Friday 13 November 2009

Water for All


A new offering on water from the Democracy Center's Blog. Keep posted for more on water as the 10th aniversary of the Cochabamba Water War draws near.

Cochabamba's Poorest Neighborhoods
Take on the Challenge of Water

Dear Readers:

Today we bring you a special edition of the Blog from Bolivia which took a good deal of work by a team of people to produce -- an important new video about how the people of Cochabamba's poorest neighborhoods have taken on the challenge of getting water.

A decade ago the streets of Cochabamba were made known worldwide when the people of this city came out by the thousands to take back their public water system from Bechtel in the now-famous Cochabamba Water Revolt.

As the ten year anniversary of the Water Revolt approaches, we are going back to it, to dig deeper, and especially to look at a basic question – What difference did it make? We have already written a good deal about that, including
this chapter from our recent book Dignity and Defiance and this briefing paper published last year. These writings have not been varnished versions of that history. They have included accounts of the ongoing problems with Cochabamba's state-run water company along with the stories of the heroism and courage involved in taking it back a decade ago.

With this Blog we want to focus on a very specific piece of the post Water Revolt story, one of the lesser known: How the neighborhoods of Cochabamba’s impoverished south side have taken into their own hands the challenge of getting water.

Because of it's length, 15 minutes, we have broken the video into two parts. Here are the links on YouTube:

Part One
Part Two

The production of the video and the accompanying article below was a collective effort of the Democracy team but in particular Elizabeth Cooper, a student at Mt. Holyoke College in Massachusetts who joined us for part of her summer to work on the project, along with Democracy Center stalwarts Leny Olivera and Aldo Orellana. I think you will see that they have offered up something truly worth watching and reading.

Jim Shultz
The Democracy Center

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