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Mennonite Central Committee

Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) shares God's love and compassion for all in the name of Christ by responding to basic human needs and working for peace and justice.

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  3. Water from stone
Chad

Water from stone

In Chad, water pumps and latrines provide life-giving water for tens of thousands in refugee camps

February 18, 2020

By Jason Dueck

With a series of quick, practiced strokes, Aïchatou Hamidou clears the area around a newly built latrine with a long broom made from dry grass. After the trash and waste are swept into a tidy pile and safely disposed of, she unties the brightly patterned red handkerchief over her nose and mouth and adjusts the unmissably royal blue smock designating her as a member of the WASH (water, sanitation and hygiene) team.

Hamidou is the leader of the WASH team in Kobiteye—a refugee camp of more than 6,000 in Chad near the border of Central African Republic (CAR). She’s one of 24,000 refugees that are living in Kobiteye as well as two other government-built camps and a few dozen small villages in the area near the city of Goré.

Aïchatou Hamidou sits with the women who make up her WASH team after finishing their morning errands in Kobiteye, a government camp supporting around 6,000 refugees.MCC photo/Colin Vandenberg
A campaign of deadly attacks on non-native Central Africans—like Hamidou, whose parents were Chadian—in CAR caused thousands to flee into nearby countries where they have no family or support.

These three camps are the site of one of MCC’s planned centennial projects—a partnership with SECADEV (Secours Catholique et Développement, or Catholic Relief Services) that provides WASH support, namely, making sure everyone living here has access to safe, clean water.

When the camps were first built in 2013, builders dug open-pit wells, which can easily become breeding grounds for unsafe bacteria and disease, especially when there are not enough latrines to properly support the population. MCC and SECADEV have begun work with leaders in these camps to install new sealed handpumps that draw water from much deeper underground that isn’t polluted by waste.

In Danamadja, one of the other Chadian camps, refugee and mechanic Mahamat Moctar (middle right) maintains one of the water pumps constructed in the camp by MCC partner SECADEV.MCC photo/Colin Vandenberg

But contamination isn’t the only concern with the water supply in Kobiteye. Although the new pumps are a significant improvement, there simply isn’t enough water for everyone in the camp. The WASH team found that residents of the camp have access to 17 per cent less water on average than the United Nations minimum standard for refugees in emergency situations.

In the sweltering heat, a lack of safe water often leads to arguments around the wells, says Hamidou. It’s not just the lack of water, but the feeling of hopelessness many refugees here live with; there are very few opportunities to earn any income and nearly all other international relief support has dried up.

“SECADEV brought real change to our community,” says Hamidou. “They came and taught us how to deal with conflict better, so there’s much less quarrelling at the wells now. And more latrines and pumps mean people are living with better water and more hygiene.”

MCC is already working in Kobiteye and the other camps, Danamadja and Djako, but thousands of refugees in surrounding villages are still in dire need of WASH support.

In recognition of its century-old roots helping displaced people, MCC wants to expand on this work and reach more people. This project is a special centennial project and with increased support, SECADEV will be able to expand its work to the refugees who don’t live within the camps.

You can donate to the project online here.

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