Drought hits Central Highland provinces

Published: 18/03/2011 05:00

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Hundreds of households in Sa Binh Commune in the Central Highland province of
Kon Tum are struggling to deal with a shortage of water, after suffering the
affects of an early dry season.


Sa Binh People’s Committee chairman
Nguyen Minh Thuan said that 220 out of 550 wells were dry, and the remainder
were running low.


Water levels in two local
reservoirs located near the Pleikrong Hydro-electrical Plant are also worrying
low, causing serious issues in the villages of Lung Leng and Binh Loong.


“The drought hit the locality about
two months ago, causing huge water shortages for both agricultural production
and day to day life,” he said.


Local residents have attempted to
dredge wells, but to no avail.


Students at Sa Binh Secondary
School were sent home because there was not enough water for daily activities,
said school principal Truong Van Hong.


The commune would run out of water
by the end of this month unless the situation changed, Thuan said, adding that
it could become worse, given that it was only the start of the dry season.


Meanwhile, nearly 5,000ha of crops,
mainly coffee and rice, in the Central Highland province of Dak Lak are going
dry.


The three biggest irrigation
reservoirs in the province were now unable to supply water for over 3,000ha of
coffee and nearly 700ha of rice, said head of the province’s Irrigation
Department Pham Tien Sang.


Despite extensive irrigation
infrastructure in the province, water levels had only reached 60 per cent
capacity this year, according to the department.


* Whale dies on
Khanh Hoa beach


A 200kg whale died on the coast of
Khanh Hoa Province in Ninh Ich Commune yesterday afternoon, March 16, 10 hours
after it beached.


Chairman of the commune’s People’s
Committee Nguyen Cong Toan said the 2m long whale had been found badly injured
in the morning by local people.


He said he had not reported the
struggling mammal to the local Oceanography Institute, given its critical
condition.

The whale had been spotted off the
coast by fishermen a few days before.


Local leaders and residents buried
it after a traditional whale funeral that is considered to bring luck to
fishermen.


Beached whales appear every few
years in Khanh Hoa, and there are small temples where they are worshipped along
the provincial coast.


VietNamNet/Viet
Nam News

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