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How ancient engineering helped address Delhi’s perennial water shortage

Special How ancient engineering helped address Delhi’s perennial water shortage
Tourists visit Ugrasen ki Baoli, a medieval stepwell in New Delhi, on June 10, 2025. (AN Photo)
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Updated 19 sec ago

How ancient engineering helped address Delhi’s perennial water shortage

How ancient engineering helped address Delhi’s perennial water shortage
  • Delhi used to have 20 stepwells, which made water available throughout the year
  • In summer months, stepwell sites turned into places for social gatherings

NEW DELHI: Just minutes from New Delhi’s commercial hub, Ugrasen ki Baoli is an engineering marvel worth a detour from the usual tourist path, as it bears witness to unique medieval water storage solutions that could still hold relevance today.

A baoli, or a stepwell, is a storage system that once helped the Indian capital address its perennial water shortage.

With a series of steps leading down to the water level, these structures allowed people to reach the water even when its levels changed with the seasons.

Usually built in the hot and arid areas like the northern state of Rajasthan and the western state of Gujarat, they used to be common in the Delhi region too.

“Since Delhi was also semi-arid, there was a large number of these built to provide water to people in small and large villages and settlements,” Sohail Hashmi, oral historian of Delhi and conservationist, told Arab News.

“They were dug especially in areas where the water level was rather low … You dug a well and next to the well, you built a tank, and when both structures were ready, you connected the well through a channel to the stepwell, and the water from the well filled up the stepwell.”

Located about a 5-minute walk from Connaught Place, the New Delhi stepwell is approximately 60 meters long and 15 meters wide, descending 108 steps — or about 15 meters below ground.

The baoli made water available throughout the year, and people could use it not only to draw drinking water but also to wash and bathe in the tank.

“It was a relief because the water was flowing from the well and the water from the well was always clean. So even if the water in the tank got dirty because people washed their clothes, you could still draw water from the well for drinking,” Hashmi said.

“Over time, these places also became places for social gathering, especially during the summer months … You had a large water body with arches and rooms and spaces, so people could come there and escape the summer heat.”

According to local legend, Ugrasen ki Baoli was commissioned by King Agrasen, the legendary ancestor of the prosperous Agrawal community, who, thousands of years ago, ruled over Agroha, an ancient trading city near present-day Delhi.

But historians estimate it was built around the 15th century, in the Delhi Sultanate period, which marked numerous cultural and architectural developments in the city.

“Architecturally, if you look at it, it is built with rubble, and the rubble is held together with a plaster of limestone and crushed bricks … These are techniques that were introduced into India in the late 12th and early 13th century,” Hashmi said.“It belongs to the late Sultanate period, so I would roughly place it in the 15th century.” Delhi once had 20 stepwells similar to Ugrasen ki Baoli, but none have survived the test of time. Efforts to revive them may no longer be effective, as the city’s groundwater levels have dropped significantly.

Groundwater at deeper levels is often not potable due to natural contamination — high levels of minerals like arsenic, fluoride, or heavy metals, and salinity, which in arid regions turns deep groundwater brackish.

There is still potential for the stepwells to conserve water and help address Delhi’s water problems, although it would take some time.

“At best, what can be done is that in the monsoon (season), you can divert rainwater into these stepwells, so they replenish the subsoil water,” Hashmi said.

“If this is done over decades, maybe the subsoil water level would improve and then much of this water could become potable, but before you do that, building (new) stepwells doesn’t make sense now.”


Explosion at a California fireworks warehouse sets off fires and forces evacuations

Explosion at a California fireworks warehouse sets off fires and forces evacuations
Updated 3 sec ago

Explosion at a California fireworks warehouse sets off fires and forces evacuations

Explosion at a California fireworks warehouse sets off fires and forces evacuations
The cause of the explosion was under investigation, the office said
The fire had reached 78 acres (32 hectares) as of Tuesday night

CALIFORNIA: An explosion at a fireworks warehouse in northern California caused several fires, sending black smoke into the air and forcing evacuations, authorities said. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

People were urged to avoid the area of Esparto and Madison for several days following the Tuesday night explosion, which set off multiple fireworks and caused a large fire that led to other spot fires and collapsed the building.

“The fire will take time to cool, and once it does, explosive experts must safely enter the site to assess and secure the area,” the Yolo County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release.

The cause of the explosion was under investigation, the office said.

The fire had reached 78 acres (32 hectares) as of Tuesday night, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said.

Esparto is in a rural area about 40 miles (64 kilometers) northwest of Sacramento.

“We do believe this location is owned by an active pyrotechnic license holder,” Deputy State Fire Marshal Kara Garrett told KXTV. She added: “This type of incident is very rare, as facilities like this are required to not only follow our stringent California pyrotechnic requirements, but also federal explosive storage requirements.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office posted that it was tracking the fire and that state ground and air resources were deployed.

“The State Fire Marshal has sent an arson and bomb investigation team, and stands ready to provide additional support as needed,” the statement said.

Two die in France of ‘heat-related illness’: minister

Two die in France of ‘heat-related illness’: minister
Updated 02 July 2025

Two die in France of ‘heat-related illness’: minister

Two die in France of ‘heat-related illness’: minister

PARIS: Two people died in France as a result of “heat-related illness,” said the minister for ecological transition on Wednesday, as the country registered its second-hottest June since records began in 1900.
A heatwave across Europe this week broke high temperature records, leading to the closure of nearly 2,000 schools in France at midday on Tuesday.
“More than 300 people have been treated by firefighters and two have died following heat-related illnesses,” ecology minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher said on Wednesday.
“June 2025 has become the second hottest June since records began in 1900, behind June 2003,” she added.
Temperatures in June 2025 were 3.3 degrees Celsius higher than the seasonal average compared to 3.6 degrees Celsius in June 2003, her office said.
Meteo-France said June 30 was the hottest day in June since measurements began in 1947, beating the previous record set in 2019.
Relief will start to arrive from the Atlantic on Wednesday, bringing thunderstorms and cooler temperatures to parts of western Europe.


Ugandan military helicopter crashes at Somalia’s Mogadishu airport

Ugandan military helicopter crashes at Somalia’s Mogadishu airport
Updated 19 min 32 sec ago

Ugandan military helicopter crashes at Somalia’s Mogadishu airport

Ugandan military helicopter crashes at Somalia’s Mogadishu airport
  • Three of the helicopter’s eight occupants survived the incident
  • There was a fire at the crash site

MOGADISHU: A Ugandan military helicopter deployed with the African Union peacekeeping mission in Somalia crashed at Mogadishu airport on Wednesday, a Ugandan military spokesperson told Reuters.

Three of the helicopter’s eight occupants survived the incident, said the spokesperson, Felix Kulayigye, though he did not provide details on the fate of the other five people.

There was a fire at the crash site, which emergency responders were trying to extinguish, he said.

The African Union Support and Stabilization Mission in Somalia (AUSSOM) said in a statement that “search and rescue operations are currently underway to retrieve the remaining crew and passengers.”

The helicopter crash landed at Mogadishu’s international airport just before touching down, AUSSOM said.

Earlier on Wednesday, Somalia’s state-run SONNA news outlet reported that the helicopter was engulfed in flames after crashing.

“We heard the blast and saw smoke and flames over a helicopter,” Farah Abdulle, who works at the airport, told Reuters. “The smoke entirely covered the helicopter.”

AUSSOM has more than 11,000 personnel in Somalia to help the country’s military tackle Islamist group Al-Shabab.

The Al-Qaeda affiliated group has been fighting for nearly two decades to topple Somalia’s internationally recognized government and establish its own rule based on a strict interpretation of Sharia law. 


Fiji says China military base not welcome as Pacific islands steer between superpowers

Fiji says China military base not welcome as Pacific islands steer between superpowers
Updated 02 July 2025

Fiji says China military base not welcome as Pacific islands steer between superpowers

Fiji says China military base not welcome as Pacific islands steer between superpowers
  • Strategically placed between the United States and Asia, the Pacific Islands are a focus of rivalry between Washington and Beijing

SYDNEY: Fiji is opposed to China setting up a military base in the Pacific Islands, Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka said on Wednesday, adding that it did not need such a base to project power, as shown by an intercontinental ballistic missile test.

Strategically placed between the United States and Asia, the Pacific Islands are a focus of rivalry between Washington and Beijing for security ties.

The islands were trying to cope with a big, powerful China seeking to spread its influence, Rabuka told the National Press Club in the Australian capital, adding that Beijing understood he would lobby other Pacific leaders against such a base.

“Pacific leaders in all their recent discussions have tried to go for policies that are friendly to all and enemies to none — and it is a fairly tough course to steer, but it is possible,” he added.

The Pacific would feel the impact of any conflict over the Taiwan Strait between major powers, a possibility already being planned for by China and other nations, he said.

Fiji opposes establishment of a military base by China, he said, in response to queries on Beijing’s security ambitions in a region where it already has a security pact with the Solomon Islands and a police presence in several nations.

“If they want to come, who would welcome them?” he said. “Not Fiji.”

China’s embassy in Fiji did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and Beijing has previously ruled out establishing a military base in the Solomon Islands.

China did not need a base to project power, Rabuka added, as Beijing tested an intercontinental ballistic missile in September that flew over Fiji to land in international waters.

China showed off its coast guard to 10 visiting leaders of Pacific islands in May, after registering two dozen of its vessels with a regional fisheries commission last year, though it has yet to start South Pacific patrols.

China’s coast guard would need to “observe our sovereignty, our sovereign waters,” Rabuka said.

Fiji’s cooperation with China to develop infrastructure should not affect how it interacts with Australia, New Zealand and the United States, he added.

To manage strategic competition in the region, Rabuka is trying to build support for an Ocean of Peace treaty to ensure outsiders respect its unity and the “rejection of coercion as a means to achieve security, economic or political advantage.”

Leaders of the 18 members of the Pacific Islands Forum will consider the pact at a meeting in September.


Russia says certain forces are out to wreck ties between it and Azerbaijan, RIA reports

Russia says certain forces are out to wreck ties between it and Azerbaijan, RIA reports
Updated 02 July 2025

Russia says certain forces are out to wreck ties between it and Azerbaijan, RIA reports

Russia says certain forces are out to wreck ties between it and Azerbaijan, RIA reports
  • RIA cited the Russian Foreign Ministry as saying it regarded its relationship with Baku as extremely important

MOSCOW: The Russian Foreign Ministry said on Wednesday that certain forces were trying to wreck Moscow’s ties with Azerbaijan and that they should think hard about what they were doing, the state RIA news agency reported.

The statement came amid rising tensions between the two countries after two Russian state journalists were arrested in Baku and a further around 15 more Russians arrested separately on suspicion of drug trafficking and cybercrime.

The arrests followed Russian police raids against ethnic Azerbaijanis living in Russia suspected of involvement in serious crimes in which two men died.

RIA cited the Russian Foreign Ministry as saying it regarded its relationship with Baku as extremely important and that it believed the arrest of the Russian journalists was not connected to their work but motivated by other considerations.

The pair have since been charged with fraud and other crimes by a Baku court.