NEW YORK: Running the equivalent of two marathons a day in some of the harshest conditions on Earth, three young athletes have pounded approximately two thirds of their way across the Sahara Desert in a United Nations-backed bid to raise awareness of the burgeoning global water crisis.
Charlie Engle of the United States, Ray Zahab of Canada and Kevin Lin from Taiwan, province of China, crossed from Niger into Libya on Saturday, completing some 3,800 km of their 6,437-km-long extreme quest that is taking them from Senegal on the Atlantic Ocean to Cairo, UN Development Program (UNDP) spokesperson Irena Mihova told the UN News Service today.
They expect to cross into Egypt on Feb. 13, reaching the Red Sea on Feb. 23 before turning north to Cairo, in an awareness-raising odyssey that will be the subject of a feature documentary film, Running the Sahara, directed by Oscar winner James Moll and narrated by another Oscar laureate, Matt Damon, executive producer, with UNDP as co-producer.
Pounding over endless sands and camel tracks, past towering dunes, stark rock mountains and mud-brick mosques, through oases and nomad settlements, the three left St. Louis in Senegal in early November and passed through Mauritania, Mali and Niger before reaching Libya.
For the runners, water is a daily necessity, Mihova said. For the people of the Sahara, and throughout the developing world, it is a lifelong concern.
This is made clear in the UNDP 2006 Human Development Report – Beyond scarcity: Power, poverty and the global water crisis – which offers fresh new data on how many poor people go without water and sanitation, the inequality of access within and between nations, and how clean water affects child survival rates.
It calls on the Group of Eight (G-8) developed nations to spearhead an urgent global action plan to resolve the world s growing water and sanitation crisis, which causes nearly two million child deaths every year and holds back countries development, especially in Africa.
Against the backdrop of the world-wide challenges the water crisis presents to development, the three athletes are interacting with the people who live in the 5.6 million square kilometers of the Sahara, witnessing some of the work by UNDP and others in the region.
Each runner brings his own unique story and motivations, but all unite around a love for Africa and a profound desire to make a difference in the lives of the people of the Sahara in the best way they know how – by risking their lives running coast-to-coast across the Sahara Desert to prove that the impossible is possible; and in the process bring people into a new relationship with the Sahara and its people, UNDP said.
Among projects by the agency and Global Environment Facility, an independent financial organization, that the runners have already visited or will soon visit during their extreme marathon are water-management, governance and peace-building efforts in Mali and Niger, a conservation project for medicinal plants in Egypt, dam construction in Mauritania and a school in Senegal.
In addition to the 90-minute film, slated for international release in late 2007, a website tracks the progress of Engle, Zahab and Lin, providing information about the people and projects they visit. Web visitors can also pledge support on a per-mile basis for water projects through H2O Africa, the charitable component of Running the Sahara