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Kowloon City, Hong Kong

Kenya family volunteering & safari

 

Experience the best that Kenya has to offer. This expedition is designed to give families a real taste of Africa with the support of an incredible team boasting an immaculate safety record. Enjoy exclusive access to the stunning 80,000-acre Rukinga Sanctuary that is based in the wilderness of Kenya’s Taru desert and borders the majestic Tsavo National Park, the largest in Kenya. This exclusive wildlife conservation area, which is also an important migration corridor, acts as the base for your two-week family programme.

   

Your family will have the opportunity to work with the local school and community, contributing to environmental education workshops and the improvement of facilities. Work with local safari guides to learn how to track wildlife on foot, identify animal spore & tracks, as well as basic bush craft skills and activities suitable for children.

 

For two full days you will visit Tsavo East National Park for your Big Game Safari and experience some of the best wildlife viewing in Africa. This tour ends with a well-earned rest at the Kenya coast for an Indian Ocean beach break on the sandy white beach and turquoise blue waters of Diani Beach.

 

Trip highlights

 

- Community development volunteer programme designed for volunteer families

- Game ranger & bush craft skills

- Night game drives

- Big game safari at Tsavo East National Park

- Relax and play on Kenya’s South Coast at Diani Beach

Day-by-day itinerary

Day 1:Arrive Mombasa and transfer to Camp Tsavo. Camp Tsavo is a 2 to 3 hour drive from Mombasa and established on the 80,000-acre conservation area of Rukinga Sanctuary. After lunch you will be provided with an arrival safety brief and a full orientation of the conservation area. The rest of the day is left for you to settle in and enjoy the views over the Taru Desert, its mountains, and the abundant wildlife viewing on offer.

Day 2-3:Bush Skills and Game Viewing. For two rewarding days, resident wildlife experts and experienced game rangers will teach you how to track wildlife, identify spore & tracks of wildlife species as well as basic bush survival skills and wildlife conservation techniques.

Day 4:Tsavo East National Park. After breakfast, depart for Tsavo East National Park for big game viewing. You will be able to identify all the common species of African wildlife in their habitat as well as rarer species. You will take the ‘River Route’ and stop for a picnic lunch at the amazing Lugard falls. Enjoy more game viewing en-route back to Camp Tsavo.

Day 5-8:Community Phase. During this period you will get involved with the refurbishment of a rural primary school, which may include some basic activities such painting or desk making. You will be expected to interact with the school children to encourage the importance of wildlife and environmental conservation through education. Your personal contribution to the school and its students plays an essential part in wildlife conservation and effectively reduces human/wildlife conflict in the area.

Day 9:Tsavo East National Park. Set out after an early breakfast for another day in Tsavo East National Park, this time following a different route.

Day 10-11:Bush Skills and Game Viewing. A chance to brush up on your wildlife and bush skills, as well have the unique opportunity to go on a couple of night game drives.

Day 12-13:Diani Beach. Your chance to chill out on Kenya’s famous south coast and get rid of the safari dust! After breakfast you will be transferred to Pinewood Village beach resort (aprox 3.5 hours away). Pinewood Village is a boutique hotel situated on the unspoiled shores of the beautiful warm Indian Ocean. Optional activities here include scuba diving, snorkelling, kite surfing, big game fishing and shopping.

Day 14:Departure. Transfer from your hotel to the airport for your departure

 

B=Breakfast, L=Lunch, D=Dinner

Volunteer travel - what's it all about?

Are you looking for an adventurous trip with a purpose, or on a gap year or career break? If you want to make a difference in some of the world’s most important conservation areas - and in community projects - then volunteer trips are for you! Volunteers tend to have a sense of adventure, and come from a range of different backgrounds and from all over the world.

Edward Abbey said 'sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul'.

How this vacation makes a difference

Winner in the Responsible Tourism Awards 2008, Best Volunteering Organization category and Highly Commended in 2007, we own our ground operation, which means we have complete control over the sustainability and integrity of our projects and the quality of the experiences we provide. We additionally subsidies our philanthropic objectives through additional funds Winner in the Responsible Tourism Awards 2008, Best Volunteering Organization category and Highly Commended in 2007, we own our ground operation, which means we have complete control over the sustainability and integrity of our projects and the quality of the experiences we provide. We additionally subsidize our philanthropic objectives through additional funds raised by our Charitable Trust to ensure our work has real and lasting tangible benefits to the communities in which we work.

   

Our camps act as a source of local industry and employment. 100% of fresh produce and project materials are sourced from sustainable local suppliers and skilled workers are employed from the surrounding communities to assist volunteers with project work. Group sizes are kept small to reduce any negative impact.

 

Accommodation styles will vary depending on your programme and camp location. However, all permanent accommodation is constructed using locally sourced materials and is in keeping with traditional styles. Temporary camps are designed to create as little impact on the environment and natural surroundings as possible.

 

Your families’ participation on this tour provides a significant contribution to indigenous communities, environment and wildlife in the Taita Hills. Our school development plan has enhanced educational facilities in the area by building school desks, providing clean water for the children, sourcing instructional materials and encouraging environmental conservation.

 

Rukinga Sanctuary is a superb, privately run conservancy offering National and International visitors extraordinary experiences and activities. But more importantly, it has turned thousands of acres back to wildlife conservation from previously degraded and overgrazed landscapes, devoid of wildlife, and offered significant, tangible benefits to the local communities that live along its boundaries. Rukinga Sanctuary and the projects run by Camp Tsavo and Wildlife Works have improved the productivity of the landscape and provided employment and financial support to thousands of families, as well as contributing to the preservation of Kenya’s natural and cultural heritage.

 

In short, our commitment to local people and the environment is not a by-product of our programmes but core to everything we do. All of our projects are developed and co-located in partnership with the local communities to ensure they (and their natural environment) receive tangible and long-lasting benefits.

 

The UK office is here to assist you with your booking and help you prepare for your trip. There is also a 24-hour emergency contact number that can be left with your relatives in case they need to contact you or us urgently.

Kenya Volunteer Program is open to:

We invite individuals, couples, families, students, researchers, and groups (churches, colleges, and student associations).

Our programs are flexible and volunteers can arrive and depart on any day all year round.

The volunteer in Kenya program fee covers in-country orientation, training, meals and accommodation, and supervision.

 

The volunteer in Kenya costs you need to meet are: Your flight to and from the country, visa fees, work permits, vaccinations, and travel insurance, return trip to the airport and airport taxes.

 

You will also need a weekly budget to cover your expenses like bottled water, personal costs, public transport, beverages and entertainment.

Typical Living Arrangements: Advance Africa Volunteers’ house and home-stays.

Programs, Events, Materials, Organizations, Affinity Groups, Volunteer Opportunities in Nairobi Kenya that were posted to the site in English concerning Children and Youth, Community Development, Community Service and Volunteering, Disaster Relief, Foundations, Fundraising, and Philanthropy, Sports, Recreation, and Leisure, Travel and Transportation.

 

Orphanage in Kenya, Orphans in Kenya, HIV and Aids orphans in Kenya ,Charity Work in Kenya, Kenya Community Development Projects, Help us Bring Clean, Safe Drinking Water To Millions.

info@lecdenkenya.com

www.lecdenkenya.com

   

Musée de l'histoire et des cultures de l'immigration - Palais de la Porte Dorée - 12éme arrondissement - Paris - Île-de-FRANCE

 

Posto nuovamente questo scatto dopo averlo rivisto tra i miei vecchi upload flickr ed aver apportato alcuni ritocchi sui colori e sulla luminosità con photoshop..

One single room can contain up to 14 bed spaces which easily become 20 when counting the "floor spaces".

    

With its narrow streets, low buildings and houses, Satwa is the place where most of Dubai construction workers live. They come from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh.

    

A bed space is not a space to put a bed but an empty bed, often only a wooden plate without mattress, or even a space on the floor of an overcrowded room.

     

Evening prayer in an angle of Satwa. In the background, a glimpse of what this area is due to become: a high-tech, postmodern city without a soul.

    

Up to 100 people may share the same house or "working camp" as its inhabitants call it.

   

These men come from India, Pakistan or Bangladesh to work on Dubai multiple construction sites for a monthly basic salary of 800 Drhs (320 euros).

    

Arrived few years ago or only few months ago, they all converge to Satwa to find a place where to live, une maison, as it is the cheapest area of Dubai.

    

In Satwa, the idea of a home is reduced to renting a bed space for an average of 500 Drhs a month (200 euros).

    

These men come from India, Pakistan or Bangladesh to work on Dubai multiple construction sites for a monthly basic salary of 800 Drhs (320 euros).

    

“My wife and I had a great experience with Priya. As you can imagine, we had hundreds of questions concerning the Visas and the work permits, and Priya was always helpful and reactive. We would highly recommend her to anyone going through the immigration process.” - Vincent C.

The official demolition announcement of most of the "villas" at Satwa was made in October 2008 unveiling its replacement by a luxurious city-garden.

    

The area of Satwa, five minutes away from Sheikh Zayed prestigious street, is marked for razing. It is going to be replaced by Jumeirah Gardens City, a Dhrs 350 billion project.

   

"No work today so I will eat a little and then go to bed" says Otul. When asked whether he can still send money home, the answer comes up as an evidence: "I have to manage otherwise, what am I here for?"

   

Covering 110 million square feet, Jumeirah Gardens will change living in one of the most popular neighborhoods of Dubai. The project includes appartement buildings, villas and commercial properties.

   

A few months ago, most of them would find work. Now only 40-50 out of 100 people will be hired as a certain number of projects have been delayed due to the financial crisis.

  

Arrived few years ago or only few months ago, they all converge to Satwa to find a place where to live, a house, as it is the cheapest area of Dubai.

     

Non EU migrants workers were protesting outside the offices of the Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Innovation, Batt O’Keeffe, T.D., calling on him to give workers employed through the employment permit system the right to change employer.

The current employment permits system binds a worker to one employer. This is a leading factor in the exploitation of workers.

 

more info at Migrant Rights Centre Ireland website www.mrci.ie

 

demonstration on YouTube: www.youtube.com/watch?v=2eqowPbcgdI

 

Uspecto Images on FB www.facebook.com/Uspecto

 

The United Kingdom Border Agency (UKBA) will implement new global changes to the immigration rules for applying for a visa to work or study in the UK. Online applications and priority Visa service are set to improve customer service in Pakistan.

... and a prayer room.

    

Workers coming back from work at night. Each one of them is doing its best to send money back home every month but because of rising prices and the hardship of finding work, this has become a more difficult task.

    

Non EU migrants workers were protesting outside the offices of the Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Innovation, Batt O’Keeffe, T.D., calling on him to give workers employed through the employment permit system the right to change employer.

The current employment permits system binds a worker to one employer. This is a leading factor in the exploitation of workers.

 

more info at Migrant Rights Centre Ireland website www.mrci.ie

 

demonstration on YouTube: www.youtube.com/watch?v=2eqowPbcgdI

 

Uspecto Images on FB www.facebook.com/Uspecto

 

The smallest available space is used for washing, eating, and sleeping as well as a meeting place.

    

A medical examination which includes a blood test and an x-ray is necessary to obtain a visa on top of the borrowed 12,000 Drhs (4,800 euros) already disbursed. They feel they cannot go back home as long as they haven't reimburse this amount.

   

Contact us -

Hotline: 19006654 /

Email: service@nhigia.vn or info@nhigia.vn

Workers waiting in front of Satwa's main mosque going onto their night shift. Workers from south-east Asia are now competing for the same jobs with workers coming from China.

  

Getting ready to go to work in the morning implies starting early so to be able to queue up for the only shower available.

   

A bus takes the workers to the construction site. They will come back to Satwa 10 hours later, having earned the equivalent of 12 euros.

   

Thanks to the local business, Satwa is the cheery and cheap go-to place where even locals like to take advantage of the good bargains it offers.

  

Water is not always available and most of the time there is only one shower.

     

Their families have stayed behind. The luckiest ones will go home every year but most of them can only afford to go back once every two years.

    

Because of the shortage of space, the street is used as an extension of the house.

    

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