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                                       © 2007 AID AFRICA  UK Registered Charity Number 1116336









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Orphaned at 4 weeks, then pictured at
9 months, with her delighted guardian
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MILK PROGRAMME
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The Next  Stage -
our     “Play Centre”
Future goat breeding plans also include providing high milk-yielding females, and specialised training, into local communities to empower them to create their own Dairy Units.
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The goats grew up, and on the very day that we managed to get the first 1\2 cup of clean milk from our first goat, - as opposed to polluted with hair and dirt where she put her foot in the bucket! - we heard that a young mother in the next village had just  died leaving a 4-week old baby.   
Could this be the start of our Milk Project?
Next day we sent a bottle of diluted goats milk to the family, and continued each day. That baby is now a bright, healthy, 9-month old.   Her guardian confessed that she never expected  her to survive.
   Pemphero,
     Vulnerable
     and sickly, and again 6 months and gallons of goats’ milk later - gaining weight and strength
We first met little Pemphero when she was about 18 months old.  She was frail, swollen with malnutrition, and sickly. She lived with her 18 yr old aunt who also had a child of her own, - a very reluctant carer.  Pemphero was often left alone, malnourished and neglected, only looked after by her 6-year old sister. One of our staff, concerned for her welfare, suggested we help with milk.  We gave her a mosquito net too, so malaria is now much less of a problem and she is slowly gaining strength. At two, she weighs just 7kgs, and still can’t walk, but  now often  smiles!