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UN Redoubles Efforts to Close Sanitation Gap

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In a bid to improve the health and well-being of millions of people worldwide, the United Nations on 21 June 2011 launched a major push to accelerate progress towards the goal of halving, by 2015, the proportion of the population without access to basic sanitation.

 

In a bid to improve the health and well-being of millions of people worldwide, the United Nations on 21 June 2011 launched a major push to accelerate progress towards the goal of halving, by 2015, the proportion of the population without access to basic sanitation.

Access to sanitation has been recognized by the UN as a human right, a basic service required to live a normal life. And yet, some 2.6 billion people, or half the population in the developing world, still lack access to improved sanitation.

The drive, “Sustainable sanitation: The Five-Year-Drive to 2015,” was established by the General Assembly in a resolution adopted last December that called on Member States to redouble efforts to close the sanitation gap, one of the eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) that world leaders have pledged to achieve by 2015.

The resolution also called for an end to open defecation, the most dangerous sanitation practice for public health and one practiced by over 1.1 billion people who have no access to facilities.

*** See the UNICEF video below on Mozambique’s success with Community Led Total Sanitation***

“Sanitation is a sensitive issue. It is an unpopular subject. Perhaps that is why the sanitation crisis has not been met with the kind of response we need,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said at the launch.

“But that must change,” he added. “It is time to put sanitation and access to proper toilets at the center of our development discussions.”

Ending open defecation, in particular, will not be easy, said the Secretary-General, adding that it will require strong political commitment, a focused policy framework and reliable supply chains for both building and maintaining affordable latrines.

“Most important of all, we need effective public education so people understand the hazards of open defecation. We must convince people to change these unhealthy practices.”

Children under five are the most vulnerable to poor hygiene and inadequate sanitation, two of the major causes of diarrhea. According to the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the disease kills at least 1.2 million children under five each year.

“We can reduce cases of diarrhea in children under five by a third– and save an untold number of young lives – simply by expanding the access of communities to sanitation,” said Anthony Lake, UNICEF’s Executive Director.

He added that focusing on total hygiene does more than improve health. “It can also improve the safety of women and girls, who are often targeted when they are alone outdoors. And providing safe, private toilets may also help girls stay in school – which we know can increase their future earnings and help break the cycle of poverty.”

The Prince of Orange, Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands, who is Chairperson of the UN Secretary-General’s Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation, noted that sanitation is arguably the most overlooked and less advanced Millennium Development Goals (MDG) target.

“It is unglamorous, yet vital,” he stated. “Neglecting the need for proper toilets allows a slow moving crisis to continue.”

The main messages of the new drive, he added, are that sanitation is vital for health, brings dignity, equality and safety, represents a good economic investment and sustains clean environments.

 “Sanitation is a sensitive issue. It is an unpopular subject. Perhaps that is why the sanitation crisis has not been met with the kind of response we need,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said at the launch.

 This news is from UN News, 21 June 2011.

 



Communities in Mozambique lead the way to safe sanitation


UNICEF reports on community-led projects in Mozambique that are part of the 'One Million Initiative' -- which has reduced cases of waterborne illness and is transforming the way poor, rural communities think about water and sanitation. The One Million Initiative aims to reach a million people by 2013 with safe water and sanitation.
An approach called “Community Led Total Sanitation” is underway in three of the country’s poorest provinces. More than 433 communities have now been declared “Open Defecation Free.”
Uploaded to YouTube by unicef on Jul 20, 2011

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