Skip to main content
Skip to sub-navigation
About USAID Our Work Locations Policy Press Business Careers Stripes Graphic USAID Home
USAID: From The American People Telling our Story Spring water is distributed through a new pipe system - Click to read this story
Telling Our Story
Home »
Submit a story »
Calendars »
FAQs »
About »
Stories by Region
Asia »
Europe & and Eurasia »
Latin America & the Carribean »
Middle East »
Sub-Saharan Africa »

 

Iraq Updates

Get Acrobat Reader...

How Can I Help?

Search
Search by topic or keyword
Advanced Search

 

New Water Plant Improves Health in Iraq

Photo: Kareem Noori, head of the Water Department for the Southeastern Iraqi city of Al-Amarah. “We never had water – for 15 years people came here to use the dirty river water, hauling it away in buckets. We hooked up some of the old pipes and it takes a few minutes to rinse out the sand and debris”
- Kareem Noori, head of the Water Department for the Southeastern Iraqi city of Al-Amarah.
Photo: USAID/Ben Barber

Kareem Noor leans over a tap to check the water flowing from the new water treatment plant built with U.S. aid that provides 40,000 people in Al-Amarah, Iraq with clean drinking water. The $18,000 spent on the project by USAID, in cooperation with the Coalition Provisional Authority, purifies murky and contaminated water from a branch of the Tigris River that has been the only source of drinking water.

The new water plant was designed by the American Refugee Committee using USAID funds and working in cooperation with the Coalition Provisional Authority to hire Iraqi contractors and workers.

Print-friendly version of this page (244kb - PDF)

Back to Top ^

Fri, 31 Mar 2006 16:59:23 -0500
Star