The effort also is providing 15 generators, costing about US $282,000; distributing 10,250 hygiene kits; costing about US $205,000; and providing other general services such as emptying septic tanks and purifying water, costing about US $97,000.
“Water, certainly, means life,” said Ghayth Maalouf, ICNDR’s regional coordinator assigned to one of the two divisions of South Lebanon that includes Marjeyoun and Bint Jbeil.
Yet 90 percent of the villages no longer had access to their main sources of water, he said.
Re-establishing water supplies “is one of the most important projects,” said ICNDR regional coordinator Robert Nicolas, Maalouf’s counterpart in the other division of South Lebanon. Nicolas’ territory includes Saida and Nabatieh.
Slowly, water is starting to flow again, an event being widely heralded in the villages where it’s happening.
The villagers are overwhelmingly pleased, Nicolas said. One municipal mayor called just recently and said, “I didn’t believe that an NGO could achieve what you have done." |