What Irrigation PS Kimotho Understands About Water That Africa Often Ignores
Africa has spent decades talking about water as though it were merely a technical problem waiting for engineers to solve. Governments announce dams. Development partners finance pipelines. Reports celebrate millions of litres supplied to communities. Maps are drawn. Reservoirs are commissioned. Targets are set. Yet somehow, despite all this activity, millions of Africans still wake up every morning uncertain about something as basic as water. That contradiction should trouble us more than it currently does. Because the deeper crisis facing Africa has never simply been about water scarcity alone. In many places, the real crisis has been the failure to understand what water actually means in the lives of ordinary people. Water is not just infrastructure. It is not merely a pipeline buried beneath the ground or a storage facility standing quietly outside a town. Water shapes dignity. It shapes health. It shapes education. It shapes productivity. It shapes whether a child arrives at s...