By Anthony Langat
CHEPKRAM, Kenya - With
her year-old baby strapped on her back, Christine Lenganya, 25, lifts and
balances a 20-litre jerrycan of water on her head.
The mother of four leaves
the borehole and follows a rocky footpath that weaves through dense acacia
trees uphill to her home. This is the second of two trips she makes daily to
the nearby communal well, fitted with a solar-powered pump.
Before the well was
drilled, Lenganya had to make a long trip morning and evening to a dam 7
kilometres (4 miles) away.
"Life was so hard,
and I could hardly do any meaningful work at home. I arrived tired, and the
little water I brought was not even enough for use in the family,"
Lenganya said.
Her husband used to walk
the same distance each day to take his seven cattle to the dam to drink.
At other times, when the
area's rivers and dams dried up, Lenganya's family - and many others in Kenya's
West Pokot County - were forced to go and look for water in neighbouring
counties. That often led to conflict with the Turkana, Tugen and Samburu people
over scarce pasture and water in the north Rift Valley.
Christine Lenganya fetches water from a borehole in Chepkram,West Pokot,Kenya |
But now tensions are
abating as a result of the new well the West Pokot County government put in at
Chepkram. The borehole, equipped with drinking troughs for livestock, is one of
more than 30 drilled in the past two years.
The county, which bought
its own well-drilling rig, has also fixed over 100 disused boreholes, and
fitted the best-yielding wells with solar-powered pumps that make it quicker
and easier to access the water.
The project has focused
"on places where there were no boreholes and (that) had water
shortages", said Alfred Tulel, West Pokot County's chief water officer.
WATER PROMOTES PEACE
Now the semi-arid county
has a more reliable supply of water - a change Tulel believes will bring
greater peace to its pastoralists.
"Most of the people
in this county keep livestock, and if they have water for their cattle and
sheep, they will not cause any trouble," he said.
The wells have brought
other changes too. Pokot herders who habitually moved in search of water and
grass have begun staying in more permanent settlements, Tulel said.
Lessening of tensions in
the Uganda border area also has led to the construction of more homes, said
Samwel Kosgey, director for water in West Pokot County.
Read the full story at Building
Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Extremes and Disasters (BRACED).
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