Boganga Transitory Shelter: Search for durable water supply

By Riz P. Sunio

Lakeview Boganga Transitory Shelter overlooks Lake Lanao in Barangay Boganga, Marawi City (Photo by Riz Sunio).

Every morning, the internally displaced persons (IDPs) wait for the “bombero”, the National Housing Authority’s (NHA) water truck that supplies water for the 1,500 homes of Lakeview Boganga Transitory Shelter in Marawi City.
In almost every corner block of the shelter, five to seven green waste containers tied are placed together with other makeshift water containers the locals call “baril” which are waiting to be filled by the “bomberos”.

This Boganga Shelter resident takes water from the waste containers which he shares he will use to get a bath that afternoon (Photo by Riz Sunio).

These waste containers were supposed to help with the waste management and sanitation of the shelter and were scolded by NHA for using them for water, However, the residents deem that they need to secure their household water first before other matters.
Muslimah Solaiman, an IDP who evacuated to Baloi Evacuation Center before coming to Boganga, said that one filled waste container has about 10 pails of water.

These waste containers were turned into water containers for residents to get and store more water from the “bombero” (Photo by Riz Sunio).

Other blocks decided to remove the water reservoir installed by NHA in their homes and placed about three of them out in the highway for the “bombero” to reach them easier.

To help the senior citizens who could no longer lift heavy pails, the residents installed a hose for the old people to get water from the reservoirs (Photos by Taha Ali, Jr. (left) and Riz Sunio (right)).

The water filled in both the reservoirs and makeshift containers are being shared by everyone in the block.
All of them also tries to make do of the insufficient water supplied to them day-by-day for cleaning, laundry, and bathing shared Caironisa Cabugatan, 27, who formerly lived in what is not Marawi City’s Ground Zero and is now housed in Boganga Transitory Shelter.

More than 700 internally displaced persons families (IDPs) now call Boganga their home. The shelter has started housing IDPs on January 2019 and shall be a home for about 1,500 families from evacuation centers such as the Sarimanok and Pantar Tent Cities, and Baloi Evacuation Centers with a 24 sqm floor area houses each made of concrete floor and walls.

It should be a big improvement from the brittle tents that the (IDPs) lived in for about two years during and after the Marawi Siege in 2017. The tents can be very hot inside when the sun is high and have already become worn out after two years of use.
But now the IDPs live day to day with another problem. Their water taps run dry easily.
Marawi’s soon-to-be largest transitory site for the Marawi IDPs overlooks Lake Lanao, Lakeview Boganga Transitory Shelter yet the barangay doesn’t have enough water, despite the daily ration of water from the NHA since January.

Residents removed the water reservoirs installed at the back of their houses out to the streets and placed a mosquito net over it to catch clean rain water (Photo by Riz Sunio).

Solaiman said that the water the “bombero” provides could not fill each house’s reservoir. They also do not hose out water to these containers. Instead, the residents scoop water from their improvised water containers to their reservoirs so that their taps could work.
But a whole block is sharing water from a few waste containers. Whenever water is not enough, they would go up and down very slippery dry slopes down to a well which already has moss growing around its mouth to add to their supply of water for cleaning and bathing.
This part of Barangay Boganga in Marawi City is noticeably dry. The soil is yellowish and reddish and fine like baby powder.
Junaira Benesing, 12, fetches water from the well or “tabay” to their house in Boganga Transitory Shelter.
Doing so required a good amount of strength and foot work to carry a buckets of water. That is why even if the water already has molds growing around it, she has to take a bath right by the well because it is hard to lift the pail to her home.

Junaira Benasing scoops water from the mossy tabay for her bath (Photo by Taha Ali, Jr.).

The water from the “tabay” and NHA is not drinkable, that is why Cabugatan has to spend about Php 40 for transportation every day to buy a barrel of potable water in the next neighborhood.
Those who live near the newly installed water pump from the Community and Family Services International (CFSI) and other organizations get more water than the others. Residents from three other divisions that do not have water pumps in their areas have to do pilgrimage to divisions that have one to carry a few gallons of water home, said Imran Lumabao, president of Division 5 of the shelter.
To get water from the water pumps, the residents must abide the schedules when the pumps will work. These schedules are yet to be determined said Lumabao.

Caironisa Cabugatan shows their ketchup gallon turned water gallon to store more water for the household (Photo by Riz Sunio).


The homes in the shelter are in good condition, according to initial assessments conducted by the Mindanao Humanitarian Team. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, (UNHCR) in its Site Protection Profile, found that the Boganga Transitory Shelter has four taps per household, functioning toilets, available drinking water, but no adequate water supply. That’s a problem. Insufficient water may result in inadequate sanitation because residents cannot freely clean, wash and flush.
Dr. Emelda Gandamra-Taib, Marawi City Hall Mayor’s Office Chief-of-Staff said that the Boganga Transitory Shelter was one of the only available lands to build the temporary shelter. It is a privately owned lot lent to the government under the conditions that some of the relatives of the owner who have lost their homes to the siege in 2017 also be given shelter.
According to Gandamra-Taib, about 1,500 shelters are to be built in the area but shall be increasing in number soon.

Furthermore, the Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) between LGU Marawi and the owners of the land states that the shelters will only be there for five years.
Gandamra-Taib furthered that there have already been many efforts to drill water in the area. However, the LGU has been able to find two areas with water, that is why the distribution of water in the pumps installed by the LGU has schedules and shall be shared by all seven areas of the shelter. These pumps are regulated by controllers hired by the LGU.
Various private organizations have contributed about $28 million for the Marawi rehabilitation. The money is to improve water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH), food security and livelihood, shelter, health and nutrition, and protection.
However, Red Cross Lanao del Sur WASH focal person Johanisah Ditucalan said that while they are able to provide water for other shelters such as Sagonsongan Transitory Shelter, they are unable to do so in Boganga because their water tank would not fit in the shelter’s narrow roads.


When we visited the site, the “bombero” did not come today, the residents said.
Cabugatan said that he already sent his husband today to get more water from the “tabay” because they definitely need more water for the house.
Her taps were working, actually. She filled them yesterday with water from the rations. But not today.
“It was a good thing that it rained today,” Cabugatan said. “We can get our water containers out to catch some rain. We are happy whenever it rains hard.”

Boganga Transitory Shelter: Search for durable water supply

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