Asia
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Laos

Context at a glance

One of the world's few remaining communist states, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, or Laos, is also among the poorest countries in Asia. Poverty is concentrated in the rural areas where most people live. Eight in ten Lao people are employed in subsistence agriculture though little of the mountainous terrain is suitable for farming, Periodic floods and droughts add to the farmers’burdens.

Across country, more than half the population lacks access to clean water while about one-third of the people lack access to adequate sanitation facilities.

Due to ethnic diversity, house sizes and designs vary in Laos. Based on government census data indicate houses are made of either concrete and brick, wood, or concrete and wood. One-tenth of the population live in semi-permanent shelters where floors, walls and roofs are made of bamboo or grass. Wood and bamboo houses built on stilts are a frequent sight in rural and mountainous areas where many ethnic minority groups reside.

Habitat for Humanity programme

To meet the housing needs in Laos, Habitat for Humanity International established its presence in 2006 by partnering with like-minded local organisations. Habitat’s first partner was the local non-profit association, Community Development and Environment Association (CDEA) that supported women-led savings groups in villages in the northwestern province which includes the capital, Vientiane.

The Habitat-CDEA project served nine families in two communities through repairs and renovations. Lessons learnt from the CDEA project were incorporated into a Habitat pilot project with World Concern-Lao PDR in 2007. The partnership aims to assist 45 poor families to make housing improvements through financing services, mobilisation of community resources and construction expertise.

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