Flaming debris streaked across the skies over the Bahamas after the world’s biggest spacecraft spiraled out of control and exploded, minutes after being launched from Texas. Airports in Florida were closed as a precaution as the wreckage of Space x’s Starship plunged back to Earth.
Thousands of passengers in France and the United Kingdom have been stranded after a World War II bomb was discovered on tracks leading to a major train station in Paris.
Eurostar, the operator of high-speed trains that travel between key European cities, announced on Friday the cancellation of all its services to and from its hub in the French capital.
A spokesperson for France’s national rail operator, SNCF, said the unexploded World War II bomb was discovered during work near the Gare du Nord station.
Services will only be permitted to resume once “mine clearance operations” by the French police are completed, the spokesperson added.
Gare du Nord is a major European transit hub, serving international destinations north of France, such as London, the European Union capital, Brussels, the Netherlands, and the main Paris airport and many regional destinations.
The bomb was discovered about 4am (03: 00 GMT) by workers doing earth-moving work near the tracks in the Seine-Saint-Denis region. Minesweepers were sent to the site and their operation is still going on.
Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot expected the disruption to continue for at least the rest of the day.
Bombs left over from World War I and World War II are regularly discovered around France, but it is rare to find them in such a densely populated location.
‘ Options limited ‘
The repercussions quickly rippled beyond France’s borders. In Brussels, trains to Paris were cancelled until at least Friday afternoon.
“There’s no solution. We’re going to call the hotel and stay one more day and change our train ticket”, Michel Garrot, a retired Parisian visiting the Belgian capital, told The Associated Press news agency.
At London’s St Pancras station, travellers who had been looking forward to Paris’s charms found their plans dashed.
“We’re looking up flights, but our options are limited”, passenger Lauren Romeo-Smith told AP.
In Paris, traveller Kasman Ibrahimi told the Reuters news agency he had planned to catch a train to Cologne, Germany, but would now look for a different route.
At least 22 people have been killed in Ecuador’s port city of Guayaquil after rival factions of a drug trafficking gang exchanged gunfire, highlighting the worsening law and order situation in the country before a presidential race.
Another three people were wounded in the violence, the police said in a statement as the death toll increased from 19 to 22 on Friday.
Police said the gunfight erupted on Thursday after opposing factions of a gang called Los Tiguerones, one of the most powerful in this formerly peaceful country, were caught in a dispute.
Guayaquil’s El Universo newspaper described the killing as a “massacre”, adding that the gangs were fighting over the territories they control.
According to the newspaper, several homes in the Socio Vivienda district of the city were targeted by at least 20 armed gang members, resulting in the multiple deaths.
Images and videos posted on X showed several heavily armed men running around the district of Socio Vivienda during the attack.
Emergency medical workers were also seen rushing injured people for treatment, as dozens of government security forces were deployed to the area.
The latest deaths bring to more than 400 the number of people killed in the area in recent months, El Universo reported.
Ecuador is home to an estimated 20 criminal gangs involved in drug trafficking, kidnapping and extortion, wreaking havoc in a country of 18 million squeezed between the world’s biggest cocaine producers, Peru and Colombia.
In recent years, Ecuador has plunged into violence amid the rapid spread of transnational cartels that use its ports, like Guayaquil, to ship cocaine to the United States and Europe.
Homicides, for example, have risen from six per 100, 000 inhabitants in 2018 to a record 47 in 2023.
Experts say the gangs are constantly mutating and growing stronger with profits from crime.
Guayaquil is the capital of Guayas, one of seven provinces where a state of emergency has been in force for the past two months as the government battles the gangsters.
Last month, the right-wing President Daniel Noboa, who is seeking re-election, said he would ask unspecified allied countries to send special forces to help him wage this fight.
The violence is not letting up as Ecuador gears for a run-off election on April 13 in which Noboa will face leftist Luisa Gonzalez.
Noboa had taken an “iron-fisted” approach to crack down on violent crime, including declaring a state of emergency and deploying the army to the streets.
Human rights groups claim the aggressive use of armed forces has led to abuse, including the murder of four boys , whose charred bodies were recently found near an army base.
The Nigerian Senate has suspended a female senator after she accused its presiding officer of sexual harassment.
Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan was barred from office from Thursday and will have her allowances and security withdrawn for six months after she made an accusation against Senate President Godswill Akpabio, who denied the claims against him.
On Wednesday, the Senate ethics committee rejected Akpoti-Uduaghan’s petition about the alleged harassment, citing procedural rule violations. Her subsequent suspension , was justified over an earlier argument that erupted in the Senate about a change in her seating arrangement.
In a TV interview on February 28, Akpoti-Uduaghan – one of only four women in the 109-seat chamber – alleged that Akpabio made unwanted sexual advances towards her in 2023.
“This injustice will not be sustained”, she said on Thursday after she was prevented from speaking in the Senate and escorted out of the chamber by the sergeant-at-arms.
Akpabio has publicly denied any wrongdoing. “Since the 20th of February, I have been inundated with phone calls from various Nigerians. I would like to state that at no time did I sexually harass Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan”, he said, speaking at the start of a plenary session on Wednesday.
*Letter to the Nigerian Senate*
The Petition of Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan Must Be Independently Investigated and Openly Discussed in a Public Hearing that the Accused Does Not Preside.
Two Demands:
1. Swiftly Appoint an Independent Investigator on the Petition of… pic. twitter.com/rdUkDoR7uU
Akpoti-Uduaghan, who represents Nigeria’s north-central Kogi Central district, shared a statement on her Facebook page in reaction to the suspension.
“Against the culture of silence, intimidation and victim-shaming, my unjust suspension from the Nigerian Senate invalidates the principles of natural justice, fairness and equity”, she said.
“The illegal suspension does not withdraw my legitimacy as a senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and I will continue to use my duly elected position to serve my constituents and country to the best of my ability till 2027 and beyond”.
Ethics committee ‘ not fit for purpose’?
Senate Majority Leader Opeyemi Bamidele said Akpoti-Uduaghan should use her suspension to “learn the rules of the Senate”.
“I asked her what she will gain if she tries to pull the Senate president down”, Bamidele said during the consideration of the petition on the Senate floor.
Critics like Chioma Agwuegbo, executive director of the women’s rights organisation TechHerNG, condemned the ethics committee’s handling of the case, alleging bias.
“The ethics committee to which her petition was referred has shown that it is not fit for purpose”, Agwuegbo said.
Many prominent Nigerian figures and groups have called for a transparent investigation. Many women also expressed their anger over the expulsion on social media with some calling it “oppression”.
Two groups of protesters gathered at the National Assembly ground on Wednesday in the capital, Abuja, one in support of Akpabio and the other for Akpoti-Uduaghan, chanting “Akpabio must go”.
Akpoti-Uduaghan has filed a lawsuit against the Senate president, seeking 100 billion naira ($64, 000) in damages.
What: ICC Champions Trophy 2025 final When: Sunday at 1pm (09:00 GMT) Where: Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai, United Arab Emirates
After 14 matches and 18 days, the elite one-day international (ODI) men’s competition comprising the world’s top eight teams has whittled down to a battle between the top two contenders.
India and New Zealand meet in the final of the ICC Champions Trophy 2025 in Dubai on Sunday.
Here’s everything you need to know about the big showdown:
Why is Dubai hosting the Champions Trophy final?
In the months preceding the Champions Trophy, the ICC found itself in the middle of a deadlock between the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).
The BCCI said it wouldn’t send a team to Pakistan, and while the reasons were never publicly shared, the political tension between both countries was understood to be the cause. Meanwhile, the PCB was adamant about hosting all games in Pakistan.
With less than two months to go, both sides met halfway, and it was decided that in all ICC tournaments until 2031 that were hosted by either country, the neighbouring country’s team would play its matches at a neutral venue.
Pakistan opted to host India’s matches, including the final, in Dubai.
What was India’s route to the final?
Six-wicket win over Bangladesh in Dubai
Six-wicket win over Pakistan in Dubai
44-run win over New Zealand in Dubai
Four-wicket win over Australia in Dubai
What was New Zealand’s route to the final?
60-run win over Pakistan in Karachi
Five-wicket win over Bangladesh in Rawalpindi
44-run loss to India in Dubai
50-run win over South Africa in Lahore
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Dubai ???? pic. twitter.com/mD112FDOIh
Who are the players to watch in the final?
Virat Kohli (India): The Indian batting great, arguably the best in ODI history, has rediscovered his run-scoring form in the tournament. In addition to his peerless record in run chases, Kohli has a healthy average when playing against New Zealand in ODIs. His 32 matches against the Blackcaps have yielded him six centuries and nine half-centuries at an average of 57.1. Although Kohli only managed 11 runs in the Group A meeting between the two sides, the 36-year-old is known to save his best for the biggest games.
Shubman Gill (India): The world’s top-rated ODI batter began the tournament with a match-winning century over Bangladesh, and although Gill only added 57 runs in the next three games, the opener will be key to India’s innings in the final. His average of 74 and two centuries in 11 games against New Zealand make him a player to watch in the final.
Varun Chakravarthy (India): The leg-break bowler’s return to the Indian side has left opposition batters in a fix. Chakravarthy made his Champions Trophy debut in the group game against New Zealand, in which he took five wickets to earn the player of the match award. The spinner’s variation will suit India’s needs perfectly on a relatively slow Dubai pitch.
Kane Williamson (New Zealand): Williamson is regarded as one of modern cricket’s batting greats, and his never-diminishing hunger for runs in big tournaments makes him stand out in every competition. The former Kiwi captain was his side’s top scorer in the group match against India, and his teammates will hope that on Sunday he can add to his one century and 11 fifties against India.
Matt Henry (New Zealand): The pacer is the tournament’s leading wicket taker, but his participation in the final hangs in the balance after an injury he sustained while fielding in the semifinal. Henry was India’s tormentor-in-chief in the group match, and should he play in the final, he will be the Blackcaps ‘ main threat with the ball once again.
Mitchell Santner (New Zealand): New Zealand’s captain is among the world’s top all-rounders in ODIs, and his left-arm spin will be crucial on the spin-friendly tracks in Dubai. Santner is a capable batter in the lower order and has the ability to hit big shots when the need arises.
Virat Kohli is India’s leading run scorer in the Champions Trophy]File: Altaf Qadri/AP]
What are the key player match-ups for the final?
Gill vs Henry: The world’s leading batter vs the tournament’s leading bowler. Henry was responsible for trapping Gill early in the group match with an in-dipping delivery and can cause further problems in the final if he dismisses Gill cheaply once again.
Kohli vs Santner: Kohli has rarely thrown his wicket away after settling at the top of the order, but India’s leading century maker in ODIs can be susceptible to left-arm spin bowling. Santner’s wily bowling and Kohli’s patient batting could prove an enthralling battle in the final.
Williamson vs Mohammed Shami: The Indian pacer’s return after a prolonged injury layoff has unfolded almost perfectly as he has taken eight wickets in four matches. India will rely on Shami’s experience to undo Williamson, who rarely offers any weaknesses in big games.
Rachin Ravindra vs Hardik Pandya: The rising star of world cricket with Indian roots has averaged 75 in the tournament, and although he was dismissed cheaply in the group match, Ravindra continues to pose a threat, one that India will hope Pandya’s experienced pace and bounce will counter – as he did in the group match.
Rachin Ravindra has a knack for scoring big runs in ICC events]File: Aamir Qureshi/AFP]
What’s the weather forecast for the final in Dubai?
The final will be played on a bright and sunny day with no chance of rain and a light breeze forecast in Dubai on Sunday.
Temperatures will be the highest when the match gets under way at about 34 degrees Celsius (93.2 degrees Fahrenheit) and are forecast to drop to 28C (82.4F) in the evening.
How will the Dubai pitch play during the final?
The hosting of all India matches in Dubai while the other teams travelled between Dubai and Pakistan has been a key talking point in the tournament. The difference in the pitches is something New Zealand have had to cope with while India have played all their games on similar pitches in Dubai.
The final is expected to be played on a new pitch. However, given the past outcomes, it is expected to be yet another slower one.
The pitch in Dubai is expected to aid slower bowlers]File: Satish Kumar/Reuters]
What’s the prize money for the Champions Trophy final?
The tournament’s total prize money is $6.9m, a 53 percent increase since the last edition in 2017.
The champions will walk away with $2.24m while the runners-up will get $1.12m.
What’s the India vs New Zealand head-to-head record?
There have been 119 matches played between the finalists since 1975. India hold an upper hand with 61 wins as opposed to New Zealand’s 50.
Seven matches ended in a no result while one match was tied.
India are on a six-match ODI winning streak against the Blackcaps since January 2023.
What’s India’s and New Zealand’s record in the Champions Trophy?
New Zealand won the second edition of the tournament in 2000, and it remains their only ICC men’s title. Meanwhile, India have won it twice – in 2002 and 2013.
India won their second Champions Trophy title in 2013]File: Paul Childs/Action Images via Reuters]
Form guide: India
Being the only unbeaten team in the tournament, India enter the final on the back of four wins.
Before the Champions Trophy, India swept a three-match series against England at home.
Last five ODIs (latest first): W W W W W
Form guide: New Zealand
The champions of the 2000 edition come into the final in a rich vein of form, having won all their group games in the tournament.
Shortly before the Champions Trophy, New Zealand won a tri-nation series in Pakistan, which also involved their semifinal opponents, South Africa.
Their last home ODI series saw them beat Sri Lanka 2-1.
Last five ODIs (latest first): W L W W W
What’s the early India team news?
It’s difficult to see India changing a playing XI that brought them a 44-run win against New Zealand as well as a four-wicket win over Australia in their semifinal.
The introduction of Chakravarthy has paid off with seven wickets in two games, which means he will keep his place, and Harshit Rana will sit out the final.
New Zealand had a slight scare during their semifinal when Henry seemingly injured his shoulder while diving in the field. The New Zealand camp are hopeful that the key fast bowler will be declared fit for the final. If Henry is cleared to play, the Blackcaps are expected to remain unchanged as well.
Squad: Mitchell Santner (captain), Michael Bracewell, Mark Chapman, Devon Conway (wicketkeeper), Lockie Ferguson, Matt Henry, Tom Latham (wicketkeeper), Daryl Mitchell, Will O’Rourke, Glenn Phillips, Rachin Ravindra, Ben Sears, Nathan Smith, Kane Williamson, Will Young
How to follow and stream the Champions Trophy final?
Follow Al Jazeera Sport’s live text and photo commentary stream from 04: 00 GMT.
The final will be televised and streamed globally on the ICC’s approved tournament broadcasters.
Where and how can I buy tickets for the Champions Trophy final?
Tickets for the final went on sale on Tuesday evening once India’s qualification was confirmed but quickly sold out on the official ICC ticketing platform.
Just before midnight on March 7, 1928, the St Francis Dam, located roughly 80km (50 miles) inland of Los Angeles, collapsed. There were no witnesses to the disaster – or none who survived – but investigators later determined that the 56-metre-tall (184ft-) barrier fell all at once, sending 12.4 billion gallons of water surging down the San Francisquito Canyon in a wave 43 metres (141ft) high.
Five hours later, the waters finally dumped into the Pacific Ocean, leaving chunks of concrete in their wake as heavy as 10, 000 tonnes. By then, the gush of water was nearly 3km (2 miles) wide, laying waste to several towns along the way, cutting power throughout the region, and ultimately killing at least 431 people, many of whom were washed out to sea, their remains found as late as 1994 and as far as the Mexican border.
The dam had been marred by cracks and leaks ever since its reservoir began filling with water in 1926, but its builders deemed such issues inconsequential and continued to fill as planned. The water it contained – extracted amid much contention from Owens Valley, a lush oasis in a desert region between the Sierra Nevada and White Mountains some 320km (200 miles) to the north – was needed to provide for Los Angeles’s rapidly growing population.
Over the next two years, new cracks formed and seepage became increasingly apparent around the abutments where the dam met the sides of San Francisquito Canyon. By February 1928, large leaks were releasing so much water that farmers in the area began to worry. Again, the dam’s chief engineer – William Mulholland – declared it was normal.
On the morning of its collapse, Mulholland and his colleagues had conducted a thorough inspection of the dam, determining even then that it was safe but in need of future repairs. Hours later, the waters burst through it. An investigation would later conclude the breach was due to “defective foundations”.
It was the largest American civil engineering disaster of the century – a byproduct of western expansion and the struggle known as the California Water Wars, which pitted the public against private business interests and set the stage for a century of conflict over the state’s most contested resource.
A photo from a vantage point of where the St Francis dam once stood before the disaster in California. A small road that went along the edge of the water is still visible]Shutterstock]
‘ We are going to turn that country dry ‘
Water is still a major issue for California nearly 100 years later. During the fires that ravaged Los Angeles in January 2025, firefighters ‘ ability to battle the blazes was hampered by low hydrant water pressure. Investigators said this was caused by unusually high demand driven by firefighting efforts, while then-President-elect Donald Trump blamed state Governor Gavin Newsom, claiming the water shortage was due to “overregulation” – referring mostly to regulations designed to protect endangered species in the surrounding areas.
In recent interviews with firefighters, Al Jazeera was told the difficulty in obtaining enough water to fight the fires was likely unavoidable.
“There’s no urban municipal water system that could support that”, said Bobbie Scopa, who spent nearly 45 years as a firefighter. “You’re going to run out of water, no matter what. It’s not that uncommon. It happens when there’s large fires”.
While water shortage is certainly a valid concern as California faces historic droughts, it turns out the most pressing issues surrounding the Los Angeles water system may have less to do with lack of water than where it’s ending up, with residents going without as big agriculture and water investors extract or privatise what short supply there is. According to studies by the University of Southern California, just 10 percent of state water goes to residents, while the bulk – 80 percent – is used for irrigating crops.
This dynamic is a continuation of a series of events that dates back to the water system’s creation a century ago, which instigated a pattern of resource theft, political corruption and ultimately death due to the collapse of the dam. The result: An uncertain future in which vulnerable residents are increasingly parched by powerful business interests.
“The history of California in the twentieth century is the story of a state inventing itself with water”, wrote William L Kahrl in Water and Power: The Conflict Over Los Angeles Water Supply in the Owens Valley, published in 1982 and widely considered the definitive text on the matter. Kahrl’s brick of a book relates in fine detail the complex events that brought water to the city by drawing it from Owens Valley via a 375km (233-mile) aqueduct that is still in use, allowing the former to flourish at the expense of the latter, and prompting the sometimes violent conflict.
Long before notoriously dry Southern California was populated by Americans pushing 19th-century western expansion, the native Paiute peoples had been the first to irrigate Owens Valley whenever droughts arose between bouts of seasonal migration. As settlers arrived from the east, it was suggested that the Owens region could one day be a reservation for the Paiute. But after the Los Angeles aqueduct was built to funnel water from the valley to the rapidly expanding city to the south, the tribe was among the hardest hit when the valley’s water eventually ran out and its economy deteriorated.
“Do not go to Inyo County”, William Mulholland – who would one day direct the disastrous St Francis Dam project as part of the huge aqueduct infrastructure – warned an associate in the early days of the aqueduct effort, referring to the county containing Owens Valley. “We are going to turn that country dry”.
A small cemetery sits high above San Francisquito Canyon. The seven graves are for members of the Ruiz family, who were all killed in the 1928 St Francis Dam Collapse]Joel P Lugavere/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images]
A rapidly expanding city
According to Kahrl, “No other individual has had so much to do with the creation of the modern metropolis of Los Angeles” than Mulholland. Today, you see his name all over the city, most notably on signs indicating Mulholland Drive. And though he became one of the most influential figures in California history, he came from humble beginnings.
Born in Belfast, Ireland, Mulholland joined the British Merchant Navy at the age of 15, arriving in Los Angeles in 1877 (when the population was just about 11, 000) at the age of 22, whereupon he was hired as a ditch digger for the Los Angeles City Water Company by superintendent Fred Eaton. The two became fast friends, and when Eaton – who held aspirations for power and wealth – resigned from the company in 1886 to pursue a political career, he appointed Mulholland, who had by then worked his way up the ranks, as his successor.
In 1898, Eaton was elected mayor of Los Angeles largely on promises to bring water to the city, which was growing fast and had by then exploded to a population of about 100, 000. The following year, voters approved a bond for the city to purchase the Los Angeles City Water Company, and in 1902, it was municipalised and renamed the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP).
Initially, city planners were reluctant to retain Mulholland as the head of the department due to his lack of leadership experience, but they soon realised that they had no choice as he had designed and constructed the city’s water infrastructure system over the preceding two decades without putting it down on paper. “All of this information – the size of every inch of pipe, the age and location of every valve – Mulholland carried in his head”, wrote Kahrl.
Mulholland had developed a strong affinity for his adopted home of Los Angeles and had a vision for its growth – and how he could become rich in the process. Within a few years, he began a campaign to import water to the city to bolster local aquifers, making exaggerated prognostications about an imminent water crisis.
“If Los Angeles runs out of water for one week”, said Mulholland, “the city within a year will not have a population of 100, 000 people”. At the time, Los Angeles’s population was well past that and already heading towards 300, 000 within a few years.
Experts have since judged these claims rather dubious, but in any event, the city began looking for relatively nearby water resources. Fred Eaton had long been eying Owens Valley for this very purpose.
Recent storms have revived the vast, dry Owens Lake more than a century after its inflows were diverted into the Los Angeles Aqueduct. Environmentalists launched a campaign to keep it full of water in February 2024 in Lone Pine, California]Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images]
‘ Sell out – or dry out ‘
Owens Valley and the 285 square-kilometre (110 square-mile) lake it contained – “a tiny island of green in the middle of a wasteland” – was considered a prime candidate for extraction not only due to its abundance of water, but because its 4, 000-foot (1.2km) elevation would send the water racing down an aqueduct all the way to Los Angeles without the need for electric pumping. But unfortunately for Eaton and Mulholland, this was complicated by the federal Bureau of Reclamation, which was already in the process of irrigating the valley for local farmers using the very water the men hoped to acquire.
At first it seemed like their plans had been thwarted, but then Eaton made a deal with the regional engineer in charge of the Bureau’s project, an old friend of his named Joseph Lippincott. Eaton hired Lippincott as a consultant for Los Angeles – doubling his salary from the federal government – in exchange for a role for himself as a consultant on the Owens irrigation project. Through this arrangement, Eaton gathered the information about local land ownership he would need to obtain the valley’s water rights.
Over the coming years, Eaton and Mulholland began privately buying up property from ranchers throughout Owens Valley – its population roughly 4, 000 – and turning the water rights from those properties over to Los Angeles.
While many were reluctant to sell, Mulholland coerced some into doing so by falsely asserting that the Reclamation Service was about to end the irrigation project, and that their only option was to “sell out or dry out”. Soon LA owned 90 percent of the valley’s water, and the Bureau could no longer continue its efforts had it even wanted to.
Water secured, the LADWP now needed the funds to construct the aqueduct to transport it – a project which would eventually cost $23m – the equivalent of $626 million today – but this would require a bond that, this time, lacked voter support.
So in 1905, Mulholland ordered that the LADWP start dumping water reserves into the ocean, the sudden drop in supply allowing him to claim a dire shortage. When word of these actions leaked, he falsely asserted that it was all part of a normal process of clearing runoff. This conspiracy was fictionalised in the 1974 film Chinatown, though the film was set later, in the 1930s, and Mullholland’s movie stand-in, Hollis Mulwray, is portrayed in a more sympathetic light as he opposes the construction of a new dam, arguing that he wouldn’t repeat his previous, deadly mistake – a reference to the St Francis Dam catastrophe.
In any case, the ruse worked, the citizens of Los Angeles were convinced their access to water was at risk, and the city passed the bond. The construction of the aqueduct overran costs, however, and the city charter forbade borrowing the additional money needed as it stated the city couldn’t hold a debt greater than 15 percent of its own value, determined by factors like size and population. This inspired the next phase of Mullholland’s scheme and allowed him to solve two problems at once.
In addition to money, the city now also needed water storage facilities, and Mulholland set his sights on the adjacent San Fernando Valley aquifer where water could be stored. But here, again, the charter got in the way as it banned Los Angeles’s water from being sold, leased or otherwise used outside the city.
So, Mulholland pushed for the valley’s annexation, which would not only provide for water storage, but would also increase the size and valuation of the city, raising its debt limit so that more could be borrowed to complete the aqueduct. Valley residents voted in favour of joining the city after much lobbying from Mulholland and his associates.
Simultaneously, a group of investors associated with Mulholland and Eaton were purchasing land throughout the valley with the foreknowledge that it would become profitable, irrigated LA real estate. Later known as the San Fernando Land Syndicate, the group included the publisher of The Los Angeles Times, Harrison Otis, who would repeatedly leverage his paper to Eaton and Mulholland’s disinformation ends.
Construction of the aqueduct began in 1908 and finished in 1913. At the opening ceremony, Mulholland pointed at the water as it began to flow and told the mayor, “There it is – take it”.
A memorial to William Mulholland stands at Riverside Drive and Los Feliz Boulevard in Los Angeles, seen in May 2023]Shutterstock]
The California Water Wars
Owens Lake was ultimately dried out entirely between 1913 and 1934, but not before dramatic, sometimes violent pushback from residents.
“It was highly acrimonious at the time because it was one of the first]modern] major water transfers”, explains Andrew Ayers, professor at the University of Nevada, Reno, and research fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California’s Water Policy Center. With little legal precedent, he says, “people had to muddle their way through it”.
The ranchers of Owens Valley – the population of which had grown to about 7, 000 but would soon begin decades of decline – did their muddling via dynamite attacks on the aqueduct.
According to Kahrl, Mulholland “consistently failed to appreciate the depth of the anger his policies were creating…. Night riders now plied the back roads of Inyo, preying upon the aqueduct” with explosives and threatening anyone suspected of being associated with the LADWP.
The high point of these attacks came on November 1, 1924, when a group of angry farmers blew up the aqueduct’s emergency spillway in the Alabama Hills, allowing all the water to flow back into the valley. These escapades were fictionalised in the 1939 movie New Frontiers, in which John Wayne leads the charge against the villainous water barons.
The Los Angeles Times – whose publisher had much to gain financially from the aqueduct that would enrich the San Fernando Valley – declared that the conflict represented “the forces of law and order against Socialism – peace and prosperity against misery and chaos – the Stars and Stripes against the red flag”.
While some of the rebellious ranchers acted alone, others were organised and funded by Owens Valley businessmen Wilfred and Mark Watterson, who owned the Inyo County Bank. But suddenly in August 1927, the bank collapsed, wiping out the life savings of many locals.
When the Wattersons admitted to using the money to fund the fight against Los Angeles, they were charged with 36 counts of embezzlement and grand theft totalling exactly $450, 000.27 (more than $8.2m in today’s money). The Los Angeles Times denounced the brothers as “mobsters” and made false claims about their ties to the Ku Klux Klan, but at their trial they were greeted by hundreds of cheering farmers.
“As the district attorney presented his closing argument, he broke into tears, and the judge and jury wept with him”, wrote Kahrl. The Wattersons – sentenced to 10 years in prison – received the only criminal penalties for the water uprising.
The court ruling effectively brought about an end to the conflict. With the lake now completely dry, the lush local land previously used for agriculture turned brown and the economy in Owens Valley was devastated, afflicting the Paiute peoples – who had long called it home – in particular.
Owens Valley went on to become the nation’s biggest source of dust pollution. After the US built a Japanese internment camp there during the Second World War as part of a wider effort to suppress sabotage in the wake of Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor, one internee later remembered: “We slept in the dust, we breathed the dust, and we ate the dust”.
Somewhere along the way, Mulholland had a falling out with Eaton when the latter wouldn’t sell a piece of property the former wanted for a reservoir. So Mulholland went on to spend several years and $1.3m (paid for by yet another municipal bond) building the doomed St Francis Dam. Later, it would be reported by its construction workers that “the accent was heavy on the urge to overcome obstacles and accomplish results” with little attention given to safety.
After the dam’s collapse, a jury found that Mulholland was not criminally culpable, but he accepted full responsibility for the tragedy and was not shy about expressing his guilt. “I envy the dead”, he told the county coroner.
He resigned and retired in disgrace, living out his life in seclusion and dying in Los Angeles in 1935.
A section of the City of Los Angeles Department of Water and Power Aqueduct, south of Owens Lake in the Owens Valley on Wednesday, March 22, 2023, in Olancha, CA]Gary Coronado/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images]
The water wars continue
The state’s struggle over water was still far from over, however.
“Water is a critical resource in the American West”, says Ayers. “It’s very easy to fall into a situation where controversy and conflict become not only the dominating narratives but the dominating modes of operating, and finding ways to avoid that and stoke cooperation and collaboration pay big dividends”.
But in the century that followed the California Water Wars, conflict over the region’s water has continued. Today, the Los Angeles Aqueduct provides about a third of the city’s imported water, with the rest coming from the Colorado River and other sources throughout California.
“There are conflicting interests within the delta”, says Ayers, referring to the Sacramento-San Joaquin River delta that serves much of the region’s water. “When we move large amounts of water from the wetter north down to the drier south, how that system is managed has implications for a lot of different players”.
In recent decades, those interests have placed homeowners throughout the region at odds with large-scale producers of water-thirsty crops like almonds, oranges and pomegranates. Those living alongside and sharing wells with such farms frequently report low pressure or even a complete lack of water as dwindling supplies are diverted to irrigate the agricultural industry. Not only do many homeowners end up living entirely without a running source, but they find it impossible to sell their now-waterless homes.
These latest water conflicts have largely been driven by a 1994 deregulation agreement known as the Monterey Plus Amendments. This pact – forged behind closed doors between the California Department of Water Resources and several water contractors – transferred ownership of public water supplies in Kern Country east of Los Angeles to the Kern Water Bank Authority, an entity controlled by agribusiness interests. Since then, a growing industry of private water banks has developed, allowing their owners to control pricing and access, forcing residents in vulnerable areas to pay more while others have seen their water supplies drained entirely.
After 20 years of outcry over the situation, California passed the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act in 2014 with the intention of achieving a sustainable water system by 2042. The act affords local water agencies greater control over their groundwater basins while requiring that they create and implement plans for preventing excessive use and other undesirable impacts like ground subsidence. Public water advocates, however, argue that such measures are too little too late, citing the already incipient crisis, and the ongoing practice of private water ownership.