Chapel Hill project trying to bring safe water to Cambodia
By Prashant Nair, Special to The Chapel Hill News
Editor's note: This is the first of two articles on the Carolina Global Water Partnership.
By Prashant Nair, Special to The Chapel Hill News
Editor's note: This is the first of two articles on the Carolina Global Water Partnership.
Ka Har, a mushroom grower from the Angkor Ban village in Cambodia, lives on the banks of one of the world's longest rivers, the Mekong river of Southeast Asia.
One of Har's biggest concerns was getting safe drinking water for his family. Harvesting rainwater and boiling water from the river kept Har and his family disease-free.
That was until June 2006, when Har, 55, heard a radio ad for a newly developed water filter and saw a demonstration in his village. Ever since he bought one for his home, he has stopped worrying.
Har is one of 11 million rural Cambodians whose lives may be changed by an initiative conceived several thousand miles away in Chapel Hill.
The Carolina Global Water Partnership is a collaborative project to prevent children in Southeast Asia from dying of water-borne diseases by bringing safe water to their homes. Diarrhea accounts for more than 80 percent of the deaths among Cambodian children under 5 years of age.
Mark Sobsey, an environmental scientist at the UNC School of Public Health, heads the project, which is trying to bring inexpensive, household water purifiers to rural Cambodia.
One of Har's biggest concerns was getting safe drinking water for his family. Harvesting rainwater and boiling water from the river kept Har and his family disease-free.
That was until June 2006, when Har, 55, heard a radio ad for a newly developed water filter and saw a demonstration in his village. Ever since he bought one for his home, he has stopped worrying.
Har is one of 11 million rural Cambodians whose lives may be changed by an initiative conceived several thousand miles away in Chapel Hill.
The Carolina Global Water Partnership is a collaborative project to prevent children in Southeast Asia from dying of water-borne diseases by bringing safe water to their homes. Diarrhea accounts for more than 80 percent of the deaths among Cambodian children under 5 years of age.
Mark Sobsey, an environmental scientist at the UNC School of Public Health, heads the project, which is trying to bring inexpensive, household water purifiers to rural Cambodia.
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The Residence with Widely Garden
This is a single-storey residence that is surrounded by the wide and clean environment, leading to furniture shop in
construction materials materials said.
One more thing this residence stretches across the width of it to accommodate a large open-plan living room and there are four bedrooms, a guest suite and a gym within its walls.
In addition the living room and dining room is located at the center of the plan, where it can be opened out to the garden on both sides by using a series of sliding panels.
Indeed this garden allows cross ventilation and also connects the room with a decked terrace and swimming pool that running along in front.
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