It might take you seconds to turn on a tap and get running water or it might take you four hours to and from a pond to fetch muddy water (IRIN News)

Read at :

http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=93265

ETHIOPIA: Great trek for water in the south

Slideshow : http://www.irinnews.org/photo/?id=26 (Ethiopia: A journey for water)

BORENA (OROMIYA REGION), 19 July 2011 (IRIN) – For many people, access to water is a mere turn of the tap away; for Abdha Aso, a 20-year-old mother of five, it involves a four-hour round trip to a muddy pond. Only a year ago, she could reach a nearby stream in 20 minutes but it has since dried up.

The rains, which usually fall twice a year – between October and November and February and May – in the Borena zone in southern Ethiopia failed last year and this.

IRIN accompanied Abdha on one of her daily journeys. “Are you sure you will be able to do it? The road is difficult,” she says. With quick instructions to her mother-in-law on feeding her five-month-old baby, we set off in the afternoon sun. Nasibo, 10, a neighbour’s daughter, joins us.

I ask about safety. “We always travel in groups – never alone and you will see we will meet a lot of women on this road,” Abdha replies.

Four girls, aged between eight and 11, are ahead of us, carrying piles of firewood almost as big as themselves on their backs.

Nadifu Konso, 10, speaks for the group. They are fetching firewood for their mothers. Some will be sold and rest used at home. “This is very heavy,” says Nadifu.

The drought has been bad, they say. Their fathers lost all their animals. “We are now helping our mother – we do what she tells us to do,” says Nadifu. Their brothers are playing at home. “They do nothing.” The girls speak good English as they live near the Kenyan border and have Kenyan teachers. But as a sign that all hope is not lost in the desolate arid landscape, Nadifu says, “I want to be a pilot when I grow big.”

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Pond life

The pond has shrunk quite considerably, Abdha says. Skinny cows graze on the sparse vegetation along the bank. Vegetables planted by the neighbouring communities hug the pond, providing a bit of green in the dirt. One of the community members says if it were not for the vegetable patch, his family would have no food. “We lost all our animals.”

(continued)

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About Willem Van Cotthem

Honorary Professor of Botany, University of Ghent (Belgium). Scientific Consultant for Desertification and Sustainable Development.
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