South Sudanese Refugees Make Tippy Taps to Promote Hygiene in DR of Congo Camps
A simple yet effective hygiene initiative is helping refugees make their own handwashing devices to fight COVID-19 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. | Español | Français
Tippy taps are simple yet effective handwashing devices that usually use a stick, designed like a foot pedal to tip water from a container into the hands, thus allowing users to wash their hands without touching the container. The taps come in various forms, depending on the creator’s creativity and available resources.
“I decided to make a tippy tap to save myself and my family,” says Chris Bida, a South Sudanese refugee and secretary of Bele settlement’s refugee committee. “Anyone can do it because it is very simple to make. You don’t need to pay for it.”
Chris made his tippy tap by hanging a jerrycan on a wooden stick and installing a pedal that allows him to tilt the jerrycan until water flows.
Accessing health care is particularly difficult for displaced communities like refugees.
“Many refugees can’t afford the cost of treatment or medicine without UNHCR’s assistance,” explains Koffi Dodzi Adossi, UNHCR’s Head of Office in north-eastern Ituri province. “They also live in remote locations where health care is hard to access.”
“Anyone can do it because it is very simple to make. You don’t need to pay for it.”
For everyone, communal water points have been made safer with markings on the ground that ensure social distancing while people collect water.
“There’s a handwashing point right in front of my house so I can wash my hands there,” says Regina, a mother of two who lives in Bele settlement. “I help out by refilling it with water when needed.”
With the additional coronavirus threat, UNHCR is aiming for every refugee household to have its own handwashing device, but with limited funding available to cater to the immense needs of the more than half a million refugees and five million internally displaced people in the country, involving displaced communities in the effort is crucial.
As of 09 of June, UNHCR had only received 33 per cent of the US$745 million required globally to adequately respond to and prevent the virus from spreading.
- See also: As COVID-19 and conflict surge, DR Congo displaced face deadly consequences of chronic underfunding
So far, over 300 tippy taps have been installed in the refugee settlements and 200 refugees have been trained on how to make them.
Juma and his wife made a tap and placed it in front of their door.
“The training I received was very practical, almost like a demonstration,” explains Juma, who lives in Bele. “I encourage others to make their own too as it is easy and there is no need to buy any tools.”
Source: https://human-wrongs-watch.net/2020/06/14/south-sudanese-refugees-make-tippy-taps-to-promote-hygiene-in-dr-of-congo-camps/