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| Mama Hasria swims with hundreds of jerry cans to collect clean drinking water for her village |
Indonesian
villager Mama Hasria swims upstream with about 200 empty jerry cans tied to her
back, a daily trip she and other local women make to get clean water for their
community on Sulawesi island.
As a
scorching sun beats down, Hasria makes the four kilometre (2.5 mile), hour-long
trip along the murky Mandar river to clean water wells built along the riverbank.
There, the
46-year-old fills up her cans with clean water made drinkable by the
surrounding soil which acts as a natural filter and purifier.
The work of
Hasria and her fellow water collectors, who get paid about 500 rupiah (3.5 US
cents) for each can, or $7 for the whole load, is vital for some 5,800 families
in Tinambung district.
Thursday is
World Water Day, a UN initiative which this year focuses on
"nature-based" solutions for sourcing potable water globally.
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Hasria
earns about $7 selling the 200 jerry cans of clean water she collects every day
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It is a
challenge in Tinambung where residents have complained for years about limited
access to clean water in the remote fishing village.
"We
have to collect water from upstream for drinking and cooking," Hasria
said.
"Water
in the village can only be used for bathing and doing laundry."
Other
communities struggle with similar challenges in Indonesia, which has myriad
environmental problems and the dubious distinction of hosting the filthy
Citarum river, which empties into the sea near Jakarta.
A decade
ago, the World Bank declared it the most-polluted river in the world.
Faced with
a health emergency after decades of failed clean-up efforts, the government is
stepping in with the seemingly impossible goal of making the Citarum's water
drinkable by 2025.


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