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Chinese help more Darfur people get access to clean water
KHARTOUM—In the depth of the
desert in Sudan’s western Darfur region, a local villager has been
waiting for four hours to fill his small plastic bucket with muddy
spring, the only source of drinking water he and all the other villagers
have depended on for generations. However, all families in the village,
even people in the long lines for the spring, are excitedly talking
about sacrificing a sheep for the arrival of a Chinese company, the only
foreign company in the Darfur region which can bring them clean drinking
water.
Li Kunpeng, director of the Sudan Branch of the North China Construction
Engineering Corporation, told Xinhua Sunday that his company currently
has four well-drilling groups working in remote villages in Darfur. All
these villages are tribes far away from cities, one of which is located
more than 100 km away from Nyala, capital of South Darfur State.
Up to now, Li’s company has drilled more than 140 wells in the Darfur
region, which can meet the daily water demand of a 300-people village.
Whenever a Chinese team came to the tribe, the leader of the tribe camp
would go to collect water and food from door to door for their Chinese
friends. Although the food was quite simple, sometimes even hard to
swallow, the Chinese workers always enjoyed it and spent many
heart-warming nights in the villagers’ shanties. In recent years, the
arrival of a Chinese drilling group has always brought joys to every
Darfur village. Before the Chinese team finished their work in a
village, a greeting parade from another village has already been waiting
for them.
When the Chinese arrived at a tribe, a grand ceremony would be held with
a sheep slaughtered at the scene as a sacrifice. While the Chinese were
going to leave, all the villagers would gather around to wave them
goodbye. Because of the drought caused by a long period of low rainfall,
the wellheads in the Darfur region usually hides about 200 meters
underground. With the lack of geological information, it is very
difficult to find a well. Under such harsh weather and working
conditions, the Chinese workers can only get an opportunity to reunite
with their families back in China more than a year.
Sometimes, the Chinese drilling team felt quite sorry when they found
that a well with clean drinking water could never be found in some
villages. However, the Darfur people often showed much understanding.
They said, “It doesn’t matter. We have got used to days without water.
Please go on to other villages and people there have been looking
forward to your early arrival.”
Last year, local rebel groups staged several attacks on vehicles with
drilling materials, interrupting the supply for the Chinese side. After
the reserve materials dried up, the North China Construction Engineering
Corporation was forced to pull out of the Darfur region. According to
Li, the Chinese and Sudanese governments have signed a deal on
well-drilling in Darfur. The Chinese company has won the tender for a
new project and will return to the region in the upcoming months, he
noted.
Li Chengwen, Chinese ambassador to Sudan, said that the Chinese
government has been encouraging Chinese enterprises to engage in the
economic development in the Darfur region. Currently, another Chinese
company is working on a water-supplying project in Nyala, capital of
South Darfur State, which will meet the demand for drinking water for
hundreds of thousands of people after the project’s completion in 2009.
—Xinhua |