Power outages put Aleppo back in dark ages
SYRIA: “When I see a light on, I’ll run to have my photo taken with
it,” laughs Sheikh Yazen, a resident of one of many districts in Syria’s
Aleppo that have been plunged into darkness by extended power outages.
“We haven’t seen that in Fardoss for four months,” he says.
Syria’s conflict descended on the northern city, which was the
industrial and commercial capital of the country, in July 2012.
Months later, power cuts in rebel-held parts of town such as Fardoss
have left hundreds of thousands of employees out of work.
Electricity supplies across the country have almost halved since the
anti-regime uprising broke out in March 2011 because of shortages of
fuel to feed power plants. The official media blame the shortages on the
country’s insecurity and the risks involved in transporting fuel.
Syria’s Electricity Minister Imad Khamis said in February that
widespread blackouts have caused economic losses of around $2.2 billion
over the past two years of conflict.
He blamed sabotage by armed militants who had killed dozens of power
sector workers since the outbreak of the anti-regime revolt. Water has
been available for the most part until now, but cuts have started in
recent days.
In war-battered Aleppo, the poor have had to adapt to life without
electricity while those with the means have splashed out on generators
that consume vast amounts of fuel at soaring prices.
“We wash our clothes by hand, use candles for lighting and wood for
cooking. It’s like we’re living in ‘Bab al-Harra,’” said Ahmad, a man in
his 40s, referring to a Syrian television series set in the 1920s.
“We only take a shower every two weeks because without electricity to
run the pump the water can’t climb up to our floor,” he said.
At night, entire neighbourhoods of Aleppo are plunged into darkness,
except for rare home windows lit up and some shop fronts using
low-voltage LED bulbs to conserve energy. Sheikh Yazen himself has
turned his personal misfortune around, taking up a new profession as a
generator salesman after his shoe shop was burnt down in the fires which
swept the Old Souk last autumn.
AFP
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