From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


CWS sand dams lessen Kenya-Uganda border water conflicts; Women lead effort


From "Lesley Crosson" <LCrosson@churchworldservice.org>
Date Thu, 20 Mar 2008 16:43:32 -0400

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CWS sand dams lessen Kenya-Uganda border water conflicts; Women lead effort

MOROTO COUNTY, UGANDA,- March 19-World Water Day 2008 (Sat March 22) is accompanied by increased regional water shortages in the United States and around the world. The shortages, attributed to climate change, are causing conflict, stress and competition between communities for the dwindling resource.

But two communities in Uganda have decided to stop fighting and to work together to solve their water problems with a simple but highly effective technology.

With support from global humanitarian agency Church World Service, Kenyan grassroots womenâs organization Yangâat is leading a precedent-setting Water for Peace program that not only is lessening the severity of water problems for communities in a border region of Uganda and Kenya but is helping prevent future conflicts. This is significant in an area where prolonged dry periods force livestock herders to invade neighboring communities in search of water and grazing land, which then leads to violence among the herdsmen.

The program utilizes simple sand dam technology for dam construction, coupled with community meetings, awareness and training in ownership, management and maintenance of local water systems to insure project sustainability.

The objective is to construct six culturally appropriate, technically viable, environmentally friendly water systems in communities on both sides of the border in this semi-arid region.. The benefits of the sand dams extend way beyond a mere increase in access to clean water.

From CWSâs Nairobi office, Regional Director Dan Tyler says, âOur

broader goal with these water projects is to promote peace and improve quality of life for the two communities by empowering the residents to manage their own resources, within their own communities. This is a key to preventing future conflicts and ensuring future clean water, health and development.â

In Kenya, the government owns the water, but as climate conditions worsen, the government is embracing the idea of letting local communities manage their own water systems.

The Yangâat Water for Peace water program, part of CWSâ Water for Life initiative in Africa, began with peace-building and planning workshops for community leaders, government officials, churches and other stakeholders in Kenya and Uganda.

Program leadership from the Yangâat womenâs organization was a natural. Says Yangâat Project Coordinator Deborah Katina "We originally started Yangâat to care about the girl child and women because they are the most marginalized ones in the district. Women walk long distances here, particularly for water, so they don't have time for other economic activities."

Now, during droughts, the Ugandan women can come to the Pokot riverbed sand dam site and scoop into the sand to find water. The time they†™re saving can be used to generate income or attend school. An added bonus for women is that their leadership in solving the areaâs water problems has resulted in newfound respect for them from the men of the community.

Leaders from both sides of the Kenya-Uganda border early on agreed to build a sand dam in Uganda because that countryâs Pokots âa re the ones who move to Karamoja villages in search of water and pasture during the droughts, and that causes conflict,â says Katina.

On the other side of the border in Kenyaâs Akiriamet community, under the guidance of Yangâat, the community has already been protecting itself from the whims of nature and ensuring more reliable access to water with one of the programâs first operating sand dam water system.

âIn recent years,â Katina explains, âduring the dry season our people in Akiriamet district and those across the way in Ugandaâs Nakapiripirit community have gathered so closely along water points that the land has suffered from environmental degr adation.â As a result, she says, âMany of our children have suffered from diarrhea due to limited sanitation facilities.â

CWSâ Dan Tyler says more than 80 out of every 100 people admitted to Kapenguria District Hospital in Kenya are ill from water-related conditions.

Challenges remain on both sides of the border, but in all the communities where sand dams are planned, people are looking forward to easier access to water, less water-borne disease, and an end to the fighting caused by competition for dwindling supplies. Scientists predict that extreme weather caused by climate change will become an even bigger problem over the next decade and that poor people in developing countries, like the people of the Pokot region in Kenya and Uganda, will be most affected.

Ultimately though, more than 4,000 people-2,000 in Kenya and 2,000 in Uganda-are expected to benefit from CWSâ sand dam Water for Peace program.

The sub-surface sand dams, which cost US $5,000, are constructed by building reinforced concrete walls across seasonal riverbeds with a pipe built into the dam. Over the course of one or more seasons the dam fills with water, then sand. The sand filters the water running through the pipe and the water is then collected at the lower side of the dam or from relatively shallow holes dug in the sand behind the dam. Sandsand dams, which can hold up to 2.6 million gallons of water, can provide clean water for a thousand or more people, for livestock and for gardens.*

Tyler says the agency hopes ongoing funding will assure continuation of its Water for Peace/Water for Life programs here and in other areas of Africa.

Those wishing to contribute to CWSâs Water for All/Water for Life programs can Donate by phone at 1-800-297-1516 or by check mailed to Church World Service, 28606 Phillips Street, P.O. Box 968, Elkhart, IN 46515

To find out more about Church World Service Water for All/Water for Life programs and the Yangâat water project, visit http://www.churchworldservice.org/Educ_Advo/news/2007/waterkenya.html

* Source:

â Adaptation to droughts: Developing community based sand dams in Kitui, Kenya, Geophysical Research Abstracts, Vol. 8, 01596, 2006 SRef-ID: 1607-7962/gra/EGU06-A-01596 Â European Geosciences Union 2006, http://www.cosis.net/abstracts/EGU06/01596/EGU06-J-01596.pdf

Media Contacts

Lesley Crosson, (212) 870-2676, lcrosson@churchworldservice.org Jan Dragin - 24/7 - (781) 925-1526, jdragin@gis.net


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