Best of our wild blogs: 13 Sep 09


News from the International Coastal Cleanup Singapore
α Φ Ω strikes again at Pasir Ris! and Pasir Ris Beach 6 – a hidden paradise! and 98 Warriors make a difference at Pandan Mangrove and Labrador Beach Cleanup by River Valley High students and Punggol Squeak ‘N Clean and Our journey to the mangrove coast at Lim Chu Kang and PU……It’s all about rubbish! and photo albums and more!

Is That A Duck? No...
from Life's Indulgences

Grey-headed Fish Eagle nesting
from Bird Ecology Study Group

High tide walk at Changi
from wild shores of singapore

Bear Exchange I: Sepilok to Lok Kawi Zoo
from Bornean Sun Bear Conservation


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Examining the No-Impact Life

Bryan Walsh, Yahoo News 13 Sep 09;

New York City–based writer Colin Beavan was casting around for a new book idea a few years ago - and fretting over the state of the planet - when he had an epiphany. He and his family - wife Michelle and baby daughter Isabella - would live for an entire year while making as little impact on the environment as possible.

That meant no motorized transportation, no elevators, no nonlocal food, no caffeine and (eventually) no electricity. TIME talked to Colin and Michelle about the new book and documentary on their green year, No Impact Man, and why pulling the plug on modern life was the best thing that ever happened to their family. (See photos of how our food is produced, from farm to fork.)

For your year of living with no impact on the environment, what was the hardest thing to give up?
Michelle: For me the hardest thing was giving up the caffeine. The brutal and ugly and murderous caffeine withdrawal - that was tough. And I wasn't able to see my family because they don't live locally, so it was great on day 366 to be able to get on a plane with my daughter Isabella and go see my parents.

Colin: I find it interesting that everyone asks that question. But the surprising thing to me is that instead of how hard it was to live environmentally, we discovered how joyful it was. We found that by creating space in our lives in terms of letting go of stuff, cutting out the TV screens, we had more time for relationships - more time to spend with each other and with friends. More time just reading books or going to the park and going swimming. We were eating better and getting more exercise. That's what really struck me.

And what did you do with all that time that was opened up by the project? Was it hard to figure out what to do once the noise of electronic culture and consumer culture ceased?
Michelle: There was this weird moment when my consumer self kind of died away, and it felt like there was an empty spot. If you've heard of the slow-food movement, this was like the slow-life movement. It changed my perspective of time.

Michelle, all through this year, you kept your job writing for BusinessWeek. How did you manage to keep up that fast-paced lifestyle, and shift back and forth?
Michelle: It was like two alternative realities that I would have on the same day. But they were really complementary.

How so?
Michelle: BusinessWeek was my fast life, where I got my weekly adrenaline rush, doing this work I really love and really believe in, which is a huge part of having a happy life. And then I would go home, where the screens were off and it was very quiet and it was just my family. I was living in the moment then.

Colin, you mentioned before that there were environmental groups that, when news of what you were doing first broke out, were worried. They thought people already associated environmentalism with giving things up, and they worried that message wouldn't work with people. Do they still feel that way?
Colin: For me, there are two models for change. One is a model that works through collective action and politics. And then there is the model that works through individual action and lifestyle change. People in the environmental movement have been working so hard for collective action that when No Impact Man first started to get attention, they became very concerned that people would only think they had to change their lifestyle and didn't have to worry about collective action. I think some people are very ambivalent about the possibility of political action, but are wiling to change their own lifestyle, and once they have skin in the game, so to speak, they will get into politics.

Are we ultimately going to have to redesign our lives, make do with less, if we want to combat climate change?
Colin: The simple answer is yes. Even the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report says that developed nations are going to have to change the way they live. But maybe there's a chance that we could actually gain something - a different kind of life that we might like more.

You talk a lot about how the year of no impact actually improved the quality of your family's life. How?
Michelle: Before the project started, I was really heavily into a diet of high-fructose corn syrup. My life was very much determined by having screens all around me, all the time. I was a major TIVO user, totally addicted to sugar and reality TV. I was just a high-consuming member of the high-consuming lifestyle. And I think that I was just asleep to the toll, in terms of my health, in terms of not being with my family, and to the literal cost in terms of debt. I also realized halfway through the project that it was a great joy to eat this way and live this way, and how much I'd been sacrificing without realizing it in my old life.

You started out this project in a state of despair over the fate of the planet and over your inability to do anything about it. After a year of no-impact living, how do you feel now?
Colin: You know, a couple of years ago, when the publicity over this first started, I tried to tread gently on this question, but the truth is that I believe we're in a gigantic crisis and it's a difficult one. I see a huge number of people trying to figure out the solution to the problem. I don't despair for the human race. I'm an optimist - I believe that people are good. I don't despair of our ability to affect change when we need change. But what is required is that we actually engage that ability. I believe we can solve the problem. We have to yet to find out, however, whether we have the collective will.


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Eco-city 'can be urban renewal model'

Lessons from Tianjin project can be applied to old cities across China, says SM Goh
Grace Ng, Straits Times 13 Sep 09;

In Dalian: Replicating lessons learnt from the Tianjin Eco-city in the renewal of old cities across China will be the goal of the joint project between Singapore and China, Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong said.

'The whole idea is it will be replicable...the model there can be used as a solution to China's urbanisation of other cities,' he said in an interview with Chinese state news agency Xinhua in the north-eastern city of Dalian last Thursday.

Launched two years ago, the eco-city project aims to transform a 30 sq km barren plot of land in the northern port city of Tianjin into an environmentally friendly community of 350,000 residents, and create up to 60,000 jobs over the next decade.

During his meeting with Mr Goh just before the interview, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said the project must succeed.

Mr Goh highlighted waste water management as an example of a lesson in the development of the eco-city and other Chinese cities, citing Singapore's experience in which 'every drop of water is collected, treated and recycled'.

'China will face a shortage of water. It can go into waste water management and then we can see how water can be managed and recycled for use in industries, and even human consumption,' he told Xinhua.

Mr Goh was in Dalian to attend a summit of international economic and political leaders organised by the World Economic Forum (WEF).

During the interview with Xinhua, held on the sidelines of the conference, he also spoke about the global economic recovery and China's role in it.

The world's governments, he said, face two potential problems as they struggle out of the crisis: inflation and the question of how to exit their massive stimulus packages without disrupting the recovery.

'If the stimulus package for each country is ended too early, then there is a real danger of the economy reverting back to what it was some months ago,' said Mr Goh, who also heads the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

However, 'if you do not exit from the stimulus package, the likely consequence would be inflation'.

For now, the world's leaders have agreed to continue with the stimulus and a policy of loose money, or much money available for loan at low interest rates, to encourage growth, amid some concerns that the global financial system has not yet digested all its banking and bad credit woes.

Even China, which enjoyed relatively fast growth of 7.1 per cent in the first half of the year, has been cautious about proclaiming a certain recovery, with Premier Wen pledging at the WEF summit to press on with Beijing's 4 trillion yuan (S$836 billion) stimulus.

But Mr Goh said China 'can do much more'. It can stimulate domestic demand to support its own growth, such as in the leisure sector and financial services.

Beijing's efforts in health-care reform, education and economic restructuring were a step in the right direction, he added.

During his three-day trip in Dalian that ended yesterday, Mr Goh also met the city's Communist Party secretary Xia Deren, during which they reaffirmed the 'two-way learning relationship' between China and Singapore.

Dalian, which has already sent about 1,000 officials to Singapore for training since 2007, plans to send another 1,000 officials, said Mr Xia.

graceng@sph.com.sg

Slow recovery after mighty fall

'The world economy is like a man who has fallen from a great height. Many bones have been broken and the body is bruised; but the person has survived...So the prospect for the world economy will be one of slow recovery.'

SM Goh


Leisure way to boost growth in China

'China should consider spending more on leisure activities. As people have more income, leisure becomes very important, because nobody wants to work 16 hours a day. So find ways to stimulate the leisure activity sector as a growth sector. For example, sports and tourism.'

SM Goh


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Carbon stocks in Indonesian forests, not yet settled

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 12 Sep 09;

The total amount of carbon emissions that could be stored in Indonesian forests is still "unsettled" given possible impacts of regional autonomy and severe threats of forest fires .

Senior ministerial advisor on partnerships at the forestry ministry, Wandojo Siswanto said forest fires would significantly reduce stocks of carbon emissions that could be traded on the international market once the Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) scheme was agreed.

"The creation of new regencies will also cause massive forest conversions that would accelerate the deforestation rate," he told reporters at a press conference Thursday.

"So, we must be careful with emissions data from the forests."

He said the total of carbon emissions in forest is "dynamic data".

He said that there were many predictions of carbon stocks in Indonesia's forests, including by the National Council on Climate Change (DNPI), Indonesia's focal point for climate change issues, established by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in 2008.

"But, emissions figure issued by the council are still in question both in local and international forums," said Wandojo.

"This is not the standpoint of the Indonesian government at the formal negotiation table."

A study by DNPI showed the country's greenhouse gas emissions were expected to jump to 3.6 gigatons by 2030, from 2.3 gigatons in 2005 of which more than 80 percent were from the forestry sector. It also predicted the emissions would increase by 2 percent annually.

DNPI secretary-general Agus Purnomo said the emissions data was only a projection for the country to work with to help cut emissions.

"We will revise it once the government issues its second national communication by the end of September," he told The Jakarta Post.

The national communication is an official document outlining the country's greenhouse gas emissions data to be submitted to the UN.

The Office of State Minister for the Environment said that it was facing difficulties to finish the emission document as some ministries had yet to submit reports on this.

A source said that the forestry ministry had yet to submit its emissions report as its contribution towards the national document.

Negotiators from 190 countries gather in Bangkok from Sept. 28 to Oct. 9 to discuss carbon emissions cuts, including REDD, ahead of the December Copenhagen meeting.

The Copenhagen meeting would decide whether or not the REDD scheme should be included in the new climate pact to replace the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

Once agreed, forest nations, including Indonesia, could raise billions of dollars by trading the carbon sinks in their forests to developed nations to help them meet emissions reduction targets.

Global annual revenue from REDD credits could reach US$5 to $20 billions, the UN says.

A climate expert from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) Daniel Murdiyarso predicted Indonesia could earn up to $15 billion of financial incentives by avoiding forest destruction under the REDD mechanism.

Debate still rages over whether an REDD scheme, once all the measuring, monitoring and verification systems have been agreed, should be funded entirely by the market, only by public funds, or a mixture of both.

Indonesia is the first country to issue a regulation on REDD, allowing indigenous peoples, local authorities, private organizations and businesspeople, both local and foreign, to run REDD projects.

Under the regulation, permits for REDD projects may only be granted to people or groups that have ownership certificates for the forests.

Several private firms have currently developed REDD pilot projects.


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Vietnam police say 849 endangered turtles rescued

AFP Google News 12 Sep 09;

HANOI — Vietnamese police have rescued 849 critically endangered hawksbill turtles, police and news reports said Saturday.

Officers discovered the turtles last Wednesday and set them free at the Nha Trang Sea Reserve, said a member of the environmental police in south-central Khanh Hoa province.

Investigations were continuing and nobody was arrested, said the officer who refused to be named and gave no further details.

The VietnamNet online news service said the turtles weighed between seven and eight kilograms (15 and 18 pounds) and had been bought by a local resident from fishermen.

It said the sea reserve was established in 2001 and turtles were now breeding there. The report did not say if the turtles were destined for the pot or export.

Hawksbills are listed as critically endangered on the Red List of the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

Endangered sea turtles rescued in central Vietnam
thanhniennews.com 11 Sep 09;

Police in the central province of Khanh Hoa have released 849 endangered sea turtles into the wild after confiscating them from a local man now under investigation.

The hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata), most of whom weighed between seven and eight kilometers each, had been bought since last October, Mac Tien Nang told the police.

Nang said he had never sold turtles.

Hawksbills are not allowed to be used for commercial purposes under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, to which Vietnam became a signatory in 1994.

Despite being categorized as “critically endangered” by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources, hawksbills did not receive proper protection in Khanh Hoa Province until local authorities cooperated wit some international organizations to found a marine reserve and applying conservation measures in 2001.

After almost 20 years of absence from Nha Trang Bay, the turtles have recently been seen laying eggs on the bay’s Hon Tre Island.

Source: Tuoi Tre


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Hippo kills poaching soldier in DR Congo park

Yahoo News 12 Sep 09;

KINSHASA (AFP) – A hippopotamus killed a member of Democratic Republic of Congo government forces at Virunga National Park while he was fishing illegally, a local environmental NGO said Saturday.

Bantu Lukamba of the IDPE non-governmental organisation told AFP that Private Sebagendi was killed Thursday when he was fishing along with five other people on Lake Edward in spite of a fishing ban.

"As he could not swim he was devoured by the hippo which had earlier overturned their boat," he said adding that the incident was the first of its kind in the park which covers an area of 790,000 hectares (1.95 million acres).

Usually, "they (the military) shoot at the animals," he said.

According to UNESCO the park which borders Uganda comprises an outstanding diversity of habitats, ranging from swamps and steppes to the snowfields of Rwenzori at an altitude of over 5,000 meters (16,400 feet), and from lava plains to savannahs on the slopes of volcanoes.

Mountain gorillas are found in the park, some 20,000 hippopotamuses live in the rivers and birds from Siberia spend the winter there, the United Nations cultural organisation said on its website.

IDPE said "at least 18 animals including seven elephants, four hippopotamuses and a lion were killed in the park between late August and early September".


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Oil threat to Australia wildlife

Phil Mercer, BBC News 12 Sep 09;

Environmentalists have warned that an oil slick caused by an accident on a rig in the Timor Sea is threatening wildlife in Australian waters.

Oil has been flowing from the West Atlas platform for three weeks.

Safety authorities have been using chemicals to try to break up the spill but warn it could be at least two more weeks before the leak is plugged.

Up to 400 barrels of oil per day have been pouring into the Timor Sea to Australia's north.

An emergency rig has arrived from Singapore to repair the damage and aircraft and boats have been dousing the slick with detergents.

Fragile environment

The Australian Maritime Safety Authority has said that this has helped to contain the spread of oil, the bulk of which remains around the drilling platform thanks, in part, to benign weather conditions.

Officials have stated that the slick is about 170km from the Australian coast.

Environmental groups believe the contamination poses a significant threat to wildlife and is heading towards land.

Piers Verstegen, from the Conservation Council of Western Australia, says the spill - off the north coast of the Kimberley region where whales congregate - is an ecological disaster.

"Humpback whales, an endangered species, go to that area and that region to calf and give birth and this oil spill is happening just off the Kimberley coast," Mr Verstegen said.

"The oil, as far as we are aware, is travelling towards the Kimberley coastline but it is definitely affecting areas that are used by these whales and dolphins."

Fishermen have reported seeing endangered flatback turtles covered in oil.

There have also been claims that fish and sea-snakes have been poisoned.

Conservationists believe that, in its rush to exploit abundant natural resources, Australia risks inflicting irreparable damage on its fragile environment.


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1.27 million displaced by China's Three Gorges Dam

Yahoo News 13 Sep 09;

BEIJING (AFP) – China has relocated 1.27 million people to make way for the controversial Three Gorges dam development, the world's largest hydroelectric project, state media reported.

The figure was the total number of relocations as of the end of June, a top dam construction official was quoted as saying by Xinhua news agency in a report issued late Saturday.

Chinese officials have previously said 1.4 million people were to be subject to forced relocation from areas now submerged or due to be submerged in central China.

It did not provide a timetable for the resettlement of the remaining residents.

Critics of the dam have long alleged massive corruption in the resettlement programme, while villagers forced from their homes have complained they were denied promised job retraining and resettlement funds.

State media said in 2007 that at least 37 million dollars had been embezzled from the programme in 2004 and 2005 alone.

A further four million people have been "encouraged" to move from the area by 2020, officials said in 2007, although the government has insisted those relocations were unrelated to the dam.

At 2,309 metres (7,575 feet) wide and 185 metres high, the Three Gorges Dam in Hubei province is the world's largest.

Already generating electricity, the dam is expected to begin approaching full capacity as early as this year.


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German ships successfully make "Arctic Passage"

Reuters 12 Sep 09;

LONDON (Reuters) - Two German cargo ships have successfully navigated across Russia's Arctic-facing northern shore from South Korea to Siberia without the help of icebreakers, the shipping company said.

The two merchant ships belonging to Beluga Shipping Gmbh were able to make the cost-saving voyage by the fabled Northeast Passage because of the reduction in the polar ice cap due to global warming, the company said.

"We are all very proud and delighted to be the first Western shipping company which has successfully transited the legendary Northeast Passage and delivered the sensitive cargo safely through this extraordinarily demanding sea area," Niels Stolberg, president and CEO of Beluga, said in a statement on the company's website.

The ships are carrying a cargo of "heavy plant modules," said the company statement, dated Sept 9.

The "Beluga Fraternity" and "Beluga Foresight" left the Russian port of Vladivostok with cargo picked up in July in South Korea, bound for Holland.

They dropped anchor at the Siberian port of Yamburg on Monday, Beluga said.

The Northern Sea Route trims 4,000 nautical miles off the usual 11,000-mile journey via the Suez Canal, which Beluga has said would yield substantial savings in fuel costs and reductions in CO2 emissions.

The company got Russian authorities' clearance to send the first non-Russian commercial vessels through the route in August.

"Russian submarines and icebreakers have used the Northern Route in the past but it wasn't open for regular commercial shipping before now because there are many areas with thick ice," Stolberg told Reuters in an email interview at that time.

"It was only last summer that satellite pictures revealed that the ice is melting and a small corridor opened which could enable commercial shipping through the Northeast Passage -- if all the circumstances were right and the requirements were met."

Stolberg said Beluga was eager to send ships through the northern route last summer during a six- to eight-week "window" in August and September when temperatures in the region rise to 20 degrees Celsius or more to open a corridor in the ice.

(Editing by Jerry Norton)

German ships blaze Arctic trail
BBC News 11 Sep 09;

Two German merchant ships are sailing from Asia to Europe via Russia's Arctic coast, having negotiated the once impassable North East Passage.

This route is usually frozen but rising temperatures in the region caused by global warming have melted much of the ice allowing large ships to go through.

The North East passage has tempted mariners for hundreds of years.

In 1553 the British voyager Sir Hugh Willoughby died attempting to find the route.

The German ships Beluga Fraternity and Beluga Foresight arrived in the Siberian port of Yamburg, in the Ob river delta, on Monday, owner Beluga Shipping GmbH said on its website.

Both ships left South Korea in late July, negotiating the passage off north-eastern Siberia behind two Russian icebreakers.

"We are all very proud and delighted to be the first Western shipping company which has successfully transited the legendary North East Passage and delivered the sensitive cargo safely through this extraordinarily demanding sea area", said Beluga CEO Niels Stolberg.

Retreating ice

The ships have been offloading some of their cargo. Beluga spokeswoman Verena Beckhusen told AP that the Beluga Fraternity had already left to continue its journey via Murmansk to the Dutch port of Rotterdam.

The Foresight's departure has been postponed until Saturday because of bad weather, she added.

But the once impenetrable ice that prevented ships travelling along the northern Russian coast has been retreating rapidly because of global warming in recent decades.

The passage became passable without ice breakers in 2005.

By avoiding the Suez canal, the trip from Asia to Europe is shortened by almost 5,000km (3,100 miles).

The company behind the enterprise says it is saving about $300,000 per vessel by using the northern route.

Both the Russian authorities and the German shippers are keen to prove the safety and efficiency of the passage, believing it could be a valuable commercial alternative to the Suez canal in summer.

Despite the rise in temperatures the route is still dangerous, with icebergs moving more freely in the warmer waters.

Scientists estimate that the last time that the North East Passage was as ice free as it is now was between 5,000 and 7,000 years ago.


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Thousands alter their lives in flooded West Africa

Rukmini Callimachi, Associated Press Yahoo News 12 Sep 09;

FASS MBAO, Senegal – The only piece of furniture that survived the most recent flood in Fatou Dione's house is her bed. It's propped up on cinderblocks and hovers just above the water lapping at the walls of her bedroom.

The water stands a foot (more than 30 centimeters) deep throughout her house. She shakes off her wet feet each time she climbs into her bed. To keep it dry, she tries to place her feet on the same spot so that only one corner of her mattress becomes moist.

Torrential rains have lashed Africa's western coast for the past three months, killing 159 people and flooding the homes and businesses of over 600,000 others, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Human Affairs.

They include the patients of one of Burkina Faso's largest hospitals who had to be carried out on gurneys after water invaded the wards. They include those living on the banks of a river in northern Niger, whose homes were swept away when a dike burst under the weight of the rain. And they also include tens of thousands of people like Dione whose homes took on a foot or less of water and whose ordeals are not a priority for the country's overwhelmed emergency response teams.

While the rains have been extreme, people are also to blame, said Col. Singhane Diagne, spokesman for the country's firefighters. The home where Dione lives should never have been built, he said. During the droughts of the 1970s, people began illegally building houses in the low-lying marshes that surround Dakar, the Senegalese capital. When the drought ended and the rains returned, these bowl-shaped neighborhoods began to flood.

"Every year we pump the same houses. Not just once. Over and over. You pump the water out — and it comes right back. Like a boomerang," says Diagne. "These people need to leave."

Among the six countries where the flooding has been most severe — Senegal, Sierra Leone, Mauritania, Burkina Faso, Niger, and Ghana — the neighborhoods most affected are the poor ones. Typically these communities are the result of urban sprawl, built without municipal approval, using unsafe materials. In Ouagadougou, the hard-hit capital of Burkina Faso, many of the flooded homes were made of nothing more than clay.

In Senegal, the government has built a satellite community of around 150 homes outside the flood plain, but the homes are already nearly full. The U.N. estimates that just in Senegal, 264,000 people have been affected by flooding. And although many families say their homes flood every year, they say that they do not have the money to move.

As the rain continues to come down, families are waging individual battles with water. About 20 miles (32 kilometers) away from Fass Mbao, in the flooded suburb of Tivaouane, 37-year-old Mansour Ndiaye tries to scoop water into a bucket using a large sponge. The courtyard to his family's home is a pool. He had managed to dry out the hallway of his family's home by the time the afternoon rain started. "I'm doing the best I can," he said.

His elderly neighbor, Assane Sock, had spent the day before carrying buckets out of his house. The water seeped back in overnight. He spends the afternoon looking for pieces of wood and stones to try to elevate his furniture and his Singer sewing machine. He's a tailor, he explained. And he can't sew if his clients' clothes are trailing in the water.

"I live like a fish," he said. "I eat in the water. I sleep in the water. And now I work in the water."

Limited aid is being distributed to the most affected regions. The World Food Program hopes to give out food rations to 125,000 people, including in Rosso, the small community on the banks of the Senegal River in southern Mauritania.

The water was so deep in some neighborhoods that people were forced to swim out.

"I lost my entire house. All of my furniture. All of my things. We swam for 45 minutes to get out of the flooded area," said 54-year-old Marieme Fall in Rosso.

Even as the aid begins to arrive, the rain continues to fall. On a recent evening in Fass Mbao, 40-year-old Saliba Ndiaye was hurrying to get home. The dun-colored water on the main road came up to her hips. As she pushed her way through, it started to pour again. She was soaked by the time she pushed open the door to her house, where her six young children were waiting. Unlike her neighbors, her floors are dry, even though rain sprays in through a hole in the roof.

She grabbed her baby and pulled him close, his dry body smack against her soaked, brown shirt. He nursed, oblivious to his wet mother. "We've learned to live with the water," she said.

___

Associated Press Writers Ahmed Mohamed in Nouakchott, Mauritania, Brahima Ouedraogo in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, Jonathan Paye-Layleh in Monrovia, Liberia, and Dalatou Mamane in Niamey, Niger, also contributed to this report.


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