It's hard to live in Eastern Ukraine
The conduct of
hostilities and violations of the Minsk ceasefire agreements has resulted in
repeated damage to the water pipe system in eastern Ukraine, putting tens of
thousands of civilians living on both sides of the contact line without access
to piped water.
The current
shortages in water in the conflict‐affected areas of
Donetsk and Luhansk Regions could leave civilians bitterly cold throughout the
coming winter as central heating systems break down and have lasting consequences
on food production.
The thematic
report, Access to Water in Conflict‐affected Areas of
Donetsk and Luhansk Regions, says that the situation has been exacerbated by
the fact that the existing water infrastructure was already in need of repairs
even before the fighting commenced in spring 2014. Hostilities prevented
further repair works from taking place. Moreover the functionality of essential
water pumps has decreased due to the shelling of the electrical systems which
powered them.
Access to water is
a precondition for the enjoyment of the right to an adequate standard of living
and the right to the highest attainable standard of health and is an
internationally recognised human right. Lack of access to sufficient, safe,
acceptable and affordable water is putting the most vulnerable groups including
children, persons with disabilities, chronically-ill and elderly persons
residing within least accessible conflict-affected areas at risk.
In the past few
months, OSCE has played a key role in facilitating local ceasefire to enable
access for repair crews to attend to damaged water works and other crucial
infrastructure. Cities and villages which have benefitted from these
interventions include Trokhizbenka, Horlivka, Maiorsk, Raivka, Komsomolske,
Krasnoarmiisk and Mariupol. Nonetheless, repair works are not sustainable as
long as the exchange of hostilities continues to damage water and power supply infrastructures.
Monitors have also
found that the presence of Ukrainian Armed Forces and armed groups, land mines
or unexploded ordnances - coupled with the poor condition of road networks -
has hampered residents from accessing wells or from receiving water supply by
trucks. In many cases workers have been unable to conduct repair works due to
on-going shelling or from receiving spare parts needed for the repair of the
water installations due to restrictions on the transport of goods across the
contact line.
The report explains
orders limiting the freedom of movement and/or the supply of goods or water
across the contact line is interfering with the supply of water from government‐controlled settlements to non‐government
controlled settlements.
OSCE called upon
the Ukrainian authorities and those in effective control of Luhansk and
Donetsk, to immediately cease attacks against civilians - including civilian
objects indispensable to the water supply system - and to respect the Minsk
Agreements including an immediate and full ceasefire and the pull‐out of all heavy weapons.
The report is
based on data collected by OSCE monitors from May to August 2015 in the Luhansk
and Donetsk regions, including in non-government controlled areas.
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