For the past month, Bishkek resident Kanychai Bakirova has lived with her family of 11, including young children, in a home with only a trickle of water running from the tap. At the laundrette where she works, she is unable to serve customers who come in with piles of dirty clothes. “I’m a laundress but I can only run three washing machines,” 59-year-old Bakirova told AFP, waiting her turn to collect water at a distribution point as others took the opportunity to wash their faces. In the south of the Kyrgyz capital, where the water shortage is acute, such scenes are increasingly common. Drought — once restricted to the country’s villages — is now drying city-dwellers’ taps. With Soviet-era water infrastructure and few resources, the Bishkek authorities have struggled to keep the water running. In the southern districts of the city, residents have come to rely on plastic bottles of water distributed by the city as temperatures near 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit). “I haven’t had running water for more than three weeks,” said Imach Omorov, 61. “I was able to get 150 litres (33 gallons). Hopefully that’s enough for the next three weeks.” At the start of summer, the authorities introduced restrictions to manage water supply. In some districts of Bishkek, water was cut off at night. Swimming pools and car washes were closed. Night-time watering was banned. But residents have struggled to cope. When Omorov’s neighbour died, “it was complicated to wash the body”, he said. Like other city-dwellers, Omorov took part in a protest against the water shortage this week, where demonstrators blocked one of the main avenues south of the capital.