Moukele Community Development Committee recieving their approved Funding Deed from AusAID Acting First Serectary Belinda Bayak Bush and SPSN Program Director Jeremy Syme(in red). |
MOUKELE
villagers from Fishermen Island, 15 kilometres off the coast of the Moresby
South electorate, are the city’s leading suppliers of fresh fish. These
hardy fishermen and women have the doubly gruelling task of catching fish by
night and making daily boat rides to the city at break of dawn, to sell their
catch at Koki market.
It’s a tough
life, with many dangers, made even tougher by the absence of any health care
facility on the island. Currently, residents
have to seek health services on the mainland and many seriously ill patients, and
women in labour, have died on the long journey.
Their prayers for a health care facility have been
answered; the Australian Government has approved K64,351 for the
Moukele Community Development Committee to construct
an aid post on Fisherman Island in November 2012. The funding is made available through the
Strongim Pipol Strongim Nesen Program small grants scheme.
The committee’s chairman Keimelo Gimapau thanked
AusAID and the people of Australia for the gift describing it as “a blessing
indeed”.
He said “An aid post on the Island will make our
lives a lot better, there are some non-government organisations and self-help
groups already in our communities but usually they lack money and resources.
The help of a powerful donor like AusAID will make all the difference,
particularly for the very young, old, disabled and sick”.
The Moukele
Community Development Committee were amongst five communities
in the National Capital District to benefit from a total AusAID gift of K363,739
for community development projects.
Other recipients were:
·
The
Young Women’s Christian Association( YWCA) will
receive K76,376 to bring 20
female and 7 male adult literacy trainers from around the country to review the
literacy skills training manual, which will be used to teach more than
3,000 people.
·
The
Cheshire Disability Services of Papua New Guinea will receive
K72,618 to train 120 community-based rehabilitation volunteers, community
leaders and partners, to advocate for the rights of people living with disabilities in
Port Moresby and neighbouring villages.
·
University
of Papua New Guinea will receive K70,393 to allow art students studying
at the university, to share their education by teaching 10 youths from the
Morata Settlement and 30 secondary school students, to use basic
drama, photography, poetry, music and dance to reach out to
other young people in schools and settlements.
This peer-group mentoring will raise awareness of issues which affect
young people, such as safe sex and gender equality.
·
The
Meduna Koita Community in the Moresby South Electorate will
receive K80,000 for a water supply project that will make life much easier for
the community’s 171 residents who will no longer have to cart water from the
nearest source, five kilometres uphill at Mahuru village.
SPSN Program Director Jeremy Syme said: “AusAID
through the SPSN Program is committed to improving lives for communities across
Papua New Guinea, but communities must be equally determined to ensure that the
projects are delivering. These gifts are from the people of Australia to the people of Papua New
Guinea and are gifts that come with expectations. Expectations that you will
spend the money wisely, appropriately and most importantly for the purpose you
have requested. It’s also vital that it
benefits as many people as proposed and that you find ways to sustain it and
let it grow.”
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