Tunisian villager Ounissa Mazhoud ties two empty jerry cans to a donkey and cautiously descends a stony hill in the direction of the final native supply of water.
The North African nation, in its fourth yr of drought, is grappling with its worst water shortage in years.
Mazhoud – like different ladies within the distant village of Ouled Omar, 180km (110 miles) southwest of the capital, Tunis – wakes up each morning with one factor on her thoughts: discovering water.
“We are the living dead … forgotten by everyone,” stated Mazhoud, 57, whose area was as soon as one in all Tunisia’s most fertile, identified for its wheat fields and Aleppo pines.
“We have no roads, no water, no aid, no decent housing, and we own nothing,” she stated, including that the closest supply of water is a river about an hour’s arduous stroll away.
Offering water for his or her households, she stated, implies that “our backs, heads and knees hurt, because we labour from dawn to dusk”.
Some villagers have felt pushed to maneuver to city areas or overseas.
Ounissa’s cousin, Djamila Mazhoud, 60, stated her son and two daughters had all left searching for higher lives.
“We educated our children so that when we grow old, they take care of us, but they couldn’t,” she stated.
“People are either unemployed or eaten by the fish in the sea,” she added, utilizing a standard phrase for migrants who try the harmful sea voyages for Europe.
Whole households have already left the village, stated Djamila.
“Their houses remain empty,” she stated, explaining that aged individuals really feel they haven’t any selection however to comply with their little kids.
“Can an 80-year-old go to the river to get water?”