UN says water interruption by armed group ‘may be considered war crime’, as Tripoli government blames Haftar’s forces.
Gunmen have cut off the main water pipeline to Libya’s besieged capital Tripoli, spelling more misery for residents already reeling from weeks of fighting, residents and officials said.
Armed men on Sunday raided a station of the Great Man-Made River Project, a pipe network that carries groundwater from the Sahara to the country’s western region, the project administrators said.
“Pumping from water wells has stopped after an armed group stormed the facilities and forced the workers to close all flow control valves and stop [the] water well,” the statement said.
The eastern forces of renegade commander Khalifa Haftar’s Libya National Army (LNA) launched an assault on Tripoli in early April and are bogged down in southern suburbs by fighters loyal to the UN-recognised government of Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj.
In past attacks on the pipeline, which was one of former dictator Muammar Gaddafi’s few development projects, it has taken up to two days for households to notice water shortages in the coastal city of 2.5 million people.
The government agency said water provision would be restored once the attackers’ demands have been met, without specifying what they were.
Al Jazeera’s Mahmoud Abdelwahed, reporting from Tripoli, confirmed that water supplies to the capital and surrounding districts had been suspended, saying that people now had to rely on private water deliveries to meet their daily needs.
The Tripoli government blamed a group that also cut the water supplies in 2017, saying its commander Khalifa Ehnaish belonged to Haftar’s forces.
The LNA denied that and Ehnaish could not be reached on Monday.
Maria Ribeiro, the UN’s Humanitarian Coordinator for Libya, condemned the shut off in a statement on Monday, saying that “such attacks against civilian infrastructure … may be considered war crimes”.