Canadian well project floods Kenyan school - with kids
The new water well is just one small component of an ambitious development project spear-headed by Canada's Operation Eyesight. The project's ultimate goal is to eradicate trachoma, one of the world's leading causes of unnecessary blindness, from the entire country. But along the way, other unintended benefits of the project keep cropping up.
"At virtually every bore-hole we've drilled so far, communities immediately make plans to construct or enlarge a local school," says
"The impact on girls' education is especially dramatic because most had to walk many kilometers each day to fetch water for their families, leaving no time for classes. With the new well, girls' enrolment at Ongata Naado school has doubled."
Recruiting and retaining teachers in waterless African villages is notoriously difficult and sometimes impossible. Well-educated teachers know the dangers of consuming unsafe ground water and usually have the luxury of finding work elsewhere.
Moses Naikuni, headmaster at Ongata Naado's school, is relieved that high staff turnover is no longer an issue, especially in view of the mass influx of new students. He also recently announced plans to construct dormitories to accommodate boarding students from more distant communities that lack school facilities.
Operation Eyesight launched the trachoma control project in Kenya's Narok District in 2007 and is implementing the World Health Organization's full SAFE strategy to eliminate trachoma. SAFE includes Surgery to treat trichiasis (the late stage of the disease), Antibiotics to eliminate infection, Face washing and hygiene promotion, and Environmental change including wells and latrines to prevent re-infection.
With 33 deep water wells drilled and 2 water pans currently under construction, Operation Eyesight is developing more safe water sources at a faster pace than any other organization in
"The water table throughout Narok District is extremely deep, making these wells very expensive to drill," says Ferguson. "It's one reason so little progress has been made in the past. But the long-lasting and far-reaching benefits for these communities more than outweigh the cost.
"With the support of generous donors, we're not only preventing blindness, we're helping people permanently move from hardship and poverty to health and prosperity."
Operation Eyesight is a Canadian international development organization dedicated to preventing and treating blindness throughout the world for more than 40 years-primarily in Asia and
Global Blindness - Every five seconds, one person in our world goes blind and a child goes blind every minute. More than 90 per cent of the world's blind people live in developing countries, where day-to-day life is already daunting and blindness is a direct threat to life. Over 75 per cent of this blindness is preventable or treatable.
Trachoma is a disease of the eye caused by bacterial infection and is easily spread. Children are most susceptible. Those afflicted by trachoma do not go blind instantly. The disease progresses gradually until scarring from prolonged infection causes the eyelashes to turn inward and scratch the cornea, leading slowly and painfully to complete blindness. In the developing world, about 80 million people are affected by trachoma and over 8 million suffer the late painful stage of the disease.
For further information: Lindsay O'Connor, Head of International Media, [email protected], Toll Free: 1-800-585-8265, Office: (416) 438-7280, Cell: (647) 404-4469
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