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Last time you were here, you were looking to help vulnerable children and families. Your support can save and change lives.

For most people, opening a bank account is no great event but for remote communities in Rigo district, Papua New Guinea it is a momentous occasion which means a huge step forward for financial inclusion, security and stability in their lives.

Almost 85% of Papua New Guineans are subsistence farmers or fishermen in rural areas, where access to basic and government services is almost non-existent. Poor roads make access to the majority of communities difficult, infrastructure is limited and there are ever-present law and order problems.

With this in mind, ChildFund is working with children and their communities in Rigo district to improve their income and food security.  Our backyard farming project is helping to train farmers in better agricultural methods and provide necessary equipment to grow their crops. This is a wonderful initiative which is allowing farmers to increase their crop production so they can expand their income earning capacity by selling their surplus crops.

However as the potential for the farmers to grow cash crops on a larger scale increases, access to financial services becomes essential to manage their income. For these communities opening a bank account would usually require a long and rough trek down often inaccessible roads into Port Moresby (the capital of Papua New Guinea) from the mountains.  This is followed by hours in bank queues and then weeks until bank cards are ready.

This is why ChildFund is working with Bank South Pacific (BSP) and the Fresh Produce Development Agency to bring better access to income security for communities. BSP is now conducting community visits to establish bank accounts for farmers. Christine Lauve and her husband are vegetable farmers from Magautou village in Rigo who have benefitted from the mobile banking initiative.

Christine and her husband grow peanuts, zucchini, capsicum and corn to sell to hotels and shops in Port Moresby. Until now, Christine has kept her hard-earned money in a ‘safe’ corner of their village. Now that Christine and her husband have opened a bank account they are able to securely save their money for their family`s future. Through saving from the sale of their backyard produce, Christine is very excited to be much closer to her dream of owning and operating a public motor vehicle (PMV) truck on the Magi Highway, the main access route to Port Moresby, to transport her produce.

Access to mobile banking, EFTPOS and electronic payments is reducing the amount of cash-handling and enables rural farmers to access new markets in Port Moresby as buyers are now able to make payments directly into farmers` accounts. As in anyone`s case, direct account payments mean farmers are no longer spending all their cash immediately €“ instead they are able to budget, save and spend wisely.

ChildFund PNG`s two-fold project in rural Papua New Guinea is contributing to sustainable grass-roots development which is helping communities to invest in a better future for their children.

Back in March I was hired to organise a team to walk the City2Surf on 11 August. This was an amazing opportunity to get involved in one of Sydney`s biggest events and I was able to work with some inspirational people who together raised over $10,000 to immunise children in Papua New Guinea!

When I started working on this event, I had never worked in an office before but I quickly found my feet and with a bit of guidance I developed a good plan for promoting the event, supporting walkers and runners to reach their fundraising targets and organising every last detail of the walk.

It wasn`t long until we had over 20 walkers on our team. I kept in contact with everyone as much as I could and I loved hearing about their fundraising successes. These were amazing people, who not only were completing a tough 14km walk but were also spending their spare time asking their friends and family to sponsor them.

Race day arrived and the atmosphere was sensational. I instantly spotted everyone in their bright green ChildFund shirts. We all had mixed feelings of nerves and excitement all at the same time!

At 9.30am we lined up at the start line, waving our PNG flags – a tribute to the children we were supporting. As we progressed the group naturally split up into super-fast, fast-ish and my group, the easy walkers! I walked the course with Ashley and Tracey for most of the event. We were the back of our team but between us we were just checking no one fell behind.

The walk itself was great we got chatting about our experiences as we climbed Heartbreak Hill,  I think it`s more appropriately called Heartbreak Mountain. Despite the challenge we met loads of other walkers including a pack of blue smurfs, zombies, Ninja Turtles and of course we had to stop to get a photo with them,  any excuse!

I didn`t think 14km was so long but when I saw Bondi Beach I had never felt so relieved. It was amazing to cross the finish line and receive my new City2Surf medal, which takes pride of place in my lounge room! Now between you and me I`m not sure I will put up my hand again to walk this 14km course but I would certainly donate to someone else if they were up for the challenge.

The weather was kind to us (21 degrees) and our team was incredible, interesting, entertaining and energetic. I couldn`t have picked a better group to take on such a challenge. I recommend it to everyone, at least once in their lifetime!

The highlight for me was being part of a team that together raised over $10,000 to immunise children in PNG. Immunisations are something that we take for granted here in Australia but for families in remote communities immunisations can prevent serious illness and even death of babies and toddlers, no one should be denied this basic essential to a healthy childhood.

Thank you to the 34 supporters who walked or ran the City2Surf for ChildFund Australia. You made this dream possible.