Groups of Women in
Water & Agricultural Kochieng
Ahero, Kenya
In rural Kenya, lack of clean water is often the primary barrier to
girls' education. Many Kenyan girls spend hours every day fetching
potable water for their families rather than going to school.
Girls
who are able to attend school are often uncomfortable with the lack of hygenic bathrooms during menstruation. Due to the
traditional division of labor, women and girls are constantly in
contact with water, much of which is poluted. This puts them at greater risk for
contracting waterborne diseases, one of the top four causes of death
among African women.
GWAKO formed
in 1998 to provide clean water, improve women's health, protect girls'
right to education, and boost women's economic status. Like Nobel Prize
winner Wangari Maathai's tree-planting Greenbelt Movement in Kenya,
GWAKO empowers women by involving them in the improvement of their
environment.
Working with women in 14 villages across western Kenya,
GWAKO is building sustainable wells, conducting community education
about hygiene and sanitation, training women farmers to produce higher
yields and installing washing facilities and latrines in schools.
GWAKO supplements these activities by facilitating the formation of
girls' clubs in schools to promote self-esteem and life skills.
In January 2005, GWAKO received an $18,000 Global Fund grant to build
and reinforce wells in five villages, and to expand its ecological
sanitation project. The project aims to install composting and
urine diversion toilets in schools and other community areas, and to train
women farmers on how to reuse waste as fertilizer.
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Main Issues:
Environmental Justice,
Girls' Education
Grants Received:
2004 $18,000
2002 $10,000
GWAKO is building communities through women's empowerment, sustainable development and environmental progress.
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