In recent years, the work at Ankaful Camp has developed beyond anyone's imagination. It had become clear that many of the residents were never going to be rehabilitated in their home villages, even if the physical possibility existed. Their only home was Camp. The community there was really a village and village structures were actually operating with Elders, a Chief and so on. It became clearer that rehabilitation would have, in some sense, to be of the whole village.
The living conditions were still impoverished. The mud and straw homes offered little protection from animals and from the weather. Life was especially hard for anyone with physical disability. It is not possible, for instance, to move anywhere at all in deep mud using crutches! Visitors came more often though, especially from abroad, and in 1995, Christ The King Sixth Form College in London commissioned the building of a Community Centre in Camp (pictured) to bring dignity and greater facility to these village processes and activities. Residents themselves took part in the project which was completed in 1996. It proved to be a catalyst both for imagination and confidence, a mere starting point for a much more revolutionary development.
In 1997, Friends of Ahotokurom, who until then were only loosely associated benefactors, got together and commissioned plans for the complete rebuilding of the village. An application to the National Lottery was successful, and further fund-raising enabled the project to begin. The land was donated by the government and every resident of Camp, including the very young children, took part in the construction process, each according to ability. By 1999 the work was almost complete with 80 new homes occupied. The official opening in January 2000 saw peoples' lives completely transformed in the newly name village: Enyindakurom (meaning "the village we did not expect").
Roads and pavements have more recently been added. Villagers can live in safety despite their disabilities. They can move freely around the village and newer initiatives have been designed to lift them further into the world of work and self-sustenance through scholarships for training, construction of a market and provision of lock-up shops.