‘Water is sacred’ but you’d never know it in Canada where authorities enable corporate rape of it and judges lie in rulings

‘Water is sacred’: 10 visual artists reflect on the human right to water, The UN declared access to water and sanitation a human right a decade ago, but 785 million people worldwide still have no water close to home by The Guardian, August 4, 2020

Ten photographs marking the 10th anniversary of access to water and sanitation being declared a human right by the UN have been commissioned from 10 visual artists by the charity WaterAid to show the impact of clean water on people’s lives.

Globally, 785 million people – one in 10 – still lack access to water close to home and 2 billion people – one in four – don’t have a toilet of their own.

A Lopsided TalebyJoseph Obanubi (Nigeria)

For many communities, water sources are usually far from their homes, and it falls to women and girls to spend much of their time and energy fetching water, a task that can expose them to attack from men or wild animals.

Without sanitation people have no choice but to use communal latrines or find a place to go to the toilet outside, often having to wait until the cover of darkness. This leaves food and water resources open to infections and helps spread disease.

A Lopsided Tale
A Lopsided Tale

This work references Nigerian-Yoruba sculptures and the healing qualities of water as a basic element of life. Yoruba believe water to be a symbol of force and strength.

É o Fim do Caminho by Cristina de Middel (Spain-Brazil)

My water hauling tank (photo below) also leaks, because of its design.

“I live in a small town in the state of Bahía [Brazil] and we are in the middle of the rainy season. There is water everywhere but it rains with such intensity that the water system collapses very often and there is no water at home. Here water is a utility but also an important part of the landscape and the culture.”

All On Her byCollin Sekajugo (Uganda)

“This piece centres around the role of women and girls in society. Despite the significance of their contribution, women and girls have for generations been held captive by patriarchy.

All on Her

“I adopted a picture of a young woman carrying a load of empty jerrycans in search for clean water to cater for her family.

“I thought that the model’s portrait would depict the plight of underprivileged women and children while the jerrycan denotes consumerism. Africa’s socioeconomic drive is so dependent on hard-working yet underprivileged women and children.”

Pour Me Water, Pure Water byDafe Oboro (Lagos, Nigeria)

Pour me Water, Pure Water

VIVAZ (still from video)by Monica Alcazar-Duarte (UK-Mexico)

“Water allows us to celebrate, to relax, to socialise, to be joyful. This is a quality that we in the western world easily take for granted. My work very much talks about quality of life related to water and how access to clean water is essential for our soul as well as for our body.

VIVAZ (still from video)

“I immediately thought of rain and how water falls from the sky that we all share. I then remembered taking photographs of people playing under the rain in Mexico … The water looked like stars.”

Tomorrow’s Worldby Serge Attukwei Clottey (Ghana)

Tomorrow’s world

“I wanted to create art that would represent the anguish and violence that go along with our planet’s problems. People do not realise how their own suffering is tied to the environment: to their long trip to fetch water, or their discomfort under the heat when the streets have no trees. Ghana is facing some of the most detrimental consequences from climate change and water shortages. Yet the government does nothing, so I have taken it upon myself to educate through art.”

Untitled: After Lee Millerby Poulomi Basu (India)

“My response is a reflection on how many of us, particularly when living in the west, we take the bathroom and easy access to water for granted.

“Even those we consider despotic have easy access to such sanitation, while this is a right denied for many women and girls around the world, particularly those in the global south.”

Untitled: After Lee Miller

Constant Ritualby Giya Makondo-Wills (UK-South Africa)

“The initial idea came from the constant reminders to wash hands and the NHS step-by-step guide during the time of coronavirus. I noticed that the steps to prevent the spread of the virus were dependent on three key things, clean running water from a tap (ideally with a modern faucet that could be turned off by using your elbow and not your hands), a soap dispenser with liquid soap and disposable paper towels. All of these are not universally accessible, even within the UK.

Constant Ritual

“The sea reminds us that everyone is connected and that water is sacred.”

Wataby Henry J Kamara (UK-Sierra Leone)

“In the past, Bonthe was a thriving trade hub and economic centre. In the 80s, palm products and seafood became major industries. But like a sun-bleached photo taken of an exotic island town, where you can see things once were bright and new, now all that’s left is a vague image of what used to be. During the world wars the French and English navy used the town as a naval base. This Victorian water pump is a reminder that the right to clean water and decent toilets is a luxury afforded only to those who are fortunate.

Wata

“The time to change this is now. Taking a moment to show gratitude for this seemingly basic right every time you wash your hands or take a shower adds another drop of water to the sea of change.”

Garden, T Fleur Bleu and Vegetable Garden, T Fishby Saïdou Dicko Nafoore (Burkina Faso)

Garden, T Fleur Bleu and Vegetable Garden, T Fish

Go to link for the article or click on the art pieces to see them full size.

A bit of frac’d water art:

Gwyn Morgan was CEO of Encana when the company illegally intentionally frac’d Rosebud’s fresh water aquifers (among other crimes) and covered it up.

Click for background on the banner

*Steve Harper nominated eminently unsuitable Gwyn Morgan to chair his new “accountability” act in 2006. Can you imagine?

Encana/Ovintiv illegally frac’d fresh water aquifers at Rosebud, Alberta, with astounding bullying, cover-up and enabling by AER, Alberta Environment, Alberta Health and politicians (federal and provincial) and attempts to terrify into silence by Harper’s anti-terrorist squad (dozens of officers paid by Canadian taxpayers to protect oil patch frac’ers and polluters and harass the harmed. “They all have the same story,” [Vancouver lawyer Jason] Gratl said. “The RCMP are engaged in persistent contact with individuals, with intensity that amounts to harassment and intimidation.” … Gratl said RCMP members had also visited the homes of elderly residents to place pressure on family members.).

The company’s own hydrogeological report and data on file with the AER prove the company injected 18 million litres of frac fluid into the aquifers and frac’d hundreds of other gas wells in our community’s fresh water zones while lying and publicly proclaiming the company would never do such a dreadful thing, that the company only fracs deep, far below the drinking water supply.

Since 2014, Encana/Ovintiv continues to violate rules of court, refusing to disclose to me all chemical additives injected in shallow frac’s in the area around my contaminated water well (and others in my community) and the details on nearly all the shallow frac’d gas wells and problem deeper wells. Trade secrets are not allowed under Alberta rules of court.

The purpose of industrial frac’ing is to force tightly adsorbed methane and other hydrocarbons to let go from unconventional formations.

After Encana’s unlawful fracs:

Later testing by Alberta Environment on the new Signer water well, after adequate purging by the regulator, found 110 mg/l of methane. Since that test result, companies and Alberta Environment no longer adequately purge water wells before testing.

My water well’s historic record (1984), on file with Alberta Environment:

Signer’s well’s drilling record also states Gas Present: No as did others including Ronalie and Shawn Campbell, Bruce Jack, and Dale and Brenda Zimmerman.

In 2010, historic water well data was fraudulently changed by the regulator – or maybe Encana – to remove “Gas Present: No” and leave it blank on the altered “historic” records for frac contaminated water wells, and many others.

My water after Encana’s illegal aquifer fracs (the force of the explosion deformed the bottle I had filled with my well water, it was a new bottle when I emptied the commercial contents and filled it with my frac’d water):

I have to travel 45 minutes one way, to access potable water (that’s not clean; it leaves black smeary rings in the holding tanks in the house). In winter, hauling water is hell.

Refer also to:

“Water is PPE.” Treasure yours, if you have some.

Dear J Rosalie Abella and Germany: Is it “justice” and “a fantastic work ethic” for a Supreme Court of Canada judge to lie in a ruling and damage our Charter of Rights and Freedoms?

Edmonton lawyer disbarred for lying: “The code of professional conduct prohibits lawyers from misleading others, either intentionally or accidentally,” while nine Supreme Court of Canada judges get away with intentionally publishing a lie in Ernst vs AER.

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