martedì 28 febbraio 2012

Lux Fiat...Aqua non datur !!



Breaking news: Electricity got back to the town of Matadi, yesterday evening in between 18pm and 21pm, in all districts. However, there is still no water. The UN will supply the population through water tanks to be sent to several areas of the city. In the meantime, very sad news arrived this morning: the total amount of dead people, during this crisis, amounts now to 6 people, drowned into the Congo river while busy getting water for their families. It is absolutely nonsense to die like this nowadays. I am outraged and yet powerless in front of such events. Especially, because your aim is completely the opposite:helping those people; but still you cannot do anything and I have many doubts that the management of the water and electricic companies will answer to that. Very doubtful about it.
Let's wait for water, now. Stay tuned !!.

Pietro

venerdì 24 febbraio 2012

Who needs water and electricity?

All those who move to a developing country know perfectly that there is a very high probability to experience power blackout and lack of running water, for short periods. Therefore no suprise that this is happening to me as well. The worrying thing is that it is lasting since 2 days now and the problem seems to be more serious than expected.

The source of the problem is the famous Inga Dams (I and II), a huge enginnering work built under Mobutu in the 70s and currently producing only 20% of its true potential due to lack of spare parts and poor maintenance. These dams are very close to Matadi but from here all the Bas-Congo and Kinshasa regions are supplied. Rumors go in every directions: among those who believe today the problem is going to be solved and others who speak about a week long blackout.


The problem has not been reported yet but some of my colleagues said that this has to do with some old components that need to be replaced and that will take a while before to reach Matadi.

The Inga dams according to the experts could produce 39 GW of electricity.

I am not an expert but apparently this is a lot of electricity; more than the double of what produced by the biggest  hydraulic power plant in the world, the chinese plant of Hubei on the Yangtse' river.

Once more, this an additional proof of the state of the country, huge potentialities "en puissance", extreme difficulties and problems in reality.



While I hope that the problem will be quickly solved, I will light some candles tonight, these are environmentally-friendly and they create a very cosy atmosphere. Ideals for a friday night...

Wish you a blackout-free weekend,

Enjoy,

Pietro

martedì 21 febbraio 2012

Chaos in this world

People were created to be loved and things were created to be used. The reason why the world is in chaos, it is because things are being loved and people are being used (Jonathan Moldú)

mercoledì 15 febbraio 2012

Class is not water but water saves lives


I am over the moon...my boss just told me that following our inspection last weekend, the request of obtaining emergency water supplies for the cities of Boma and Muanda hit by an outbreak of cholera, have been authorised.

5.000 bottles of water will be supplied to the Central Hospital of Muanda and distributed in the most critical infected areas.
The current cholera outbreak in the Bas-Congo province has provoked already 5 confirmed dead and over 100 contaminated people.

Colleagues from UNICEF and WHO will be supervising the water distribution process.

Cholera outbreaks even if not frequent in this part of the Congo, remain nevertheless endemic and difficult to eradicate once for all.

The current dry season with very limited rainfalls in last month has clearly worsened the situation.

Matadi on the rocks


As my blog brings its name, I cannot avoid to present the city that is hosting me: Matadi.

The port of Matadi
Matadi is a chief sea port, the biggest in Congo DR and is also widely to be known as "la ville de pierre", for the fact that all the city is literally carved in stone and actually Matadi in the local Kikongo dialect means, hard to believe, stone.

 
The port constitutes the driving force of the city, roughly 90% of the goods entering in the Congo DR, access the country via Matadi. That also explains why one of the very few decent roads of the country, is the one connecting Matadi to Kinshasa, the capital city. There is also a railway line but it is of minor importance: most of the goods are transported by road.


View of the River Congo from my house

Before coming to Matadi, I thought the town was not bigger than 250.000 inhabitants (according to Wikipedia sources). However, once on the spot, I could notice that the city is, for sure, over 700.000 people, probably even close to a million if we consider the suburbs. The UN base is uphill, in the Kikonda neighbourhood that enjoys of a wonderful view over the "Pont Marechal" - a suspension bridge, built by the Japanese that allows Kinshasa to be linked via Matadi to the other smaller harbours, Boma, Banana and Muanda.

martedì 14 febbraio 2012

From Rue Stanley to Stanley Livingstone


Hi everybody,


Portrait of Mr. H. Morton Stanley
 I start today this new blog, exactly one month after my entry into Congolese soil.

A new adventure that I would have never been able to foresee some months ago but that nevertheless I have embraced it with enthusiasm but also with pragmatism.

Yes, because, in order to work in a country like Congo DR (and there are not many of those countries, truth to be told), you need to be enthusiastic but also very pragmatic.

Stanley's Baobab
To sum up in few lines, Congo is like paradise in hell, the country is rich of every natural resource you might even think about (gold, iron, coltan, copper, uranium, diamonds ...you name it, you have it !!

However, the country became hell with a very small elite benefiting of that richness and the greatest part of the population living below the poverty line.

This is the most difficult part to accept: how can it be possible, in a country where fishes die of old age in the river Congo that people are starving and children are living undernourished, in a muddy hut located probably on an underground gold site?.

This happens for several reasons. For instance, imagine the richest and unexploited country in the world, one of the weakest government ever, absence of a well-trained and well-equipped army to defend your borders, huge surface extension (comparable to 1/4 of the US territory), no significant infrastructures and quite a number of "hungry" neighboring countries trespassing in your territory to help themselves with every kind of resources they need.

Stanley's journey from Zanzibar to Muanda
Well, that country, Ladies and Gentlemen, is Congo DR.

Said that, I mentioned the word "pragmatism" because you need a lot of it, considered the very scarce resources the UN has, in order to fund institution building and capacity building initiatives.

In practice, when you realise that you need to do "peacekeeping" and "conflict resolution" with almost no money, at all; there is where you start losing your enthusiasm and start acting pragmatic.

That means: you do what you can and you stop having that “I want to save the world” kind of ideas.

Idealism in this country does not help and it represents only your projection on how you would like this country to be.

Pragmatism is the only way to address real concerns from real people.

Definitely, these are my starting thoughts. Hope to keep them in the future.

Pietro