| The Prem Rawat Foundation Helps Provide Clean Water for 40,000 Villagers in Ghana 24
July
2007
Nearly 40,000 destitute
Ghanaian villagers are enjoying clean fresh water and marked improvement in
their living conditions due to support by The Prem Rawat Foundation (TPRF)
for the United Nations Development Programme's Community Water Initiative
(CWI).
The Ghana project was started in 2006 to provide potable water
facilities and sanitation to "rural, poor and marginalized communities in
high parasite- infested areas," according to CWI.
For the nine Ghana communities impacted, the results have been life
changing. Previously, these villagers often spent entire days searching for
or hauling contaminated water. Many places had indiscriminate toilet
practices due to lack of facilities, and guinea worm parasite infestation
was common.
Now, integrated water supplies, sanitation management and renewed water
sources (including 22 wells and some dams) are providing safe, potable
water year round, enough for dry-season gardening. Each resident has access
to at least 20 liters (5 gallons) of water a day.
In one community, Kwasilansa, women and children had drawn their water
from a remote seasonal stream that tests showed to be teeming with
bacteria. A seven-member Water and Sanitation Committee was formed, and the
members were taught how to hand-dig four wells and construct a water
treatment house using communal labor. Seedlings were planted and cared for
to establish 5 hectare acres of riverside forest to act as a dry season
catchment area. Today, all 2,000 people of Kwasilansa use the water from
the new facility. Two neighboring communities of 100 tree farmers and 200
women, who process and sell palm oil, use it as well.
Nana Takyi XI, Chief of Kwasilansa, reports, "Kwasilansa has come out
of the doldrums of underdevelopment. We have good drinking water and
excellent sanitation conditions. We have said good-bye to guinea worm
infestation."
Magazia Saratu Mamuna, a resident of Sanga community, one of the nine
in the project, agrees. "I can't believe that we have good drinking water
during the dry season," she says. "It has never happened before. It's a
miracle. We thank the people who have changed our lives."
Due to TPRF's funding of CWI's first water projects in Ghana and the
success gained, additional support was obtained through UNICEF and the
Netherlands to further implement water projects in Ghana, and together with
a new partner, H20 Africa, CWI has now decided to expand their work in
Africa to cover 10 countries by undertaking similar water projects in three
more African countries -- Mali, Niger and Senegal.
The approach has been to mobilize and empower local groups to build,
own, operate and maintain low-cost, affordable water technology, using
locally made materials. Each of the nine villages now has its own trained
community water and sanitation committee. Technical support is provided by
the District Community Water and Sanitation Units.
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