS Racisme questioned the official version of events, connecting the death with other cases of “police brutality.”


North Korea sent 1,500 more troops to Russia, Seoul spy agency tells lawmakers

North Korea sent 1,500 more troops to Russia, Seoul spy agency tells lawmakers
Updated 23 October 2024
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North Korea sent 1,500 more troops to Russia, Seoul spy agency tells lawmakers

North Korea sent 1,500 more troops to Russia, Seoul spy agency tells lawmakers
  • The latest deployment brings the number of Pyongyang’s troops in Russia to 3,000, lawmaker Park Sun-won said
  • Seoul’s spy agency last week said Pyongyang had decided to send a ‘large-scale’ troop deployment to Russia

SEOUL: North Korea has sent 1,500 more soldiers to Russia, Seoul’s spy agency told lawmakers Wednesday, with 10,000 troops expected to be deployed by December.
The latest deployment brings the number of Pyongyang’s troops in Russia to 3,000, lawmaker Park Sun-won said, after a briefing by the National Intelligence Service.
“An additional 1,500 troops are believed to have been deployed to Russia... so approximately 3,000 North Korean soldiers are believed to have been deployed to Russia so far,” Park, who sits on parliament’s intelligence committee, told reporters.
“The planned deployment of about 10,000 troops from North Korea to Russia is expected to to have occurred by December,” he added.
Seoul’s spy agency last week said Pyongyang had decided to send a “large-scale” troop deployment to Russia to fight against Ukraine, cementing Pyongyang’s contentious military alliance with Moscow.
North Korean state media has not commented on the purported troop deployment, which Russia has also not confirmed.
South Korea has long claimed the nuclear-armed North is supplying Russia with weapons for use in Ukraine, and Seoul expressed alarm over the troop deployment, which comes after Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a military deal in June.
Another lawmaker said rumors were spreading within the tightly controlled North that the elite “Storm Corps” had been sent to Russia.
“Additionally, there are reports circulating that the families of the deployed soldiers were so much in grief that their excessive crying has visibly affected their faces,” lawmaker Lee Seong-kweun told reporters.
“In response, North Korean authorities are said to be strictly controlling information, and there are indications that they are relocating and isolating the families of the deployed soldiers in undisclosed locations to better manage and control them.”
Germany on Wednesday said it had summoned North Korea’s envoy over Pyongyang’s support to Russia in Ukraine and warned the reclusive state against sending troops.
The United States and NATO have yet to confirm the deployment, but Ukrainian media reported President Volodymyr Zelensky saying Tuesday that two North Korean brigades – with up to 6,000 personnel each – were undergoing training in Russia.
Also on Tuesday, the Russian Telegram channel Astra released clips purportedly showing Russian and North Korean soldiers, with audio capturing phrases such as “I’m tired” and “we’re late” spoken in a North Korean accent.
Lawmaker Lee said that Seoul’s spy agency confirmed that the Russian military “is actively recruiting a large number of Korean language interpreters.”
The North Korean troops are also being provided with “with training on the use of military equipment, including drone operation and other technical skills.”
“Russian instructors participating in military training have assessed that while the North Korean soldiers display excellent physical stamina and morale, they lack sufficient understanding of modern warfare tactics, especially drone-based attacks,” Lee said.
As a result, the Russian instructors expect “there could be a significant number of casualties if North Korean forces are deployed to the frontlines,” Lee added.
Experts have said that in return for sending soldiers to help Russia, the North’s leader Kim is likely aiming to acquire military technologies, ranging from surveillance satellites to submarines, plus possible security guarantees from Moscow.
Both North Korea and Russia are under rafts of UN sanctions – Kim for his weapons program, and Moscow for the war in Ukraine.


Senior Hamas official arrives in Russia, RIA reports

Senior Hamas official arrives in Russia, RIA reports
Updated 23 October 2024
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Senior Hamas official arrives in Russia, RIA reports

Senior Hamas official arrives in Russia, RIA reports

MOSCOW: A senior member of Hamas, the militant Palestinian group that controls Gaza, Mousa Abu Marzouk has arrived in Moscow on a planned visit, Russian state-run news agency RIA Novosti reported on Wednesday, citing a diplomatic source.
Hamas politburo member, Abu Marzouk, intends to hold a series of meetings with Russian officials, RIA said without providing any further details.
Russia has ties to all key players in the Middle East, including Israel, Iran, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority and Hamas.
Moscow has repeatedly blamed the current crisis in the Middle East on the failure of US diplomacy, and called for a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas and the resumption of talks aimed at finding a peace settlement.