Paying the Water Bill

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Christina

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D.C. refuses to turn on Libyan Embassy’s water Utility says country has racked up $27,000 in back bills at facilityThe Associated PressUpdated: 1:22 p.m. PT Aug 8, 2006WASHINGTON - Libya wants to reopen an embassy in the United States, but it can’t get the District of Columbia to turn on the water.The Libyan government sued the D.C. Water and Sewer Authority last week in federal court, demanding that the property’s water and sewer service be turned on. The lawsuit also asks for $1 million in damages.At the heart of the dispute are more than $27,000 in outstanding water and sewer bills. The D.C. utility won’t provide water or sewer service until someone pays.The city’s records show water and sewer accounts at the property in the name of the “United Kingdom of Libya,” and the authority has filed a lien demanding payment, The Washington Times reported Tuesday.Libya says it hasn’t occupied the Wyoming Avenue building since 1981, when the U.S. government cut diplomatic ties with the country and shut the embassy.Washington announced in May that it would restore normal diplomatic relations with Libya. The U.S. State Department officially removed Moammar Gadhafi’s regime from its list of state sponsors of terrorism on June 30.Squatters allegedly lived in embassyThe United Arab Emirates took control of the embassy property after the Libyans left. And, according to the suit, squatters stayed there for several years without permission from Libya or UAE.The UAE evicted the squatters in 2003 and ordered water and sewer service to be shut off, the suit said.The Libyan government said it shouldn’t have to pay because it didn’t authorize the service.The city agency declined to comment on the suit but said they treat foreign embassies the same as other customers, said Michele Quander-Collins, a spokeswoman for the water authority.“Basically, if they’re in arrears, we pursue the customer no matter who they are,” she said.The city utility has filed property liens against more than a dozen foreign countries in recent years, records show. The debts ranged from a few hundred dollars to tens of thousands — and some will be difficult to collect.The Republic of Yugoslavia disintegrated in the 1990s but still owes more than $14,000 to the city, according to a lien filed last year. And the former Zaire — now known as the Democratic Republic of Congo — has had more than $20,000 in outstanding bills, according to another lien.