Tripoli – Mains water is to be restored to western Libya after a week-long cut prompted by sabotage threats from loyalists of a jailed Muammar Gaddafi-era official, the water authority said.
“The wells and pumps are being switched back on to gradually restore supply,” the authority said on its Facebook page Saturday. “The crisis is over.”
The announcement brought welcome relief to Libyans forced to cope without water as a summer heat wave gripped North Africa.
Also read the following from African Insider
Some bodies to be exhumed and reburied as Mugabe-era massacre victims set to be compensated
Ecowas court demands Mali explain detention of ex-leaders
Megaship that blocked Suez heads back to Asia
Jihadists behind a wave of attacks in Niger ‘circulate freely’ despite strict controls
Kenyan court rejects disputed bid to change constitution, a new blow to Kenyatta
The water authority is responsible for a huge network of pipelines, dubbed the Great Man-Made River, which was one of the major projects of longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi during his four decades in power.
It brings water from underground aquifers deep in the Sahara desert to settlements on the Mediterranean coast.
Last weekend, the water authority shut down the pipeline network in a bid to contain any damage, after loyalists of Gaddafi’s brother-in-law Abdullah al-Senussi threatened to sabotage it unless he were released.
Senussi was sentenced to death in 2015 for his role in the attempted suppression of the 2011 uprising that toppled Gaddafi.
He remains in prison in the capital, Tripoli.
Follow African Insider on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
Picture: Getty Images
Source: AFP
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com