Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene July-August 2015 Vol. 10 No.4 | Page 7

NEWS in brief Namibia: Government Restores Water at Ashihaya The feeding programme at Ashihaya Junior Primary School that was suspended at the beginning of the year following a water crisis was back on track early July 2015 after government installed a 10 000-litre water container at the school. Another 10 000-litre tank was installed at the village through the Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Forestry to cater for about 300 homesteads that in recent months had to do with drinking murky water drawn from distant ponds. Recently, it was reported that the school feeding programme at the school had been put on ice for five months following an acute water crisis at the village resulting from the drought. Villagers had to drink saline water from one borehole while the water ministry through its department of rural water supply was only able to provide water to the villagers every three months, or sometimes six months. However, that did not completely alleviate the situation as the masses still had to walk long distances in search of water. Around Africa Sanitation Innovation Challenge (SanIC) was launched. The programme, of which the South African Water Research Commission (WRC) is the implementing agent, aims to appraise sanitation technologies on the market. Other sanitation programmes which are linked to the government’s plan of achieving sustainable sanitation coverage include the faecal sludge management capacitybuilding programme in Africa, known as the Sanitation Research Fund of Africa (SRFA) Project, and the SASTEP Programme, which is co-funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) and the South African Department of Science and Technology. For the latter, the next generation, water-saving, off-grid sanitation solutions from the BMGF’s Re-Invent the Toilet Challenge will be demonstrated in resource limited areas in South Africa. It is envisaged that novel treatment processes used in these toilets will lead to entrepreneurship opportunities in lowincome areas from the beneficiation of waste streams. South Sudan Children at risk from cholera outbreak South Africa Paradigm s