Anabar Nosirova, who works in the kitchen at the Beshkent School. Everyday she gathers 80-100 liters of water from a nearby aryk, which she filters the water through cheese cloth and then lets them sit overnight so the dust settles to the bottom. The next morning she boils the water before making tea for the students. The locals are hoping and planning for infrastructure project to bring clean water to their homes, schools and medical facilities. In villages across Kyrgyzstan (Central Asia) antiquated water delivery systems and infrastructure is the cause of health issues such as outbreaks of


Anabar Nosirova, who works in the kitchen at the Beshkent School. Everyday she gathers 80-100 liters of water from a nearby aryk, which she filters the water through cheese cloth and then lets them sit overnight so the dust settles to the bottom. The next morning she boils the water before making tea for the students. The locals are hoping and planning for infrastructure project to bring clean water to their homes, schools and medical facilities. In villages across Kyrgyzstan (Central Asia) antiquated water delivery systems and infrastructure is the cause of health issues such as outbreaks of hepatitis and gastrointestinal disease, especially among children.


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Photo credit: © SOPA Images / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
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Keywords: anabar, aryk, beshkent, borne, clean, diseases, environmental, health, issues, kitchen, kyrgystan, lyaily, nosirova, safety, school, social, village, water