by Lissie | Oct 4, 2012 | Blog |
Known as much for the warmth of its people as for its amazing landscapes, Malawi is a stunningly beautiful country. Though historically underdeveloped, reforms in recent years have allowed for real economic growth, as well as a slow improvement in environmental and...
by Lissie | Sep 25, 2012 | Blog |
Not far from the African Well Fund’s first Nigerien project in Tsamia Jigo, Kabefo village fought a similar battle to secure enough increasingly scarce water to survive. Like in much of the rest of Niger, rainfall in Kabefo is both inconsistent and inadequate,...
by Lissie | Sep 20, 2012 | Blog |
By far the largest nation in West Africa, Niger was 5,000 years ago covered in fertile grasslands, home to pastoralists who passed on a culture stretching back to at least 10,000 BCE. Their rock paintings show the complex lifestyle of so many years previous, with...
by Lissie | Sep 12, 2012 | Blog |
Sixteen-year-old Kyasimire Evaleen, a student at Ruhama Secondary School, was excited to be among the female students benefiting from an improved latrine and water tank near the school’s dormitories. In her own words: “After classes we would climb the...
by Lissie | Sep 10, 2012 | Blog |
The first week in our ‘Looking Back’ series featured Uganda, a country where the African Well Fund has funded four projects. With a population of 25 million, as few as 30 percent of whom have access to safe water, there’s much room for growth. In...
by Lissie | Sep 3, 2012 | Blog |
Last week we looked at the African Well Fund’s first project in Mali. In 2010 we had the opportunity to continue this work, helping to fund further wells in the areas served by Africare’s Goundam Food Security Initiative. Two of these wells – those...