Former sponsored child spearheads major tourism project
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| Mayor Nixon Mamani is determined to help people in his community |
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A former Plan sponsored child who has become one of Bolivia’s most progressive and popular mayors is spearheading a US$2 million project to develop tourism in his home town of Guaqui.
The port of Guaqui, just 90 kilometres from La Paz in the Bolivian Altiplano, is a poor and largely excluded rural community. Mayor Nixon Mamani is determined to change that. He has raised US$2 million to fund the construction of the Lake Titikaka Ecological and Railway Complex.
When it is completed, the complex will have the highest railway in the world and house three museums, wildlife viewing points, craft workshops and a botanical garden.
From shepherd to mayor
Born in 1963, Nixon was a Plan sponsored child. While he had to spend much of his childhood tending sheep, he benefited from an education and eventually completed university, where he qualified as an agronomist.
He said: “When I was child, Plan was training families in adequate soil and seed management so they could produce more. I learnt everything and then applied that knowledge to my land with good results.”
Nixon later helped to set up the first faculty of agronomy in the La Paz Altiplano, which now trains people to degree level and benefits hundreds of peasant young people each year.
Telecentres project
Nearly four decades after being a sponsored child, Nixon is working closely again with Plan on the Telecentres project in Guaqui. The project aims to provide children in rural areas with access to computers, so they can enjoy the same opportunities as those in towns and cities.
The project will provide ten state-of-the-art computers with internet access in safe, modern rooms.
Plan’s vision is of a world in which all children realise their full potential in societies which respect people’s rights and dignity.
Find out more about sponsoring a child
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