... bull by the horns
A young girl is pumping water as another is filling pots while other children are waiting for their turn at the hand pump installed in the centre of village Wala Akram Jan Bakhta, north of Zhob city. The children gather here to fetch water, happy that they do not have to go to far flung areas to get water for drinking and other household purposes as they were compelled to do, two years ago.
Busy collecting water, they often missed school, and just a few would be able to go. Water in the nearby pond which animals also frequented was brackish and contaminated. In the rainy season they had to use muddy and unprotected water and hence water-borne diseases were rampant. Presently, the situation has changed and water-shortage doesn’t exist so the children can happily go to school as they no longer have to fetch water and the incidence of water-borne diseases is much reduced.
Two years ago the villagers formed a local committee that soon turned into a local organisation. Haji Meewa Khan, 63 and a resident of 60-household village, told us that the community and the village organisation have decided to solve the problems faced by villagers.
They got in touch with the “Balochistan Rural Support Programme (BRSP), which with financial support of European Commission under the EC-WatSan Project, erected three hand pumps at different places in the village in 2013,” Khan said. “We have a hand pump next to our house and we get clean water so our children are healthier than before,” he added.
Similarly, the village in the mountainous area known as Killi Naway Oba on Zhob-Waziristan highway, 10km away from Jan Bakhta village consists of 70 houses. Here, people are dependent on livestock and agriculture but famine has badly affected livestock and agriculture in recent years which has increased poverty and multiplied the difficulties of people in an area deprived of basic facilities.
With just a little help, village communities tackle better ways to manage their basic amenities issues
The school that consists of two rooms has no drinking water or washroom facilities, neither electricity and reading or writing material. They walk a kilometre away from school to relieve themselves.
“Last year, funded by the European Union (EU), the village organisation built a toilet on the school premises. The facility created a sense of hygiene among the children; saved more than a 100 students from various diseases and also succeeded in attracting more kids to join school,” said Imran, a student.
As water shortage was the biggest problem in the village, last year, in partnership with the BRSP and funded by the EU, a water supply scheme was installed in the village.
“Not only a major issue was solved, it also created a trend of solving issues through partnership,” added Imran.