A few weeks back Mrs. Nirmala Shahi, Deputy Mayor of Mandan Deupur Municipality of Kavreplanchok. EcoHimal have updated their website with more details.
Latest updates on #COVID-19 from our partners in Nepal
We are receiving regular updates from our partner NGOs in Nepal on the situation relating to COVID-19. We will relay these updates to you on this page.
UPDATED: 16.30 GMT: 27th March
From Narayan Dhakhal (Executive Director, EcoHimal Nepal, in Kathmandu)
Narayan is housebound in Kathmandu, but still directing operations for EcoHimal who have staff scattered around the country. He has sent several updates today:
The local government’s are asking for COVID-19 precaution kits, like masks, gloves, sanitizer, towel, soap, bucket, etc. for distribution and also support for the fever clinic operation tools like fever scanner and above mentioned goods including PPE. But it is difficult to buy in the moment and impossible to transport due to lockdown.
Nepal is sending a plane to china to bring PPE and distributed to the health workers. Other materials in the moment are not possible to buy, so it is not possible to assure, since government itself is in scarcity. I will let you know if there are any possibilities.
One more covid-19 positive found. Out of 802 people tested 3 are found positive, all are imported cases. The last case is in far west Nepal, he came home from the Middle East with the virus.
However, in general there is no COVID-19 outbreak yet, and hoping for not; no casualty yet, hope for not. We are concerned that because the border with India remains partially open, thousands of Nepali people entered and may have spread the virus around Nepal. That is not controllable even though everybody has been requested to stay in self quarantine. I doubt if they all follow that request. Therefore there might be many more imported cases.
So far supply of food and goods is not easy, but quite stable and no serious problem has been seen.
Specifically in relation to the situation in our project areas, Narayan told us:
I am regularly in touch with all staff members and working from home, most of my time is spent taking phone calls from different project sites and staff members.
Keshab Rai at Deusa AFRC is working from home and only coming to the AFRC to take care of plants and animal. Other activities have halted there.
I am collecting opinion from different staff members about their feelings. I will send you these tomorrow. I fear people might be exaggerating the situation in the name of different missions but the ground reality is different. The lock down will be extended for sure, but no idea how long? Maybe two more weeks? Let us hope for a better situation.
UPDATED: 11.45 GMT: 26th March
From Pabitra Majhi – Co-Founder GET-Nepal (via Mark Goddard)
Extraordinary scenes from the streets of Kathmandu. It is unlikely to ever have been this quiet. Note the extent to which the streets are being sprayed with disinfectant. Pabitra also updated that a Chinese company has donated 2,000 testing kits to Nepal.
UPDATED: 12.05 GMT: 25th March
From Sajana Bhadel – President of Girls Empowered By Travel -Nepal (GET-Nepal).
Today is the second day of Lock-down. Everything was closed Yesterday (Kathmandu). I think the situation will be same today. We basically follow this Facebook page for the updates: https://www.facebook.com/officialroutineofnepalbanda
Everything will be closed besides these services; Important Notice: Home Ministry has made it clear that emergency/essential services like Health, Security, Food (i.e Daal, Rice etc), Water, Milk, Electricity, Telecommunications, Information and Communication, Waste Management etc will not be closed.
In Southern Nepal, Birgunj city, Parsa district, GET-Nepal have organised some awareness programs regarding COVID_19 (Hygiene/handwashing) and they distributed some masks, but pics show no social distancing.
UPDATED: 11.30 GMT: 25th March
From Kanchan Kattel (Alumni TGT Higher Education Programme, in Kirtipur, Kathmandu)
So the whole country is under lock down. I'm locked up in the hostel with few other people and food for a week or so. Many people including my hostel mates rushed to villages few days ago (of course increasing the chances of transmission on the way and to the villages that were at much lower risk otherwise).
Only ambulance, health workers van, food/ fuel and pharmaceutical suppliers get the special pass to drive (probably the press too but not sure of that). Markets open up early in the morning for a hour or two and in the evening for few hours. This lock down is said to be for a week starting from 6 am yesterday but maybe it will extend looking at the situation. There's one positive case so far, the patient is the Nepali student who came all the way from France via Qatar Airways. Authorities are trying to trace her contacts and the passengers who came along with her. People are worried about the cases that are yet to be recorded.
UPDATED: 13.00 GMT: 24th March
From Dinanath Bhandari (TGT volunteer and Development professional based in Kathmandu)
Lock down has started. I hear news that people are obeying it mostly. But in the area where I am living in Kathmandu, house building goes on as usual and people are walking, some of them seems to collect essential items like drinking water. Especially those who live on daily wages, seem to keep on working.
UPDATED: 23.20 GMT: 23rd March
via Dinanath Bhandari (TGT volunteer, Kathmandu)
The Nepal Government has announced strict controls on all citizens:
These 8 decisions will be implemented from 6AM tomorrow (24th March)
No one should go out except for medical emergencies and food purchases.
All kinds of public and private vehicles are banned except for the permitted vehicles, and those used by medical professionals and security agencies.
All domestic flights are halted except for the ones used by the security agencies and other designated flights.
Related heads of offices should grant a leave except for the most essential services like health, security, food, water, milk, electricity, telecommunication, information and communication, customs, quarantine, garbage management.
Except for drugs and health equipment manufacturing, food, water, milk, energy companies, all other private industries grant a leave to workers and staff.
Businesses should manage ways to supply drugs and drugs-related material. Those hoarding goods, creating artificial shortage, black marketers, and obstructing supplies will be punished as per the law, and those goods will be confiscated and used in medical treatments.
This order is implemented as per the Infectious Disease Act, 2020’s Subsection 2 of Section 2. To implement this order, all chief district officers will be mobilized and the Local administration Act, 2028 will be activated.
Those disobeying or obstructing the order as per the Infectious Disease Act, 2020 will be punished as mentioned in the Act.
UPDATED: 13.40 GMT: 20th March
From Narayan Dhakhal (Eco Himal)
Nepal Government has decided to lockdown gathering and movement of people in public areas from 22 March till 3rd of April 2020 until further notice. Our office remains closed and we will try to work from home as much as possible. I will notify all the staff members to stay at home and work if possible from there. Most of the staff has no such capacity. It means all of staff members will have sort of holiday.
This follows the Nepal PM’s address to the nation. More on that here: https://thehimalayantimes.com/kathmandu/pm-oli-delivers-special-address-all-flights-suspended-from-march-to/
UPDATED: 11.30 GMT: 20th March
From Narayan Dhakhal (Eco Himal)
Narayan has sent thorough a photo of the COVID-19 health awareness posters Eco Himal are distributing across the communities we are working with.
Nepal Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli is addressing the nation this evening.
UPDATED: 8.40 GMT: 19th March
From Richard Allen (TGT co-director (Nepal), Kathmandu)
Nepal Gov. still claims there is only one confirmed case in Nepal from January - recovered. Latest data that I have seen (from yesterday) 510 tests done, 510 negatives - but the panic is building.
More via Himalayan Times
UPDATED: 08.40 GMT: 19th March
From Surbir Sthapit (Executive Director, HICODEF, Nawalparasi)
We are together with local government working together to sensitize the communities in the working areas. As you know that the health system and facilities here in Nepal is very poor so we have give high priority for prevention. Furthermore we also decided to stop our field work that need mass gathering.
If you have some fund to spend for awareness of coronavirus would be great.
UPDATED: 15.00 GMT: 18th March
From Dinanath Bhandari (TGT volunteer and Development professional based in Kathmandu)
The globalization of market system has connected everyone across the globe. When market is affected due to a disaster, it aggravates risk and impacts of disasters. Nepal is safe as of now from COVID19 but adverse effects of Corona affected market are already here. Our disaster preparedness is very weak; past efforts were heavily influenced by external donors, which did not develop country capacity properly. Now, global community is engaged to save themselves. We have opportunity to grow ourselves and build on our internal capacity to cope with disaster emergencies. We can start from self-discipline to obey safety rules and support government efforts.
UPDATED: 14:00 GMT 17th March
From Narayan Dhakhal (Executive Director Eco Himal Nepal, Kathmandu)
There is no outbreak of the Coronavirus except one student who arrived from china (so one imported case) on January 13. He was hospitalized and recovered well and discharged from the hospital. So far there are not any cases noticed officially.
However, Nepal is in highly danger zone and if the outbreak happens there is no real capacity of the government to take care of the people and treatment.
The economic impact is already high due to global situation. Food items, fuel and medicine are in shortage. Schools are going to close from 19th March. Big gatherings are restricted and people’s movement on the road has decreased over the last two days. There is high fear, but most of the people are still not aware of it. It is a sort of unknown. Village people are not really concern and daily life is not much affected. The rumour in the market and ground reality is different.
If there is question, how safe is Nepal from Coronavirus or COVID-19? It is not safe and highly is in risk. But luckily no suffering. Hope it will be not.
So far, all the organization [Eco Himal] is working as normal and trying to make some contingency plans.
We are going to have awareness program in the Mandan Deupur Municipality through making and sharing IEC (information education and communication) materials. We are planning to deliver 6-day programmes in two rounds.
Similarly, we are trying to educate people through radio.
Water management on the farm
The district of Kavrepalanchok in central Nepal is especially dry and one of the first to suffer water stress as the dry season enters its last few months. For farmers, it is essential they manage their water supplies carefully. They need to collect water when it does rain and use it as wisely and efficiently as possible all year round.
We’ve been sent some photo’s from our NGO partners that illustrate how water management techniques are being introduced in our project area, Mandan Deupur. This is an interesting case study in the ‘show don’t tell’ approach to education and training we enable in Nepal.
At the newly established Mandan Deupur Agro Forestry Resource Centre (MD AFRC), funded by TGT and the Marr Munning Trust, our NGO partners, Eco Himal Nepal. have been installing a new drip feed irrigation system at the centre’s plant nursery.
The system is fed by a water storage tank; which is filled just before watering time. Hosepipes are attached to the tank and laid out across the vegetable plot, or bed. The hosepipes are then pierced at precise intervals with a pin or thin nail to create a hole small enough for water to drip out and into the soil. Farmer’s fill the tank with just enough water so that none is wasted. It takes a bit of time to set the system up, but once it is up and running it saves both time and water!
This irrigation system not only helps the centre to use its own water supply as efficiently as possible, it is also a model of best practice that other farmers can copy and install themselves.
Core to the educational approach of MD AFRC is to ‘show not tell’, in fact it often goes further than that. Local farmers are invited to help with the installation of systems like this so that they can ‘action learn’ by getting hands-on experience of rigging up the bamboo stands, the tanks and the pipework.
We have secured funding to establish MD AFRC and it is doing well. However, we still urgently need more funds to help it grow and thrive. It will eventually achieve full financial self-sufficiency, but we need to support it through its start-up phase.
To make a donation and to support our project work in Nepal, please visit our donate page.
Before the stoves arrive
If you’ve been following our work over the last few months, you’ll know that we have been busy with our NGO partners EcoHimal Nepal trying to end indoor air pollution for 131 families in Sankhuwashabha (eastern Nepal).
Earlier this month we gave you a quick tour of the factory in Kathmandu where 131 tailor made smoke free cook stoves have been put together ready for transportation to the mountains.
However, this project is not light touch! EcoHimal do not wish to just build stoves and transport them up to two villages and hope that the families there will install and use them correctly. Far from it; we ensure that the stoves are just one part of a project that is wrapped up in education and training on health, climate, women’s empowerment and ecology.
This training effort starts before the stoves arrive. This photo essay features Anisha Kharel and Narayan Dhakhal from EcoHimal and their recent visit to Rukuma and Chepuwa villages in Sankhuwashabha.
Soon the new stoves will be making their way up to Sankhuwashabha and the training effort will continue. EcoHimal have employed a project officer to work with the community to train them on correct installation and use of the stoves.
Health and safety is a vital concern, the stoves have chimneys that need to put in properly and then looked after. Families also need to be aware of the dangers of Carbon Monoxide and how to prevent it from building up. We will do a follow up story specifically on this soon.
All this work has been made possible thanks to a grant from IFAD to EcoHimal that was matched by those of you who donated to our Crowdfunder campaign in November 2019.
To enable us to do more work on climate change adaptation in Nepal, please consider signing up to donate £3 / month via text.
Ending indoor air pollution for 131 families
Back in November we launched a Crowdfunder campaign to end indoor air pollution for 131 families in Sankhuwashabha. We were blown away by how many people got involved in pledging support, spreading the word and offering help. 107 people donated a combined total of £10,949 in just 28 days! Many people donated a full £207 to fund an entire stove.
We smashed our original target and got pretty close to our ‘stretch’ target, which meant we were able to fund 42 smoke free cooking stoves to match the 89 already funded by IFAD (The International Fund for Agricultural Development).
This is the first of a series of updates on how the project is now progressing.
Our partner NGO EcoHimal Nepal paid a visit to a factory in Kathmandu in January to take a look at how the stoves are being fabricated. The photo’s below tell their own story, but first up, here is one of the images we used as part of the Crowdfunder - this is Mrs Sujani Gurung, one of the 30 people who took on a stove as part of our pilot project in 2018:
131 of these excellent, tailor made stoves are now very nearly ready to be loaded onto trucks and driven up to the wilds of Sankhuwashabha.
So, as Greg Wallace would say, let’s go inside the factory!
Diary entry 6
Morgan is now in Nawalparasi with colleagues from our partner NGO HICODEF. In his sixth diary entry he reflects on their visit to the field to mark the launch of our new project Layer Farming for Adaptation.
Monday 21st
Early start to fly down to Bharatpur airport for a transfer to HICODEF’s offices in Kawasoti, Nawalparasi. It is noticeably hotter and more humid down here on the Terai.
I was welcomed by Surbir Sthapit and Shukra Raj Ojha who has just been appointed as Programme Coordinator for our newest project Layer Farming for Adaptation. We spent the rest of the morning reviewing the three year ECCLA (Enhancing Community Capacities for Learning and Adaptation to Climate Change) programme that wrapped up in July. ECCLA has made several positive impacts in the three target villages.
Climate resilient vegetable production has made huge progress, with over 20% of farmers now able to sell commercially in local markets for the first time. This is thanks to dedicated training, resource provision and the work HICODEF has done to create a route to market for the farmers.
Just before lunch we went through the plans for Layer Farming for Adaptation which will take us to the remote villages at the top of Siwalik hills in eastern Nawalparasi. We’re forecasting five years on this project, focussing on three villages in the first phase between now and summer 2021.
Layer farming is the practice of intercropping several crops that grow to different heights in a symbiotic way. Tall trees provide shade for lower bushes, which in turn protect root vegetables or pulses.
After lunch we travelled by jeep up to one of the LFA villages, Repaha to meet the local farmers group and to learn more about the coffee trees that are growing here. The coffee was planted around ten years ago, following a donation of seeds by an NGO. It grows well, but the farmers have no way of getting it to market. It therefore remains largely unkempt and when it fruits in January, cherries are either left on the tree or picked by children who eat them like sweets. Some farmers do pick a few kilos, the ones who like to drink coffee. They leave it to dry out (without removing the fruity layer) and then, when they fancy some coffee, remove the husk and roast over an open fire.
We found that some farmers already have an enthusiasm to commercialise their coffee - which is great news for the LFA project. Several have started their own nursery plots to grow coffee for transplanting later. They’re hopeful HICODEF and TGT can enable them to process the coffee to parchment stage and organise a route to market so that they can start selling and earning.
Like in Solukhumbu, investing in layer farming as a climate change adaptation strategy makes sense here. The trees provide shade, helping to keep things cool in the summer months. The income they can potentially generate will help too, they’ll have more money to invest in complementary adaptation strategies like water harvesting, polytunnels and insect pest control.
Layer farming also has a climate change mitigation effect; more trees equals more carbon sequestration.
Wednesday 23rd
After spending the night at HICODEF’s staff lodging’s in Kawasoti, we went by jeep again to the second village we’ll be working in for the LFA project. Lahape is at the end of a long, winding and bumpy dirt track at an altitude of 1,300m.
The journey took 4 hours and we passed several jeeps carrying 15 or more passengers. This is the public transport system round here, it costs around 300 rupee for a place on the jeep - same price whether you’re inside or on the roof!
From Lahape, when the clouds part, you get a spectacular view of the snowy Annapurna range, but the local landscape is dramatic in its own right; high forested slopes, terraces, long sheer drops and traditional houses complete with thatched roofs and mud walls.
Like in Rapaha, coffee is growing all over this village. But we have heard the same story, there is no route to market. With HICODEF’s local connections to some very energetic cooperatives and the knowledge and contacts TGT is developing through our projects with Eco Himal, we can hopefully enable farmers to solve this problem.
Similar to Rapaha, farmers here are very keen to make the most of their coffee. Hundreds of trees exist here already, many more have been planted in nurseries. One farmer told us that he plans to plant 10,000 coffee trees. I hope he is not trying to run before he can walk.
Training on how to process the coffee to create a high quality product is essential. HICODEF have lined up an expert trainer (who has also trained farmers in Solukhumbu) to come here in January. We expect the training to be oversubscribed.
The training and January’s harvest should produce a healthy sized sample of parchment that we can take to Kathmandu for roasting and tasting. If the quality is good (and judging by the hand roasted cups we drank this morning it should be), eastern Nawalparasi could very quickly become a new coffee zone in Nepal.
If it does, we will have a brilliant climate change adaptation and sustainable development story on our hands.
Diary entry 5
Our Co-Director, Morgan, had a short stop off in Kathmandu before heading down to Nawalparasi, here’s his fifth diary entry:
Sunday 20th
My Co-Director, Richard, and I visited Prof Rejina Maskey at Tribhuvan University this morning to reflect on the 2019 higher education programme and plan for 2020. We agreed on a slight tweak. From this year on, we’ll be providing two dissertation scholarships of 50,000 Nepali Rupee (approx. £320) to assist the two Tribhuvan students who act as research assistants and translators for the U.K. students who travel to Nepal each summer.
Masters students at Tribhuvan take a two year course, rather than the one year programme that is typical in the U.K. Tribhuvan select two first year students to partner with the UK students and base the selection on them having shared research interests. For the Tribhuvan students, the research trip with their U.K. partners is a chance to do some preliminary field study and formulate their research questions.
The field experience they gain, including the joint learning with their U.K. partners, sets them up for their own dissertation research, which they conduct a year later. It is this dissertation work that our new scholarship will contribute towards. This is all part of our effort to develop the next generation of climate change adaptation professionals.
Diary entry 4
Morgan is back in Kathmandu now. This is his fourth diary entry from his time monitoring projects in Solukhumbu and Kavre.
Saturday 19th October
Our last monitoring task in Deusa was a visit to the Hazelnut plantation, which was planted two years ago a few kilometres north of the AFRC, at an altitude of around 2,000m. The trees are in the dormant phase of their annual cycle and making reasonably good progress. Some plants are doing better than others, there was some evidence of insect pests, including the giant hairy caterpillar we met!
The Hazelnut trees need to be tended as they develop, they are not yet old enough to fruit, it may be another two years. Keshab (AFRC manager) explained that, due to a lack of time, the farmer whose land the hazelnuts are on hasn’t been clearing the weeds around the tree enough. This needs to happen to ensure nutrients aren’t being diverted away from the trees. We’ll need to work out a way to support him in doing this, many hands make light work.
It’s Saturday morning now and I’m sat with the team at our brand new AFRC in Mandan Deupur, Kavrepalanchok. Our NGO partner, Eco Himal Nepal, have been working here for three years, mostly on education and sexual health projects. Together, last year, we secured three years of funding from Marr Munning Trust, to establish a new Agro Forestry Resource Centre here, along similar lines to Deusa AFRC.
In June the AFRC building was completed and we slept here last night ahead of meetings today with the new committee and a tour of the progress made so far. I’ll report on what I learn in my next entry.