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Wow!: From pixels to pails, crowdfunded wells quench thirst in Senegal’s drylands

Workers and villagers gather around a well, being built with the help of crowdfunding, in Ourou Amady Bagga, Podor region, Senegal, on 8th July, 2023.

NGOUDA DIONE, of Reuters, reports on how builder and fundraiser Mamadou Diakhate is using the internet to fund wells in communities lacking water…

Podor, Senegal 
Reuters

In the arid expanse of northern Senegal, women traverse kilometres daily carrying heavy buckets of murky water from distant wells and rivers. Water scarcity is so acute at this time of year that many communities face a dire choice: water your farms or quench your thirst.

Workers and villagers gather around a well, being built with the help of crowdfunding, in Ourou Amady Bagga, Podor region, Senegal, on 8th July, 2023.

Workers and villagers gather around a well, being built with the help of crowdfunding, in Ourou Amady Bagga, Podor region, Senegal, on 8th July, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Zohra Bensemra

This dilemma drove builder and fundraiser Mamadou Diakhate to intervene. He turned to the internet, setting up crowdfunding campaigns where people can donate money to construct wells in communities lacking water. 

“I met women walking seven or eight kilometres to get water for their crops. I knew we had to do something.”

– Mamadou Diakhate

“In many villages, there were water problems, and this issue notably impacted on learning,” said Diakhate, who previously worked in school construction. 

“I met women walking seven or eight kilometres to get water for their crops. I knew we had to do something,” he said.

Droughts globally have become 29 per cent more frequent since 2000, according to the United Nations, as factors like global warming and forest degradation dry out previously temperate areas.



In a region pockmarked with wells in various states of disrepair, Diakhate hopes the internet can bring communities together to solve the problem of water scarcity. 

His group has built more than 50 wells this way since 2020, and nine more are under construction. 

Mamadou Diakhate known as Niintche, a social activist who gained recognition for renovating schools and is now crowdfunding to build wells in villages around Senegal with no access to water,  pumps water from a well that is being constructed in Ourou Amady Bagga, Podor region, Senegal, on 8th July, 2023.

Mamadou Diakhate known as Niintche, a social activist who gained recognition for renovating schools and is now crowdfunding to build wells in villages around Senegal with no access to water, pumps water from a well that is being constructed in Ourou Amady Bagga, Podor region, Senegal, on 8th July, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Zohra Bensemra

“We raise funds exclusively through the internet,” he said, sitting in an alleyway in Senegal’s capital Dakar showing his latest crowdfunding site to residents on his phone. 

Although currently constituting just 0.1 per cent of the global market, the total value of crowdfunding campaigns in sub-Saharan Africa could reach $US2.5 billion by 2025, researchers from Pepperdine University estimated last year.


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Villages like Ourou Amady Bagga in Senegal are already benefiting, thanks to one of Diakhate’s campaigns. 

No longer faced with extreme water shortages, the village chief, Yoro Boubou Ba, believes residents could soon have surplus vegetables to sell, giving their community a much-needed economic boost.

“Communities…can’t do everything, and the state can’t do everything either,” Diakhate said. “But we’re going to continue to do our part and push these communities to really live better.”

 

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