Water restored in besieged Libyan capital

Libyan Prime Minister, Fayez Sarraj

Libyan Prime Minister, Fayez Sarraj

Libyan Prime Minister, Fayez Sarraj

Water supplies to the 2.5 million residents of Tripoli were restored two days after they were cut off by gunmen, officials said on Tuesday, Reuters and NAN report.

The gesture enabled the besieged capital to escape shortages that could have caused a humanitarian crisis.

The United Nations had condemned the closure as possible war crime.

Libya’s internationally recognised government had accused forces loyal to Eastern commander Khalifa Haftar, which have been trying to capture Tripoli, of being behind the blockage.

Haftar’s forces denied they were responsible for cutting off the water.

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A commander in his Libyan National Army (LNA) said they had sent reinforcements to secure the pipe.

“The crisis of halting water supplies has ended and flows have started,” the Great Man-Made River Company, a pipe network supplying ground water from the Sahara, said in a statement.

On Saturday, an armed group had stormed a pumping station some 400 km South of Tripoli, forcing employees to turn off the pipes, the company said, without giving more details.

Supplies to city residents were not immediately halted because the water system holds two days of capacity.

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