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Chechnya: Second water station handed over
19 Jan 2007 07:42:00 GMT
Michał Przedlacki / Łukasz Chojecki
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.

Second water purification station, K2, with production capacity of 8 thousand tons of water a month, was handed over to Grozwodokanal - the local institution responsible for the state of water piping in Grozny. The ceremony took part on 28th December, thus the realization of water production and distribution project was entirely overtaken by local society. The project is being led since the year 2000. Every day, five water filters produce 700 tons of potable water, which is then distributed among schools, kindergartens, hospitals, heath centres and temporary accommodation centres for the displaced people who return to Grozny. The same day, the sanitation project led by PHO, was handed over to local Zhilkomtrans. The project, within which 100 cubic meters of garbage and waste is being removed daily, covered hospitals, schools and kindergartens.

The ceremony took place in the premises of Grozwodokanal in the presence of journalists and representatives of UNICEF, the donor of the program. Then, the participants of the ceremony visited the K2 station, where a press conference recapitulating the activities of Polish Humanitarian Organisation in Chechnya took place. During the conference the issues of overtaking the water-sanitation programs and their further realization by Grozwodokanal and Zhilkomtrans were brought up. Among the guests were representatives of the Refugee Committee, Sanitary and Anti-Epidemic Station and the authorities of Grozny.

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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A rescue team patrols in a rubber boat to search for residents trapped in a flooded residential area in Jakarta February 4, 2007. Floods in the Indonesian capital have killed at least 20 people and made nearly 200,000 people homeless, with the deluge of muddy brown water up to 4 metres (13 feet) deep in some areas of Jakarta, officials said on Sunday.