Tearfund highlights water and sanitation crisis in Manchester

The ‘water cooler moment’ will take place in the city’s Albert Square as part of Tearfund’s Make Life Flow campaign, which is raising funds to tackle the global water and sanitation crisis.

Campaigners will gather at the water cooler dressed in business suits and reading mocked-up newspaper ‘The Scandal’ as UN leaders meet to review progress towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals to halve global poverty.

The water cooler will be filled with dirty water to draw attention to the fact that one child dies every 20 seconds because of poor sanitation and unclean water.

The UN estimates that as many as 2.5 billion people lack basic sanitation and do not have a safe place to go to the toilet, and that 900 million people live without clean water.

Tearfund’s Make Life Flow campaign warns that half the hospital beds in the world are filled with people who have preventable water-related diseases.

Mike Chesterton, Tearfund’s Regional Manager, said that it cost as little as £4 a month to provide one person with essentials like clean water, a basic toilet and hygiene education.

“Two of life’s most fundamental necessities are clean water and a safe, private toilet to use,” he said.

“It’s scandalous that so many people around the world have neither, and that it takes such a toll on their health and economies.

“That’s why we’ve launched the Make Life Flow campaign this year – to raise funds to address this scandal that is needlessly costing lives.”
News
Fire severely damages historic Amsterdam church on New Year’s Day
Fire severely damages historic Amsterdam church on New Year’s Day

A major fire tore through one of Amsterdam’s best-known historic buildings in the early hours of New Year’s Day, seriously damaging the property and forcing people to leave nearby homes.

Rwanda’s president on the defensive over church closures
Rwanda’s president on the defensive over church closures

Rwandan President Paul Kagame defended the government's forced closure of Evangelical churches, accusing them of being a “den of bandits” led by deceptive relics of colonialism. 

We are the story still being written
We are the story still being written

The story of Christ continues in the lives of those who take up His calling.

Christians harassed, attacked all over India at Christmas
Christians harassed, attacked all over India at Christmas

International Christian Concern reported more than 80 incidents in India, some of them violent, over Christmas.