Bringing
Clean Water and Hope to the Bachoo District, Ethiopia
By George Yap, Program Director
If one were to visit
a typical "health post" in rural Africa, water and sanitation-
related diseases like diarrhea and intestinal worms would likely be
among the top three reported illnesses. If this facility had a ward,
at least half of the beds would be occupied by patients suffering from
a water-related disease. Unfortunately, many rural people live too far
from these facilities and have neither the means, nor resources, to
get to them. Even if people could manage to reach the health post, they
probably would not be able to afford the necessary medicine, assuming
that it was available.
WaterCan works with
the local organization Oromo Self- Reliance Association (OSRA) to help
bring clean water and hope to rural places like Bachoo District which
is located about 100 kilometres south of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia's capital.
Most of the land has been cleared by subsistence farmers to grow food
crops. The few trees that are present, mostly eucalyptus, are found
around villages and individual homesteads. Water collectors, usually
women and girls, must spend several hours each day performing the tiring
task of fetching water from a distant and often polluted river or stream.
Some villagers rely
on traditional unprotected wells to meet their water needs. They must
dig to a depth of 30 metres or more to get to the water table. Because
heavy black soils dominate the area, wells frequently collapse during
the rainy season and so villagers are forced to dig new ones every year,
a dangerous task that can take as long as two months. These wells are
easily polluted and pose the danger to children falling into them. Water
is particularly scarce during the dry season and villagers are forced to walk
even further in search of it.
The recent completion
of a 40-metre deep WaterCan well means that the residents of Sinbirro
Cherecha Village in Bachoo District no longer fetch water from a polluted
river several kilometers away. According to Ato Alemayahu, OSRA's General
Manager, community members did not believe that water could be found
in the ground so close to the village. But when the drilling rig struck
the water table and water gushed out of the hole, people laughed and
danced with joy! Bath stalls have been constructed near the well. Mrs.
Yeshi Negas, a member of the local Water Management Committee, told
me that because the river was so far away, most people bathed only once
or twice a year. I learned that it was especially difficult for the
women because they were too embarrassed to bathe in the open. Now, says
Mrs. Negas, people are able to bathe more frequently and thus feel better
about themselves.
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