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Remote community's decade-long wait for clean drinking water
Key takeaways
- Maxine Ningella fills plastic tubs with water from a decade-old donated filter in Pandanus Park.
- An Aboriginal community in Western Australia's north said its fight for clean drinking water has taken more than a decade.
- Advocates and leaders say Pandanus Park is not alone, and improving water quality in remote communities needs to be prioritised across the state.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
Maxine Ningella fills plastic tubs with water from a decade-old donated filter in Pandanus Park. (ABC Kimberley: Rachel Jackson)
An Aboriginal community in Western Australia's north said its fight for clean drinking water has taken more than a decade.
Advocates and leaders say Pandanus Park is not alone, and improving water quality in remote communities needs to be prioritised across the state.
Article preview — originally published by ABC Australia. Full story at the source.
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