ABOUT THIS BLOG

The Daily Nightly began on May 31, 2005. As Brian wrote in his first post it aims to provide a narrative of the broadcast day and a window into the editorial process at NBC Nightly News. Brian weighs in every weekday and NBC News correspondents and producers post regularly.

Brian Williams became the seventh anchor and managing editor in the history of NBC Nightly News on December 2, 2004. Read his full biography.



Eco-Jargon

Posted: Wednesday, September 26, 2007 7:21 AM by Sam Singal
Filed Under: ,

By Martin Fletcher, NBC News correspondent

You hear a lot these days about sustainable resources, forest degradation, sensitive ecosystems and water-borne disease. So much that it all begins to fade into incomprehensible eco-jargon. A bit like the war of the Bosnian-Herzogovians against the Serbo-Croats, which one writer described as a war of the unspellables against the unpronounceables. It all seems a long way away. What’s it got to do with me?

But up close and personal, it’s different. In a clinic near the Masai Mara in Kenya, the smallest unit of the Kenyan health system, my NBC News team and I crammed into the tiny room of surgical officer Richard Lemiso, and watched as a stream of worried mothers entered carrying their sick babies. Most had walked miles to visit this last beacon of hope, the man in the white coat.

Fever, diaorreah, stomach cramps, vomiting, sweating. The tiny faces either serene in sleep, or contorted in pain. The mood – resigned. The cause was almost always the same – dirty water. The diagnosis – typhoid, dysentery, dehydration, all potential killers.

This is the process, put very simply: trees have been cut for firewood, or died from disease, or been broken by large animals like elephants near the water springs. This allows other animals and cattle to approach and their feces and germs to enter the water source. That changes the balance between water for animals and water for people, dirtying the water available for villagers.

In other words, forest degradation harms the sensitive ecosystem, which reduces sustainable resources and leads to water-borne disease.

And so twelve-year-old Patrick sits in front of Nursing Officer Richard Lemiso and hears the verdict – typhoid. Again. He’s suffered from one water-borne disease or another every year of his life. His father James says it wasn’t always like this. Once his Masai village drank water from the same spring and nobody fell sick.

 “So what’s changed?” I asked.

“Too many people today, too many animals, the water gets dirty.” he answered. Population growth, increased herd sizes, and all competing for declining amounts of water, because more is used for agriculture, which is expanding.

NBC News/ Jeff Riggins 
Masai warrior pictured shortly after Masai baby naming ceremony.

It’s hard to imagine that of Africa’s 800 million people, almost one in three, 250 million, have no access to clean water. Not even a tap. And no Perrier for the Masai, or even San Pelegrino. Even in the capital Nairobi, people fall sick from the water.

And as for the hospitals, take care. On one day we spent in the capital, the national newspaper carried a story headed: “Skeleton found in Hospital Tank.” In Nandi South District, the paper reported, hospital patients and staff had been drinking from a water tank with a decomposing body inside it. Patients found human hair in their cups. They all gathered to watch as the skeleton was pulled out.

Our report for NBC will focus on a new Dutch invention, Lifestraw, which is a cigar-like filter you put into any dirty water and suck. The water passes through a series of filters and comes out clean into the mouth, say the manufacturers.

NBC News/ Martin Fletcher 
Masai herder boys drink with LifeStraw.

If it works, it could be revolutionary. It costs less than $3.75, although a newer model may reach $5. People with no access to tap water and who routinely live on water they find on the land, such as cattle herders like the Masai boys near the Masai Mara, could now take along their portable water cleansers.

The trouble is, drinking clean water is only part of the solution to water-borne disease. Rural people have to be taught to wash their hands before they eat. That helps. But if the water they wash with is dirty, tit doesn’t do much good. And if the dirty water spills and mixes with a mud floor, and children lie or play in it, it doesn’t matter how much water they drink through a Lifestraw, they still face the risk of water-borne diseases.

NBC News/ Jeff Riggins 
African Sunset - Acacia tree surrounded by wildebeest on Masai Mara.

Frankly, it’s heart-breaking to measure the difference between the lives of children in Europe and America and those in areas without clean water, especially in Africa.

And I’ll be a lot more sympathetic to eco-jargon.

To contribute to the distribution of LifeStraws
More information on LifeStraws and to purchase them

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

Thank you, Mr. Fletcher for this report.  You have written in such a descriptive way that I can see the faces of the mothers as they worry about their children. As a mother my heart aches for them.  They want what mothers around the world want; good health and a better life for their children.  Such strong people faced with such difficult life circumstances.  

I hope the Lifestraw helps ease some of the problems with diseases that challenge them.  Will the people be able to afford to buy them for themselves and their children?

Again, thank you for this report.  The faces of those mothers will now cause me pay more attention to ecological concerns too.
Stay safe.
Poor Africa. They've been helped to death by Communist, Socialist, and anti human eco loons.
For Brian,  I have been impressed with your skills for many years now, not only on MSNBC, but since attending many years ago a function on Nantucket at which you had me in hysterics (not an easy thing to do to a screenwriter/director), but, if you will allow me, I have a comment to make about the evening news (yours and others).  I wonder if any of you has seen TV5Monde, the French news broadcast, here in NYC on channel 25 at 7pm.  It seems to have more depth, more significance, wider world coverage, and is significantly lacking a certain "lowest common denominator" I feel permeates the US evening news.  The other night they spent an extended time with Sarkosy, two commentators peppering him with very tough questions and not letting him off the hook (yes, I know we have Face The Nation and Meet The Press, but the audience is vastly different than what evening news gets); similarly last night there was an extended interview with a woman who was a close friend of Aung San Suu Kyi and pleaded for other nations to come to the aide of her and her country; and so on.  Your NBC news is very good; and you are extremely adept at it (although I'd love to see some more of your humor come through -- I don't think it'll detract from the significance of what you have to say).  In any event, maybe you might want to, if you haven't already, tune in to TV5Monde once or twice and watch what they do.  Perhaps, it won't work for our audience, but then again....  
Speaking of Communist/Socialist. Check out how you in the media have been had by a bought and paid for liar.

http://ibdeditorial.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=275526219598836
I am very sympathetic with the people of Africa in Martin Fletcher's article.  I see the same thing happening in U.S. soon.  We must start preparing now for this eventuality.  Pipelines need to be constructed nationwide to supply needy locations from water affluent areas.  De-salinization plants should be constructed in many oceanside areas with pipelines transporting water to needy locations.  Nuclear fuel must be used for the de-salinization plants.  This same process could be put in place in other areas of the world.
I remember once living in a small northern Kenyan town called Mandera. Ended up drinking what seemed to be clean water and I was hit with a severe case of diarrhoea, I almost died until I left for Nairobi the capital city and sought a better medical attention. But I heard that the situation has greatly improved and now there is plenty of clean water
Martin--Thank you for introducing us to Life Straw. It offers hope to what so often seems a completely hopeless situation.
thanks for good article. having lived and drank unclean water almost all my life until i moved to the city i know what this means. the problem with my country is the leaders that we have. We have EXTREMLY CORRUPT politians who only care about their own fat bellies. they dont care at all about the poor people that elect them to represent and help them. clean water should be available to all not just in the capital city
thanks for good article. having lived and drank unclean water almost all my life until i moved to the city i know what this means. the problem with my country is the leaders that we have. We have EXTREMLY CORRUPT politians who only care about their own fat bellies. they dont care at all about the poor people that elect them to represent and help them. clean water should be available to all not just in the capital city
Dear Mr.Fletcher, This Life Straw invention to filter the water in order that the people can drink clean water is really amazing. Although there is the problem of washing the hands in the dirty water at least it it a start. This small beginning can help in future generations being able to survive in better conditions. I hope there is more positive progress for these people. Thank you for this posting Mr.Fletcher.  
Martin, I met you at Giraffe maonor recently. You and your cameraman were very persuasive on this subject. I have contacted the L/S folks and am working on a plan to develope grassroots effort to get these into the hands of the people who need them.
I would appreciate any suggestions you may have to expedite the process. I don't care  if this appears in the thread I'm trying to just reach Martin.
I was interested in the information about the lifestraws being used in some countries.  I was surprised to see that no where in the NBC series or in the Newsweek article is Water Advocates mentioned.  This is a group of organizations who are working to dig wells and provide clean water for people all over the world.  They have talked to the UN and to our government officials in order to get funds and to raise the awareness of the water crisis world-wide. Living Water here in the Houston area is one of the largest organizations working for clean water.
Your segment was thought provoking but inaccurate. The Lifestraw is not a "Dutch invention" but rather a Danish one. Mikkel Vestergaard Frandsen is CEO.
I am a teenager who watches the Evening News on NBC each night because I truely enjoy it, I am also part of Save Darfur! I was astonished when I heard there was such an amazing envention that is now avalible to our brothers and sisters in Africa! I am going to present this to my school officials and I hope we can help make the illnesses of today a thing of the past! And thank you for sheading light on this subject!

                                  LUV YA<3
                                        Kendall
While Africa is a sad state of affairs, it is not the only place in the world where there is a lack of clean water.    Water-born illness is the number one cause of death worldwide and its affects extend well beyond the African continent.  While Life Straws are a temporary way to fight the problem, it will take sustainable change. The Blue Planet Foundation is a non-profit committed to helping 200 million people get clean water over the next twenty years.  This summer twenty runners literally ran around the world to raise money and awareness.  Blue Planet sponsors rural water projects around the world that provide lasting relief. And just for the record - I am not associated with Blue Planet in any way.  But I would like to see them get some air time, too.
When you receive our emails to you, do you also see the information about their websites if they have one?  I have a ".com" that promotes technologies for the handicapped.  It is WrightImages.  As it is often VERRY difficult for much of the handicap community to find information (when needed) I have been putting a huge Information Clearinghouse, very well organized.  

GOAL: To bring technologies closer to those that can use them; to those that the technology could really make a difference to their life.  (206) 353-0629.
Having spent most of the last year in Kenya, working with Maasai (nearer Nairobi) I relate to what you're experiencing.  A few comments on the last few blogs: An investigation into how many Parliament members own air transport services to Maasai Mara might suggest why the roads don't get improved. Water/sanitation is the single most urgent issue throughout the developing world.  Not only do the Maasai have unclean drinking water, sanitation is virtually non-existent -- they practice open defecation and cross-contamination of available "clean" water negates most efforts to provide safe drinking water. Digging latrines needs to come before digging wells or treating water. Solutions usually present monumental obstacles, for instance, the clean water drinking straw, while an amazing idea and product, presents logistical issues.  The average Maasai can't/won't spend the money on it; do filters need to be replaced?  If they could afford them, where will they find the replacements?  At their neighborhood drug store? The reality of it is is that the straws most likely will end up added to the piles of plastic trash already threatening to overtake towns throughout Maasai land and Africa. It would take a full time ministry/NGO to administer such a program. As far as clean water in the capital city -- more than a million people live in slums in Nairobi with extremely limited clean water and sanitation, and, water service to the rest of the city dwellers is often unreliable.  While US government and charitable aid continues to flow into Kenya and other countries in Africa, a large percentage of those dollars end up in the pockets of politicians, bureaucrats and diplomats, never accomplishing the great projects we come up with and fund as possible solutions.  Barak Obama visited Kenya while I was there and his speech about corruption and tribalism was the first real hope I witnessed as far as telling Kenya "how it is" and what has to change. In the meantime, projects like the clean water straw need to be personally administered -- keep the money from touching any hands but the hands that actually deliver the service. Thank you for this forum to comment on your work over there -- you are doing a great service to get these issues publicized. And, aren't the Maasai people just wonderful?  Those smiles, those eyes....
 
Vestergaard-Frandsen,the developer of the LifeStraw is a Danish company, not Dutch.It might have been appropriate to say that each straw lasts a year or 185 gallons of water and will be exchanged for a new one at the school or clinic.
  I see this product as a life saving measure especially for children. Along with the distribution of the straw is a curriculum of clean water education. Start with the children to initiate change.
Being a real skeptic about just contributing money to projects with the feeling that it goes into corrupt pockets, I went to Kenya, for myself, this past July to distribute the Life Straws to schools in the Samburu region and in the Masaai Mara.The money to buy over 1,300 straws, that we distributed, was raised by three women in Chicago. One of those women,Ginny Newman, found an article on the Lifestraw and decided to make it a project.She worked with Custom Safaris to make the distribution possible. Grass roots people like Ms Newman and Linda Friedman will make a difference in Africa because they can go around the beauracracy,ineptitude and corruption found in every government. In the midwest, we say "If you want it done right, do it yourself."
Dear Mr. Fletcher:
Thank you for this report.  While it is not "new" news, it is a story that needs publicity.  Kenya along with most Sub-Sahara countries suffer from inadequate or contaminated water supplies.  I hope this is a "new" version of the purifying straw, as the ones I have used in the past are not fool proof.

I too have traveled extensively in Africa.  And while I fell in love with the countries and people, their dire conditions were hard to live with while I stayed in the comfort of the Masai Mara.  I made it a point to travel "off the beaten track" and also became deathly ill from water I was told was bottled, but wasn't.  There is a neat trick the waiters use - put their hands over the top of the bottle and pretend to cut the seal with a knife.  In fact, there was no seal to cut, and the bottle had been refilled with regular water.  Why? I had asked for bottled water, they had none as shipments are only flown in once a week.  I have learned to break the seal myself, or drink soda I could open with a can opener or drink the beer.  Try brushing your teeth in Pepsi - always looked at as an adventure, not a comparison to the U.S.

Unfortunately I think the worldwide statistic of people in need of pure drinking water is in the 65% range - horrifying.  Bolivia, India, China - this is endemic all over the world.
What a timely series! My husband and I just returned from a 5 week Africa trip where we were appalled by what people were drinking. People in the states put cleaner water on our crops than Africans put in their bodies. We were introduced to a Priest in Uganda who works with a group from Duke University to collect money to drill bore holes for villages. This is an option that is longer lasting and will aid more people in the long run. Why not run an addendum to this series about this option? Thank you for this series! God bless you all.
This was a great story in the great series.  Thanks for the report, Mr. Fletcher.
I stand silent before Africa.  Here in Oregon you would not think we would ever face a water shortage.  Not in my lifetime anyway.  I grew up on a 7000 acre cattle ranch owned and operated by my family.  It was on the Snake river and had a 145 acre natural lake on it.  Dad hung tin cups on trees near the best places to get a drink during a long day on horseback monitoring or birthing cattle.  We never had a reason to worry about the safety of the water.  Not then.  We even had more wild life and vegatation that I no longer see as common or at all here in Oregon anymore. We would have laughed at someone opening up a bottled water company to the extent that we know of today.  Here in Oregon, our policy makers have underminded our critical water supplies in favor of development that forces dry our water supplies, and we are now seeing homes truck water in.  And yet like a frog in a boiling pot of water, we just don't catch on. We just don't see what we are losing inch by inch every day.  I look at Africa and wonder, how long Oregon?
The problem is not ecology but economic growth.  Kenya has had every opportunity and billions in aid but refuses to implement the free market/capitalist model of growth that will solve these problems.  It is all heart breaking but if you don't address the primary problem (government policies and socialist rhetoric) Kenyans will remain poor and dying.  
Here we are in the 21st century and the whole world does not have clean water.  This is not a local problem but with governments who do not know what the real priorities.  These government officials need to take a weekly tour of their country to get a handle on these problems.
I think the Life Straw is a great invention. It is so sad to hear that so many people die yearly just because they don't have access to clean water. Hopefully these Life Straws will really do their job and save lives.
This may very well be the beginning by which we can start resolving one of the largest issues around the world. It is a least a start, that hopefully, will become effective for all countries who will need this.
I just returned from Africa and had read about these straws before so know how important they would be to Africa. I live right next to Bethesda so would like to contact that person or whomever to contribute toward the purchase of more of these straws.  Can you send me information regarding this?
When I read the article in Newsweek about LifeStraw it touched my heart.  I knew it would be something my 8 year old son would be interested in.  When he finished reading it he came to me and said "I want to buy some LifeStraws and send them to Africa."  So he asked all of the children at his school if they would bring in their spare change and help buy some of these LifeStraws.  He was able to raise $644.  He sent that money to IMA World Health who in turn sent LifeStraws to the Congo.  I would like Sam's story to inspire other children to do the same.  Kids saving kids, what could be better!
I am a water well driller in Ohio with a cable tool drilling rig and would really like to help.You might call me crazy but I seem to have knack for finding water with my cherry tree branch. I'm 42 yrs old water has been my whole life as a family owned business.If possible steer me in the right direction.
The Life Straw sounds amazing and only a couple dollars, or is it really???? After the first week or two I would imagine after being used several hundreds of times and passed around that the filter would have to be inevitably changed, which requires a constant supply stream of new filters, which probably isn't very practical.
this is quiet interesting to read
The Life Straw sounds amazing and only a couple dollars, or is it really???? it is just to bad people drink dirty water and die, hopefully they may get clean water one of these days
I  am doing a report on the lifestraw and i would like to find some orginazations that send the lifestraw to sudan africa... do you know any .. thank you for this great informative article


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

RECENT STORIES FROM NIGHTLY NEWS

  • Nightly News section front

CONNECT WITH US

About the broadcast | Biographies

RSS is an easy way to get the news you want as it is updated even if you are not on MSNBC.com. More information about MSNBC.com's RSS feeds.

Subscribe to feed

Podcasting brings you audio and video from each weekday broadcast on your iPod or other portable MP3 player anytime, anywhere. More information about MSNBC.com's podcasts.

Subscribe to podcast

Sign-up for our daily e-mail newsletter. It offers a preview of the stories and special reports featured on each weekday broadcast.


Syndicate This Site

Add The Daily Nightly to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google