For years, Abyei, a disputed area between Sudan and South Sudan, has been affected by severe flooding, especially during the rainy season.
Poor living conditions with almost no toilet facilities are also a factor for widespread diseases in the local community.
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A new road in Abyei, which was recently reconstructed with the help of the Vietnamese Engineering Company Rotation 1. |
Abyei’s mayor has called upon the United Nations Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA) to ask for support in developing the water drainage system to relieve the situation.
On July 13, Vietnam’s Engineering Company Rotation 1 set out to study the local terrain under the task assigned by the UNISFA.
The field trip revealed one of the most difficult issues in the area that contribute to insufficient drainage system: no slopes, and minor differences in the levels of residential areas and the river water.
The Vietnamese unit proposed to direct drainage flow to two locations: the UNISFA water reservoir and the swamp at the far end of the town.
While the engineering unit had been ready to get to work and prepared three excavators and various dumping trucks for the mission, the challenge remained in the acceptance of the local people.
Aware of the situation, the Vietnamese unit set out to talk to the village elders and went knocking door to door to communicate the message of their mission.
Reducing the distance between the peacekeepers and the local people, and receiving the latter’s approval, construction for the drainage system was allowed to begin.
Within two days after the water flows were redirected and improved, the town’s flooding issues were significantly mitigated.
Taking a holistic approach, the Vietnamese engineering unit continued working to improve the area’s entire drainage system, connecting the main and auxiliary flows in the hope to prevent flood risks in the future.
However, expanding the system means they must restructure the roads in town.
The unit assigned Civilian-Military Coordination (CIMIC) officers to work with the UNISFA and obtained old, discarded sewer pipes.
These pipes were then repaired and used to install 138 meters of circular sewers, and 36 culverts.
To make up for the lack of building materials, the unit improvised by using wooden planks and sandbags to finish the road construction.
In addition, the Vietnamese unit also worked on a 200-meter-long road to help children go to school easier.
In the past, the road leading to the local school was flooded and covered in mud.
While the team actively worked with local authorities to alleviate the problems, their work encountered multiple challenges due to the high costs of murram - a type of red soil used for road surfaces in Africa, and difficulties in moving soil from place to place in the area.
The solution then was to use old cement from the U.N. mission to reconstruct the road.
Nearly 100 cubic meters of soil was used to raise the school’s foundation to prevent flooding on a total area of 400 square meters - which was also made into a sports field for the children.
Apart from the new road, Vietnam’s Engineering Unit Rotation 1 also presented the school with two new garbage incinerators, and three waste containers, alongside one set of pillars, a net and five volleyballs.
During the month of deploying the mission, the unit had spent a total of 700 hundred working days of the entire personnel and 500 hours working with the machinery, moving over 3,000 cubic meters of soil, and dredging more than 20 kilometers of the drainage canals.
Their work has also left a lasting positive impression on the local people.
Abyei’s mayor Aach Deng Biong personally gifted the Vietnamese unit with four goats – a substantial asset to African people.
Expressing his gratitude, the mayor said that he wished the unit would stay in the area for an extended period of time and provide further support to local people.
Aach Deng Biong also penned a letter to the UNISFA head of mission to commend the support and contributions of the Vietnamese troops.
For the Vietnamese engineering unit, their humanitarian work represents the qualities and traditions of Vietnam’s army, garnering trust from local people, the U.N. peacekeeping forces, and the UNISFA.
Their achievements translate into Vietnam’s responsibility and credibility to the international community and reaffirm the capacity of the Vietnamese engineering units in U.N. peacekeeping missions.
Source: VNA