India Water Crisis Affects Millions (Corrected Version)

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WILLS POINT, TEXAS (ANS) — As South India remains in the grip of a critical water shortage that threatens hundreds of millions of lives, Christian missions agency Gospel for Asia (GFA, www.gfa.org) called for Christians to pray.

As many as 600 million people – almost half of India’s 1.3 billion population – face acute water shortages, and experts warn some cities could run out of water entirely by 2020.

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Millions across India are affected by water crisis

GFA says India is prone to cycles of devastating drought and severe flooding. Due to weather patterns in different parts of the country, some areas suffer drought while other regions experience floods at the same time. This month, torrential monsoon rains lashed part of northeast India and Nepal with flash floods claiming more than 200 lives and affecting 10 million people.

Millions across India are affected by water crisis. As the year-long drought continues in Southeast Asia, the megacity of Chennai – formerly Madras – is virtually out of water, leaving most of the city’s nine million residents totally dependent on water shipped in via trucks and trains.

“Every day, the crisis deepens,” said GFA founder Dr. K.P. Yohannan. “We’ve reached the point of no return, and the people of Chennai need a miracle. I am asking our friends around the world to please pray and intercede on behalf of those in Chennai.” GFA workers in Texas have been praying together as a community to ask God to send rain.

Thr ministry says that with the monsoon rains failing, the city’s four main reservoirs have completely dried up and wells have also run dry in the country’s sixth largest city. Desperate residents are lining up for hours in the heat, hoping to fill their plastic buckets with water shipped in by a fleet of government-run trucks. The few who can afford to buy water from private sellers have seen the price more than double since May.

“The coconut trees are withered. The cattle have no grass. The wells are dried up,” said a GFA-supported pastor in Chennai — the biggest city in the state of Tamil Nadu.

“Pastors and  those in their communities are struggling every day to get enough water for their basic needs,” Yohannan said. “The water trucks come only once every two days – and this puts enormous pressure on families desperate for drinking water.”

GFA-supported pastors are purchasing water from private water carriers to provide much-needed drinking water. Covered in dust, people are also desperate for water to bathe, wash their clothes, and clean cooking utensils.

“Currently, we’re finding difficulty getting water even for drinking,” one pastor said.

GFA said the water shortages are sparking tensions in the manufacturing hub of Chennai as competition for limited water becomes fierce. “I remember my mother telling me that the next war will be over water, but I never thought I’d have to fight others to take a shower,” resident Richard Lynrah told local media.

The crisis has shut down many hotels and heightened fears that critical services such as hospitals could suffer.

According to the ministry, the devastating drought started last year when monsoon rains failed to come, and has intensified as the post-summer monsoon season, beginning in June, has also come up dry so far. Chennai gets 85 percent of its rainfall during its two rainy seasons from June to September and then from October to December.

Celebrating its 40th anniversary this month, GFA is well known for its unique “Jesus Wells” program that helps drill thousands of wells in South Asia, providing a reliable source of clean water for entire communities and millions of people. The Texas-based ministry has also helped to distribute tens of thousands of household BioSand water filters in communities across South Asia.

“GFA stands with the people of Chennai at this critical hour and we will do all we can to come alongside families and show them God’s love in practical ways,” Yohannan said.

The author of this story, Michael Ireland, is a self-supported media missionary with ANS. Click here to support him as a missionary journalist.