According to the report, in Taran community, there was only one source of water for the villagers and animals to drink from. For the villagers, it’s a choice-less situation; it’s the only way of staying alive; it didn’t matter if water borne diseases become their constant ailment.
“We drink water from the same source with our goats. When we get to the stream to fetch water and discover that goats have come ahead of us to drink, what we do is to fetch the surface that we believe the mouths of the goats touched and pour it away, then proceed to fetch our own,” said Rahal Bitrus, one of the women in Taran.
“We don’t have any other source of water. We just reduce the surface and fetch our drinking water even though we know there are consequences, but we are left with no option.
The water sometimes gives us and our children diarrhea and typhoid fever and very painful urine, but we still go ahead and drink it to stay alive.
We trek about nine kilometers to get to the river to fetch the water we are talking about, and, of course, it is affecting our lives, economy and even our children’s education.
This lack of water affects our economy in the sense that we have to look for water before going to the market and, by the time you go and come back, on getting to the market, some transactions would have been made which you must have missed and sometimes we end up not going to the market because we must have been late and prospective customers gone home.”
If you as much as drink tap water in your house, be grateful.
Na wa....this is what people should b fighting for...the village hv representative in house of assembly both state n federal level collecting constituency development allowance...now I ask,,how much does it take to hv a bore hole....with #250k and above one can gave village like this standard borehole......God help us from d hands of greedy n criminal politicians......
ReplyDeleteNa their way! Hmmm! "Uwaifo don talk e own o".
ReplyDeleteThis is to show how wonderful God is,even as they share same source they are still surviving
ReplyDeleteIt is something they shud work on,during my service year in kebbi,hv seen students dug ground, fiction their keg daybreak for water,so d local and state government shud look into it
ReplyDeleteIs amost every where but things have really change
DeleteIt is something they shud work on,during my service year in kebbi, hv seen students dig d ground, fix their kegs day break just for water, d local and state government shud look into it, imagine goats,haaaa
ReplyDeleteNa wa
ReplyDeleteGod we see us true
ReplyDelete