Kulah Borbor, whose husband died of cholera, at the well she uses in West Point, a slum in Monrovia, Liberia. Image by Peter Sawyer. Liberia, 2011.

Liberian journalist Tecee Boley reports from Monrovia's biggest slum, West Point, about the lack of access to clean water. Most slum residents meet their water needs by drawing from a well or collecting rainwater. However, water from both sources is contaminated and often leads to deaths from water-borne diseases such as cholera.

Boley received a grant from the Pulitzer Center to report on water and sanitation issues, part of the center's West Africa water and sanitation reporting initiative. Her project investigates the gap between the Liberian government's stated intention to address the problem and the actual conditions experienced by Monrovia residents.

New Narratives, an initiative supporting African journalists reporting on Africa, provided editorial and technical support for this report.

Project

Liberia - Rhetoric and Reality on Water
Only 25 percent of the population has access to clean water in Liberia, but government officials claim they are working vigorously to address water sanitation issues.
April 26, 2012 / PBS NewsHour
Tecee Boley
Water and sanitation are at the center of a heated political debate in Liberia. Why are so many still going without?
April 25, 2012 / PBS NewsHour
Tecee Boley, Stephen Sapienza
Liberian journalist Tecee Boley and NewsHour special correspondent Steve Sapienza on why the after-effects of war and a lack of accountability mean poor access to clean water and sanitation.