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January 2003 Report
Food Delivery and Research
Rearding Water and Sanitation Needs in the Village of Foutaka, Zambougou,
Mali, West Africa
Food Water
& Wells Garden
Medical
School Immediate
School Needs Peace
Corps Volunteer
Report by Karen Marx
Food
Abdoul Doumbia and I traveled to Bamako, Mali, in late Decemer,
2002, then traveled to Segou. Segou is the town where farmers bring
their crops to sell, and then it is transported to Bamako and other
areas. We were in Segou for a day and a half to locate the quantity
of food we wanted to purchase, negotiate the price, hire loaders,
and acquire trucks to transport the food to Zambougou. In Segou
we were welcomed at the home of Almamyba, a well-known Malian musician
who plays kamalingoni and sings spiritual songs. Almamyba was able
to negotiate a fair price for the food, as the supply is limited
due to the drought in Mali. The price is twice that in 1999 when
we last delivered food to Zambougou.
We
purchased 37,400 pounds of millet and rice, most of which was delivered
to Zambougou and the "Fulani" village adjacent. The villagers
were extremely grateful for the food, as their supply was insufficient
to feed them until the next harvest, due to the severe drought conditions.
There are approximately 1325 villagers in Zambougou, plus about
350 "Fulani" tribe members who are in a cluster adjacent
to the main village and consider themselves part of Zambougou. This
is a total of 1675 villagers, approximately.
Upon arriving in Zambougou-Fouta, we were warmly
greeted a better description would be gleefully! The next
morning Abdoul, Sekou Camara, Souley Diarra, and I met with the
village and spoke with the elders. Sekou Camara is a translator,
historian, teacher, and storyteller from Bamako who is Abdouls
longtime friend and has been our translator during all of the five
visits to Mali that I have made. Souley is Abdouls closest
friend and assists him with all of his Malian endeavors.
Sekou described to the elders and the village
our desire to assist the village in becoming fully self-sufficient.
The villagers were extremely receptive and happy with our presence.
Water and Wells
While
in Segou, Sekou, Souley, and I met with the director, Oumar Traore,
of "Direction Regionale Hydraulique Et Energie, Region De Segou,
Republique du Mali". With Sekou as my translator, I discussed
with Mr. Traore The Mali Assistance Project, our efforts to date
with food delivery and our research relating to water in the village
of Foutaka Zambougou, the meager supply and contamination of existing
water. Mr. Traore stated that his office was aware of the water
problems in Zambougou. He said that this village was the driest
area in the Segou region and had possibly the worst problem with
water among all of the villages. He said that he was extremely pleased
to know that MAP was working to assist the village and offered his
full support and gratitude.
Mr. Traore explained that the land is hard volcanic rock and dry
land. He said it is not easy to drill or to find water. He described
the efforts over the past 18 years to find water. 139 meters was
drilled in Tesserela with no water found. 81 meters was drilled
in Zambougou by another NGO with no water found.
Technicians
from his staff traveled to Zambougou several months ago to inspect
the wells and to assess the problem. They were able to allocate
the funds to replace one of the Mark II hand pumps supplied in the
1980s by Saudi Arabia (it has been broken since 1986 and was
manufactured in India parts are no longer available). They
cleaned out the well and provided a French pump called Vergnet.
This well produces at a rate of 1.35 cubic meters per hour. Another
well dug in 1986 by Saudi Arabia, that has a broken Mark II pump,
produces water at a rate of 1.4 cubic meters per hour; however,
the water is inaccessible to the village due to the broken pump.
It is 93 meters deep. Mr. Traore stated that his office has determined
that one good producing well per 400 villagers is required to have
sufficient water. The village has approximately 1675 members. Four
good wells are necessary. However, Mr. Traore said that his office
did not have the funds to replace the second Mark II pump or to
help Zambougou additionally with their water problems.
I described to Mr. Traore the research and efforts made by EWB-USA
(Engineers Without Borders), founded by Professor Bernard Amadei.
I asked his opinion of using the Peace Corps model of hand-digging
wells to a deeper level, then adding Dutch bricks and concrete liners
to limit contamination. His strong recommendation was to bring in
a drilling rig, create 100-meter deep tube wells, use the French
hand pump, and create a concrete platform around the pump to prevent
contamination of the wells and of the containers used by the villagers.
I requested that one of his technicians go with us to Zambougou
to inspect the wells and further discuss the options to remediate
the water problems. Siaka volunteered and traveled with us to Zambougou
on January 2nd.
On January 3rd, Sekou, Siaka, two village well experts and I walked
around the entire village to inspect and measure the wells and the
latrines. Rocky Mountain Consultants, an engineering firm in Longmont
associated with MAP and EWB-USA, donated to EWB a GPS (global positioning
system). I was able to mark the coordinates, via satellite, of all
of the wells and many of the latrines in the village, and to create
landmarks for the perimeter of the village. With a rock tied to
a rope, we measured the depth of each well and the level of water
in the well. We discussed with the villagers the usage of each well
and noted that most of the wells had gone dry. There were dry well
holes all around the village a serious danger for children
playing. I asked if children ever fell into the wells, as there
is no protection around the holes, and was told that they do. When
this unfortunate event happens, it is either fatal or the child
is seriously injured. I filmed the wells, the former swamp areas,
the dried up gardens, the animals and their water source, and the
villagers during their daily lives.
The village well experts explained that their fathers and grandfathers
taught them to never dig a well deeper than the volcanic rock, as
the well would cave in and suffocate them. They said that all of
the wells were dug to this point and could not be dug deeper. With
this information and the expertise of Siaka and Oumar Traore, Sekou
and I realized that the only option for an appropriate water solution
would be to
- Repair and clean out the former Saudi Arabian dug well, then
install the French hand pump and replace the broken concrete slab
around the pump.
- At the location of one of the existing wells that currently
has water and is centrally located to service many villagers,
to bring in a drilling rig and dig the well to a 100 meter depth;
install a tube well and the French hand pump; and create a large,
round, concrete slab with a retaining wall around the pump to
provide a clean area to set containers to be filled with water.
- Locate a third existing well to dig to the 100 meter depth,
as above.
This would provide the village with four good producing wells and
a constant supply of water. It also would provide clean, pure water
there would be no need to provide water purification systems.
The existing wells are seriously contaminated from the latrines
that are ten to twenty feet from the wells, as well as debris that
fall into the wells. With the described new deep wells, the contamination
from latrines would no longer be a factor and a problem.
Many
meetings were held with the elders, Sekou, and myself to discuss
all of the issues that are distressing the villagers. One agreement
was that each family would contribute a specific sum of money monthly
(such as 1000 CFA - $1.5), a savings account will be opened in Tesserela
where they have a bank for farmers, and the funds will be used for
future repairs to the new pumps. We created a committee that will
be responsible for maintenance of the wells and pumps, collecting
the money monthly, educating the villagers about only using these
wells for drinking and cooking water, and for future repairs. Specific
villagers will be trained in pump repair. A womens committee
was also created to facilitate the use of the new wells. Mr. Traore
estimated that the yearly cost to repair pumps would be about 100,000
CFA ($154) for parts and a repair technician. I asked the committee
what they would do if a family refused to contribute to the well
fund. They decided that they would take one of their chickens and
sell it. Sekou explained to the village that they were already paying
for water in terms of purchasing ropes, illness, etc.
Garden
We agreed that the committee would search for and locate a plot
of fertile land where the women would have a community garden for
vegetables and negotiate a price to purchase the land. Rather than
individual family vegetable gardens, the women will work together.
MAP & EWB-USA will provide an irrigation system for the garden.
Medical Needs
Being
in Zambougou for six days enabled me to realize the serious level
of illness among all of the children. One child died while we were
there. We drove two children and their mother to the hospital in
Segou who were diagnosed with malaria, then sent back home with
medicine. Many mothers came to me with their very sick children,
hoping that I could do something to help them, and I could do nothing.
In spite of the incredible hardship of insufficient food, lack of
nutrition, illness, death, and contaminated water, the people of
Zambougou-Fouta were possibly the warmest, most hospitable, most
loving, smiling, and talented people I have ever met. When it was
time to leave, in one sense it was heart wrenching and in another
sense I felt very happy and greatly satisfied to know that we had
found a solution to provide clean water and health to these extremely
thankful people.
Our driver had driven Siaka back to Segou to report to Oumar Traore
and to price the well repairs and digging new wells. After leaving
Zambougou, we went back to Segou to meet with Oumar Traore. He presented
us with pricing for the work we wish to do. His office has the equipment,
the expertise, and the manpower to do the work and to support the
village with the changes. We agreed that MAP would work with his
office to provide the well repairs. Currently the price to dig two
new wells and repair the one pump is about $26,000. Siaka explained
that they would bring in a geo-physician, measuring machines to
determine the nature of the soil, the type of rock, how deep to
dig to have pure water that will last a minimum of a full year through
the dry season. Then, they would bring in a truck with a drilling
rig. It is urgent that this work is completed by March 2003 and
that this amount of money is raised to do this work.
I described to Mr. Traore the concept of a rain catchment system.
During the four to five-month rainy season (from June to Oct), the
rain can be torrential. If water were caught and kept in a holding
tank, it could be used for bathing, washing clothes, watering animals,
and possibly irrigation. Mr. Traore was not aware of this type of
system and said that nothing like this currently exists in Mali,
but he felt that it would be extremely beneficial for many villages.
He offered his complete support in our efforts to create a rain
catching system in Zambougou. The villagers also agreed that this
could be extremely beneficial and they were very positive about
the idea. MAP is currently working with EWB-USA to develop a system
and a holding container, appropriate for Zambougou.
School
Region
of Segou, Cercle Baraoueli, Commune of Tesserela, Zambougou-Fouta
I had several meetings with the three teachers of Zambougou, inspected
and photographed the existing school, and discussed the current
problems that are making it basically impossible to have a school
at this time. After our meetings, I requested that the teachers
prepare a report with specifics about their needs. The following
is their report:
Teacher's Report
The school is in very bad condition. We
request a new school with six classes because next year we would
like to have six grades. We want that children go regularly to school
every year. We intend that all of the children in the village of
school age should be recruited It needs to be a community school,
not private.
- The head master office should
be built.
- One toilet with two compartments
must be built (one for boys and one for girls).
- We need books to be read in class (from
grade one through grade six).
- We need geography, history, biology,
and math books (from class one to class six).
- We will need a well in the yard.
Teachers Living Conditions
We were trained by the CAP (Centre dAnimation
Pedagogique) and NGO partners such as the World Bank and Care Mali.
The teachers salaries are to be paid by pupils parents.
We are not being regularly paid. Our salary is between 25,000 CFA
($38 per month) for the newly hired teacher and 35,000 CFA ($54
per month) for the two older teachers (the fourth teacher recently
quit.) Its not easy to live with such a salary. We have to
buy clothes, food, medication, and do many other expenses with such
a small salary, which is impossible. Our life is being sacrificed.
Wed like to be granted better living
conditions in the village through:
- The building of a teachers ward.
- An increase of our salaries to 50,000
CFA ($77 / mo) for a nine month period, or 37,500 CFA paid over
twelve months. We currently are not paid during the vacations
(July, August, and September). We are contract workers who almost
have no rights.
The teachers also described that they do not have acceptable accommodations
in the village (one teacher came back after a week long trip to
find another person living in his designated dwelling and he had
nowhere to sleep). They only have food prepared by the villagers,
which they find to be substandard. In order to be able to prepare
their own food and secure a permanent dwelling space, they need
to be paid sufficient salaries. The salaries are supposed to be
paid by the Mali government through taxes collected, as the school
is supposed to be public, but the government does not pay. Each
family with children in school is expected to pay 2,000 CFA per
student per month, making the school private, and the families feel
they cannot afford this fee.
One
teacher is pregnant and has an eleven-year-old daughter to support.
Another teacher said her husband died two years ago and left her
with five children. Her children are living in Bamako with her sister,
while she is in Zambougou teaching, trying to send money to support
her children. The third teacher is a single man.
As I was walking through the village examining the wells, I came
across a uniformed military officer with a rifle slung over his
shoulder. I was told he was there to collect back taxes from several
families who have not paid for two years. The amount that they owe
and still cannot pay is 2000 CFA ($3.08). I was informed that the
policeman planned to take some of their chickens as payment.
At present, the school building is inhabited by donkeys!! All of
the desks and seats for students, teacher desks, chairs, and blackboards
are broken! There is no latrine for students or teachers. While
teachers are trying to conduct class, the donkeys, sheep, goats,
etc. are outside the windows making constant noise. The school is
made from the mud adobe bricks and is about to collapse. A French
NGO recently supplied a new metal roof for the school, but a new
concrete block building must be built within the next couple of
years.
The
percentage of school age children who are attempting to attend school
is less than 10%. The parents, at this time, would rather have the
children help with the daily workload. Plus, they are concerned
that if the children learn to read, they will want to leave the
village and farming when they are old enough and will go to Bamako
to attempt to find work. In Bamako, they would most likely become
"lost souls". Most of the young people in Bamako currently
and historically cannot find work. Few people in Bamako seem to
have enough money to purchase sufficient food for their families.
Sekou Camara, my translator who is also a teacher, historian, and
storyteller, and I discussed with the teachers the future of the
school. We agreed that once the school was functional and families
began to see the benefit of literacy and the advantages of education
for their children and for the village, there would be more interest
and greater attendance. I agreed to assist the teachers in providing
school for the remainder of the year and next year. If the village
had literate members, they would be able to negotiate with the Mali
government representatives and have a voice in the political environment.
They could speak on behalf of the village to the government and
other organizations. It would assist them with micro-business enterprises.
The "secrets and medicine" of the old people are being
written down by outsiders, as the old people cannot write, and then
they are lost to the village. Or they are forever lost when the
old people die. Many benefits of having educated children were discussed,
and we agreed that it might take five years of a successful educational
program before the families fully understand the value of education.
It does not necessarily mean that children would leave the village.
Immediate School Needs
I asked the teachers to make a list of immediate needs in order
to have the school functional; determine the costs of these needs;
and then write down long term needs.
Immediate needs and costs for one calendar year:
Purchase new table / chair sets
 |
| Class 1 & 2 |
8 Tables |
 |
| Class 3 |
10 Tables |
 |
| Class 4 |
12 Tables |
 |
| Class 5 |
5 Tables |
 |
| 35 Tables @ $7 ea |
$245 |
 |
Blackboards
 |
| 3 blackboards on the
wall |
3 Blackboards |
 |
| 2 additional blackboards |
2 Blackboards |
 |
| 5 blackboards @ $8 |
$40 |
 |
Teacher desks and chairs
 |
| 4 teacher
desks @ $7 ea |
$28 |
 |
| 4 Teacher
Chairs @ $6 ea |
$24 |
 |
Copybooks
 |
| Class 1 & 2: 26
pupils |
52 Copybooks |
 |
| Class 3: 29 pupils |
100 Copybooks |
 |
| Class 4: 29 pupils |
240 Copybooks |
 |
| Class 5: 10 pupils |
100 Copybooks |
 |
Total 94 Pupils:
492 Copybooks @ $0.38 |
$190 |
 |
Rulers
 |
| 94 Rulers
@ $0.23 ea |
$22 |
 |
Pencils
 |
| 188 Pencils
@ $0.11 |
$22 |
 |
Erasers
 |
| 94 Erasers
@ $0.08 |
$8 |
 |
Pens
 |
| 470 Blue
pens @ $0.11 |
$55 |
 |
| 470 Red
pens @ $0.11 |
$55 |
 |
Mathematical sets
 |
94 Mathematical
sets
@ $2.34 |
$220 |
 |
French dictionaries
 |
| 2 dictionaries
@ $10 ea |
$20 |
 |
Salaries
 |
| 3 Teachers
@ $692/year |
$2,076 |
 |
TOTAL
 |
TOTAL
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
& EQUIPMENT NEEDED |
$3,005 |
 |
Peace Corps Volunteer
In a meeting with the elders, I inquired about their desire to
have a Peace Corps Volunteer living in Zambougou and discussed the
potential benefits to the village. They responded that if the PCV
were willing to work directly with and be guided by MAP and EWB-USA,
they would be very pleased to have a volunteer living in the village.
I explained that they would need to build a house for the volunteer.
MAP committed to provide $650 for the purchase of corrugated steel
for the roof.
By the time of my departure from Mali in mid-January, I felt gratified
that solutions were found for the serious water supply & quality
problems in the village and I realized that I needed to immediately
raise $30,000 for well digging and repair.
Donations are desperately needed now, so that well repair and
construction can begin immediately. The villagers are suffering
now, with NO WATER in their wells. As of March 10, 2003, MAP has
less than half of the funds needed for this project. Your assistance
at this time would be greatly appreciated.
With great appreciation to all those who have offered support and
contributions.
Sincerely,
Karen Marx, Founder and Executive Director
The Mali Assistance Project (MAP)
Board of Directors of Witness, a Human Rights Project
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