Church and WaterAid bring safe water to Liberia, Papua New Guinea – Church News
Sando Town in rural Montserrado, Liberia, was established by a woman named Ma Sando in 1968. But its residents never had access to safe drinking water. Instead, they collected water from ponds, creeks and open wells, causing many residents to get sick from waterborne illnesses. Ma Sando’s granddaughter, Kpanah Sando, was born in Sando Town 50 years ago. Now, for the first time in her life, she has clean water from a tap at home.Together, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and WaterAid have provided sustainable access to safe water to Sando Town and 14 other Liberian communities like it — blessing the lives of more than 10,000 people in the west African nation.
A woman demonstrates how residents in Sando Town, Liberia, used to collect water from creeks and ponds. Now the residents have a tap, installed by WaterAid with support from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 2023.
WaterAid was founded in 1981 and works to bring clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene to communities around the world. Those three basic things allow for better health and food security — as well as more time and opportunity for women and girls who are most often tasked with hauling water long distances. Girls like Joyce, age 16, in Papua New Guinea in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, more than 10,000 miles away from Liberia. Joyce’s school only has one pit toilet for 230 girls.“I would like to go to university, to use a proper toilet and have a proper place to wash,” said Joyce, whose last name was not given. “I would like to become an accountant to help my family. When they are having difficult times, I want to help them.”Nearly half of schools in Papua New Guinea do not have clean water and less than a third have decent toilets. Students get sick several times a year and miss classes from a lack of hygiene and sanitation.But the Church is working with WaterAid to change that, building water, sanitation and hygiene systems in schools in the Kairuku-Hiri District of Papua New Guinea. Having safe water, proper sanitation and hand washing facilities on site gives schools in particular multiple benefits, said Shirlee Dindillo, WaterAid Papua New Guinea’s water sanitation and hygiene advisor. “The effect on girls in particular is profound. Girls are able to confidently attend school without worrying about their safety when going to the toilet and do not have to stay home when they menstruate. It is a much more secure environment for them.”
Joyce, 16, stands outside the Gaire Primary School girls’ toilet in Gaire village, Hiri District, Papua New Guinea. The single toilet served around 230 girls and is often full, dirty and smelly. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is working with WaterAid to bring safer water and hygiene systems to the school in 2023.
The Church and WaterAid have worked together since 2016 to fund clean water projects in more than 10 countries like Liberia and Papua New Guinea. The Church News has also recently highlighted Church-funded WaterAid projects in Eswatini, Colombia, Malawi and Mozambique.WaterAid uses a community-led approach to bring water infrastructure such as water points, wells and toilet blocks, combined with hygiene education and training.Building infrastructure only addresses part of the problem. WaterAid teaches crucial hygiene and health messages to the residents and ensures that communities know how to keep water systems working.In Papua New Guinea, for example, WaterAid created school health clubs and promoted peer-to-peer hygiene awareness, as well as supporting the establishment of school water committees who are responsible for the ongoing maintenance of the infrastructure. WaterAid Papua New Guinea Program Director Navara Kiene said they also worked with local and national government departments to increase their capacity and understanding of the importance of water, sanitation and hygiene. “It is amazing to see and also so important for schools and their surrounding communities to take ownership of their water, sanitation and hygiene infrastructure,” Kiene said. “We support schools to integrate infrastructure management into their wider school plans. Once they have the tools and knowledge, they are ready and willing to do the work to keep the water flowing and the toilets flushing, for good. Buy-in and engagement of school communities is so important, because that is what keeps our work sustainable.”
Joyce, 16, shows her home in Gaire village, Hiri District, Papua New Guinea. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is working with WaterAid to install water systems at Joyce’s school and others in 2023.
This same sustainability is also a part of WaterAid’s work in Liberia in Africa, where workers engage directly with communities from the beginning of every project — identifying needs and designing systems that will work for them. Training is done on operating and maintaining the infrastructure, in order to make the communities become the proud owners and operators of their own water systems.Kpanah Sando has been trained to maintain the new tap in her village.“Now that we have this new hand-dug well for the first time, the community has made strict rules to take good care so that we don’t go back to drinking creek water again,” she said. “We also tell our people not to drink creek water anymore. We have real lives now.”
Southern Africa
2 Zinara officials bypass system, install own ‘gates’ – The Herald
Southern Africa
2 Zinara officials bypass system, install own ‘gates’ – The Herald
2 Zinara officials bypass system, install own ‘gates’
Yeukai Karengezeka Court Correspondent
TWO Zimbabwe National Road Administration (Zinara) revenue clerks yesterday appeared in court for allegedly installing a boom override system illegally and collecting money for their personal use.
Tariro Mhuka (26) and Henderson Msowa (39) appeared before Harare regional magistrate Mrs Marehwanazvo Gofa facing fraud charges.
They were granted US$200 bail each and remanded to November 30.
Zinara is the complainant, represented by its risk and loss control manager, Mr Tawanda Marenga.
The two were operating from Zinara’s Eskbank Tollgate along the Harare-Bindura highway.
Some of their duties included collection of revenue from the motoring public and remitting the collected revenue to the senior revenue clerk at the close of business.
Prosecuting, Mr Pardon Dziva alleged that on July 18, the two connived to steal from Zinara using a 10-10 Technologies (Private) Limited information system.
The company, 10-10 Technologies, is the system provider for Zinara.
Mhuka and Msowa were allegedly working together with other Zinara employees, who have since been arrested and arraigned before the court.
Others are still at large.
It is understood that after the installation of the illegal system that would bypass the normal operating system, the suspects collectively received tolling funds from the motoring public, purporting that the funds would be channelled to Zinara, when in fact they would convert the funds to their own use.
The court heard on July 20, the Zinara risk and loss control department discovered the offence through CCTV footage, prompting them to report the matter to the police.
Investigations were instituted and it was established that the boom override installations were fitted without the knowledge and consent of Zinara and also without the knowledge of 10-10 Technologies.
On July 26, a team from CID Commercial Crimes went to 10-10 Technologies and they confirmed that they had not authorised the installation of the boom override system at the Eskbank Tollgate.
The State also has CCTV footage showing Mhuka and Msowa committing the crime.
Zinara is yet to establish the total prejudice, and so far, nothing has been recovered.
Southern Africa
Angola: Country not facing energy crisis due to its oil reserves … – Macau Business
The association of companies providing services to the Angolan oil industry (AECIPA) on Wednesday rejected the idea that Angola is experiencing an energy crisis, saying that the country has “many reserves and infrastructures that allow for efficient production”.
“At Angolan level we are not in an energy crisis, we are in a process of transition, our oil industry is in a certain way mature, there are almost 50 years of oil production,” said the president of AECIPA, Bráulio de Brito.
According to the official, who was speaking at the 3rd Environment and Development Conference, Angola is producing at the limit of its capacity and has “a lot of oil reserves”.
“Our infrastructures are such that our daily production can be higher than we see today, there is work to be done to make this happen, so we will continue and the operators have the strength to make this happen. We, the service providers, are here to help,” he emphasised.
For the chairman of AECIPA, who was one of the speakers at the round table on the “Energy Crisis, the Extractive Sector and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)”, there is still a way to go, but the country does not have an energy crisis as such, he insisted.
He argued that Angola needs to produce more oil efficiently and cleanly, so that “really,” he noted, the benefits of the revenues generated can be channelled into the country’s social development.
“And so that these revenues can be transformed so that Angola can be independent of oil, so that oil is another pillar of our economy and not the pillar of our economy,” he pointed out.
The chairman of AECIPA also pointed to the need for the country to continue to maintain the oil industry as the “engine for the transition to economic diversification,” admitting, however, that Angola “is not yet ready to live without oil.
“What we have to do is continue to reinforce all the good that the oil industry offers in terms of financial income, in terms of being able to produce with less impact on the environment, with very strong ecological development,” he emphasised.
The leader of the association of service providers in the oil sector in Angola also stressed the importance of the sector being aligned with the SDGs, so that production is more efficient and has less impact on the environment.
Asked during the debate about the participation of AECIPA members in the sector’s technological transformation, Bráulio de Brito said that the sector’s value chain is supported by service providers and they are the driving force behind the technological transition.
The operators “have their role to play, but on the other side of the value chain, we are the ones who carry out the service and we, the service providers, end up being the driving force behind the transition to technological transformation,” he argued.
“Because we’re the ones who really have to use these technologies so that operators can operate and coordinate production processes efficiently with less damage to the environment,” he concluded.
“The Impact of the SDGs on Business” was the motto of the 3rd Environment and Development Conference held today in Luanda by Economia & Mercado magazine.
Angola is the second largest oil producer in sub-Saharan Africa after Nigeria.
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