As the wind pulled at the edges of the roof so hard he thought it would lift right off, Mazher Mohammed hugged a 3D printer to his body, vaguely hoping that might provide it with some sort of protection from the sheeting rain.
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| Mazher Mohammed was part of a team that used waste plastic and a 3D printer to help improve water supply in the Solomon Islands. |
“All the stuff around me was just flying around — and I’m holding this printer down as it’s printing out the part we needed to fix the pipe,” he says, shaking his head. “But a Yorkshire man never worries.”
In late January, Dr Mohammed found himself in Visale, a couple of hours along the coast from the Solomon Islands’ capital, Honiara, as cyclonic conditions battered the region. Some local nuns kindly agreed to put up the bedraggled doctor.
Read the story by Liam Mannix in The Age - “Amid a cyclone, aid team turns to 3D printers for rare parts.”

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