Some communities in La Guajira say they have not seen any rain in two years |
The government says it has done all it can to ease the water shortage.
'Enormous debt' Angry locals have called an open-ended strike and about 70% of businesses and most schools remained closed on Monday.
Protest leader Felipe Rodriguez said that "the debt the state owes this province is enormous".
Bottled water has been flown to the drought-stricken province from the capital, Bogota |
The north of Colombia on the country's Caribbean coast has been particularly badly hit by the drought |
Some communities say they have not seen any rain for as long as two years.
La Guajira Governor Jose Maria Ballesteros has called for calm, but the protesters said they would not give up until President Juan Manuel Santos convened an emergency committee to tackle the crisis.
The president travelled to the province on the weekend, his first trip since he was inaugurated for a second term in office on Thursday.
He announced that his government would help local authorities build 100 wells to ensure residents had access to drinking water at all times.
He said it was his "dream to convert La Guajira into the larder of Colombia".
No comments:
Post a Comment