River Nile in Egypt Turns Murky Brown Due to Heavy Flooding

Heavy flooding killed 26 people and injured more than 70 across the country.

AP
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An Egyptian fisherman stands watching the Nile River as water appears a murky brown color due to the flooding in southern provinces. (Photo: AP)
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An Egyptian fisherman stands watching the Nile River as water appears a murky brown color due to the flooding in southern provinces. (Photo: AP)
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Egyptians this week watched the Nile's water turn a murky brown-yellow colour, the result of days of heavy rain in parts of the country and subsequent flooding that swept tons of soil into the waterway.

Officials say the murky water, now loaded with silt, forced the closure of several main water treatment stations. That has caused the disruption of water supplies in some areas.

Egypt, a mostly desert country of some 92 million, is almost entirely dependent on the Nile for agriculture and drinking water.
The water of the Nile River appears murky brown in color due to the flooding in southern provinces. (Photp: AP)

Experts warned against drinking tap water for now. Ahmed el-Shennawi, a water expert, told the Rotana Egypt TV network that the "change of the colour to yellow is a disaster and we should be cautious until water filtering takes place."

Heavy flooding killed 26 people and injured more than 70 across the country, according health authorities — mostly in four coastal and southern provinces.

Egyptian fishermen park their boats on the Nile River, with the water appearing a murky brown colour due to the flooding. (Photo: AP)

In addition to polluting the Nile, the floods caused power outages, displaced hundreds of people, and swept away dozens of cars, particularly in the Red Sea city of Ras Ghareb.

Earlier this week, angry citizens in Ras Ghareb turned away Prime Minister Sharif Ismail who tried to inspect the damage. Residents there blocked his convoy to protest what they saw as poor infrastructure and insufficient government response to the disaster.

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Published: 01 Nov 2016,03:18 AM IST

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