Safe
Water and Orphan Support
in Southwestern Uganda
By Sophie Watson
Beginnings
The Lake Bunyonyi
Development Company (LBDC) was developed in partnership with the Church of
Uganda, the Africa Community Technical Service (ACTS), a Canadian
non-governmental organization (NGO), and the Lake Bunyonyi community of
southwestern Uganda. The LBDC represents a harmonious relationship between
Canadian and African partners, offering a holistic approach to sustainable
development—tailoring projects to suit the environment and the community. In
1993, the LBDC started Bushara Island Camp as an income-generating campground
whose revenues would go to supporting community development. The Canadian
involvement in this initiative has come largely in the form of human
investment. Over the years ACTS has sent Canadians to Bushara to do training
with the Ugandan team as well as interns to work on ACTS’ water project
initiatives. Missionaries Tim and Joanne Specht went to Bushara in 1997. As
directors of the camp their mission was to develop the camp, provide training
to the staff and oversee local community projects such as water projects and
orphan-care programs in the surrounding area.
Uganda was once known
as the pearl of Africa but during Amin and Obote’s regimes, the country’s
economy plummeted and human rights violations soared to horrifying levels.
Since 1986, President Museveni has gone a long way to stabilize and improve
conditions in Uganda though the country’s GNP per capita is only $170—the
seventh lowest in the world. Agriculture is the most important sector of the
Ugandan economy, employing between 80-90% of the workforce. Women are
responsible for up to 80% of the agricultural production, which involves both
subsistence and cash crops. Two of Uganda’s most immediate problems are the
increasing number of orphans and the limited access to safe drinking water for
much of the population. ACTS and the LBDC tackle both of these issues
admirably; their homegrown approach is sustainable because it maximizes
existing Ugandan resources.
Orphan-Care Program
There are currently almost one million orphans in
Uganda under the age of 15 who have lost their mother or both parents to AIDS.
There are also a large number of orphans as a result of malaria, typhoid and
other illnesses. In rural Africa, orphanages do not exist. Orphans are absorbed
by their relatives and their communities. ACTS and the LBDC are concerned with
the growing number of orphans and have decided to use business promotion as a
means of helping the orphans. The idea motivating the LBDC’s orphan-care
program is that by helping the orphans’ guardians you help the orphans for the
long term.
The LBDC’s first orphan-care program started in 1998
after Benon Mugisha, an employee of the LBDC, died and was survived by his wife
Loid and two children Penelope and Peterson. The LBDC met with the guardians of
Bufuka and offered to start an orphan-care program in their community. After
many meetings with the LBDC the Bufuka committee decided to start a milling
machine business. The LBDC provided the revenue for the capital cost of the
machine and its installation, and the community built a structure to house the
machine. In August 2000, they started to operate the milling machine. It has
been a great learning experience for all partners.
The LBDC is now initiating similar orphan-care
programs in other communities. They approach guardians in particularly needy
communities and ask if they want to start a project to help support their
orphans. The community and the guardians form a committee that will work with the
LBDC to put together a constitution as well as two project proposals. The
constitution will clearly outline what an orphan is and how much project
revenue must go to their orphans in the form of money or school fees. The LBDC
and the committee will spend 6 months working through the proposals and then
one of the two will be chosen and the LBDC will fund the project by providing
the initial startup costs. The LBDC’s role in the proposal process is to ask
questions that will help determine which project will be the most manageable
and will yield the highest return. The most important criteria for the proposed
projects is that they be sustainable and that they generate revenue to support
orphans. Once the project is approved, the guardians start a business with the
initial capital that the LBDC provides. The committee is accountable and is
monitored at monthly meetings that the LBDC attends. Besides monitoring, the
LBDC provides business training. What distinguishes this kind of initiative in
the context of development work is that it really is hands on for the
clients—they develop their own project to suit their needs. The LBDC is
essentially there to help and advise. Once a year with the revenues from
Bushara Island Camp the LBDC starts one or two more orphan programs.
Water Projects
The UN’s worldwide goal is that every person in the
world has access to safe drinking water within a walking distance of 100
meters. ACTS works to provide a safe, dependable water supply for rural Ugandan
communities as well as providing training that will enable projects to be
maintained and sustained through generations. Additional training in health
(including HIV/AIDS prevention) and sanitation issues, and environmental
concerns, complements the technical training.
ACTS’ water project initiatives are mostly gravity
feed and very low-tech. This kind of water system works using gravity and
pressure; there are no pumps, no high technology. This simple approach means
that the water projects are relatively affordable to install and to maintain.
It’s a matter of capitalizing on the main existing resource—the hilly
countryside. ACTS bring Canadian interns to Uganda to do either technical work
(design and construction) or health education for 3-6 months.
Communities in need make a proposal to ACTS for a
water project. ACTS goes in and sees whether it is feasible—if there is enough
water, how many people they can serve—and then, usually a couple of years
later, if ACTS has secured the funding for it, they will go into the community
and work with them. The ACTS team is made up of African masons and carpenters
who teach the local people about installing a water system, how to glue pipes
and do fittings and repairs. This is an essential part of the process because
once the ACTS team leaves, the community needs to know how to repair and
maintain the pipes and taps.
There needs to be a great deal of cooperation with the
community. The community forms a management committee which will represent the
community (the water users). ACTS works with the committee to draw up a
constitution which will feature a system to manage the project. The community
needs to have decided how they will raise money for repairs and for the overall
maintenance of the water project.
Gravity-Feed System
The first step with a water project involves locating
a water source high up in the hills. The source is tested to see if there is
enough water to supply the surrounding community, especially during the dry
season when a lot of the springs and swamps dry up. When they find the source,
they start by digging around it to find the eye of the source and then they
build a catchment area around it to catch the water. From there the water is
piped down to tanks where it is gathered. The tanks build up the pressure and
act as storage. From the tanks it is piped down into the community usually
along several different pipelines. And then in each communities at various
spots they will install a tap stand. People still have to walk to get their
water, but it is a much shorter distance than before when people were walking
several kilometers and getting water from swamps which were quite contaminated.
This new water that is piped to these people is not pure, it still needs to be
boiled or filtered, but it is much cleaner than what they had before. On
average ACTS’ water projects have been 14 km long, serving up to 6000 people.
All ACTS projects are designed to have minimal impact on the physical
environment.
Joanne Specht’s first experience working on an ACTS’s
water project proved to be quite challenging. The project was in a remote
village, almost on the Tanzanian border. “The road there was brutal, just
hideous. You needed physiotherapy by the time you got there,” Joanne remembers.
“This community was very poor and sick. It had been called a cesspit of
disease. There was a malaria epidemic all over Uganda, but it was particularly
bad in this area. We lived next to the church and there were funerals every
day.” Conditions were so terrible that the villagers could not be convinced that
Tim and Joanne were missionary volunteers. The villagers were sure the Spechts
must be convicts doing hard labour.
Joanne was primarily in charge of cooking for the ACTS
team. Her other, unexpected job became first aid. “We were driving slowly
through a trading centre and we saw some children. We noticed this one little
girl who had a big burn on her chest that was totally infested and was oozing
and there were flies so we stopped and found out where she lived. I came back
later with one of our Ugandan team members and I cleaned it and put some
ointment on it. I taught her mother how to treat it, because they often don’t
know basic health care. I showed them how to use boiled water with a little
salt which is a natural disinfectant. Other people then heard that the Muzungu
could heal and so people started coming to our gate. This one woman brought her
child who was in advanced stages of cerebral malaria which was awful. We took
them to the doctor for treatment. The treatment only costs five dollars, but these
people can’t afford it. It was too late for this child and she died a few days
later. People wait too long, they hope they’ll get better without going to the
doctor and so by the time they get there they are often too far gone and they
die—it’s a very common thing.”
This was Joanne’s first experience of human suffering
on this scale. She recalls, “The day that child died I walked home crying. And
then my little friend, the one with the burn on her chest, came and held my
hand and walked home with me. That was a real blessing for me to see one person
who we had been able to help.”
There are two components of a water project, the
technical side and the educational portion. The health education component
happens 6 months before a project starts and 4months after. Before a water
project goes ahead the health education team made up of Africans and Canadians
goes into the community to do a baseline survey to get an idea of what kind of
training the community will need. They check for pit latrines, screens on
windows, garbage areas and gardens. Once the survey is done the team starts
educating the community about water health, agroforestry, basic health care,
first aid, aids education and family planning. Sometimes they’ll use theatre to
teach: the team will perform educational skits. The whole process from baseline
survey to the water system installation and follow-up normally takes 10-12
months (6 months before, 2 building, 2 follow-up).
Participating communities’ knowledge of health,
sanitation and environmental concerns increases dramatically over the course of
the project. Women, the primary water collectors, have been afforded extra time
previously spent in water collection to pursue other activities. Joanne
explains: “When we went back to that village you could really notice a
difference in the health of the people and the cleanliness of the children
because they have clean water now.” Health education, water provision and
orphan-care programs such as these can offer true long term development for rural
communities. For more information about the LBDC and ACTS please visit http://acts.ca/lbdc.
This article was produced with the support of the
Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA).
Sophie Watson is a freelance writer.