African nations unite for lifesaving training
by Laura Fennimore on 20 Sep 2014
RNLI Aquatic Survival Programme being delivered in Zanzibar in 2013. Candidates on the 2014 Future Leaders in Lifesaving course will learn how to deliver this programme. RNLI / Mike Lavis
Lifesavers and swimming experts from 14 African countries, united with the shared goal of saving lives from drowning, have travelled to Zanzibar where they will today begin two weeks of intensive training with the RNLI.
The African continent has the highest drowning rate in the world, largely due to limited lifesaving services and swimming skills, and a high exposure to open water.
Over the next two weeks, 30 trainees from countries across Africa – including Botswana, Cameroon, Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Mauritius, Mozambique, Senegal, Sudan, South Africa, Tanzania, Togo and Uganda – will learn from six RNLI trainers how to run lifesaving services in their home countries.
The course, Future Leaders in Lifesaving, is the only one of its kind, designed and delivered by the RNLI specifically to train and develop lifesavers in countries where drowning is a major cause of death.
The course is split into three core areas: operations, leadership and aquatic survival. The operations and leadership phases will cover everything from hands-on lifesaving skills, setting up a lifeguard service and training new recruits, to strategies for building and sustaining a lifesaving service, and how to manage people.
In the third phase, the candidates will learn about the Aquatic Survival Programme – a course which teaches water safety and survival swimming to children. The RNLI has trialled this course in Zanzibar, by training local teachers and community leaders to deliver these important lessons to such a vulnerable group. The candidates on the Future Leaders in Lifesaving course will learn how to implement the Aquatic Survival Programme back in their home countries, to help ensure the safety of thousands of African children around water.
Steve Wills, the RNLI’s international development manager, says:
‘A staggering 400,000 people drown worldwide each year, with a vast proportion of those being in Africa, which has the highest continental drowning rate in the world. The tragedy of the situation is that drowning is completely preventable – with better lifesaving services and swim-survival skills, lives can be saved.
‘The Future Leaders in Lifesaving course has the potential to make a huge impact in Africa. It will teach a group of very proactive candidates everything they need to know to lay the foundations of very strong and effective lifesaving services, and also establish a programme of vital water safety education for children back in their home countries.
‘It is tailored to help them apply their learning to their specific environments. Importantly, a key advantage of gathering a big group like this is that they can share ideas and experiences, and learn from each other during the two weeks.’
Future Leaders in Lifesaving forms part of the RNLI’s broader international development work, in which the charity is establishing lifesaving programmes and seeking to build a coalition to tackle the global drowning epidemic.
The project benefits from the support of the Princess Charlene of Monaco
Foundation, which works across the world to raise awareness of the dangers of water and the importance of teaching children to swim.
The programme is also supported by Royal Life Saving Society Commonwealth, with a member of their team helping to deliver the course alongside the
RNLI website
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