Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Healthcare hurdles in Nairobi’s slums

KENYA: Healthcare hurdles in Nairobi’s slums


Photo: Manoocher Deghati/IRIN
Slums are underserved in terms of access to basic amenities
NAIROBI, 11 July 2008 (IRIN) - Quality healthcare is a luxury often beyond the reach of those who live in Nairobi’s slums, such as mother-of-seven Grace Awour Opondo.

"When you are sick you buy medicine from the local shops," Opondo told IRIN. "If you are lucky you recover because the medicine is not usually the right one.

"Sometimes there is no medicine even in the hospitals, so they send you out with a prescription," she said. "Then the chemists are expensive so often one has to make do without the medicine."

According to Sakwa Mwangala, a programme manager with the African Medical and Research Foundation (AMREF), the fact that people are squatting on government land often prevents them from accessing essential services. Slums are regarded as informal illegal settlements, which means they are underserved in terms of infrastructure development and access to basic amenities.

"Government health facilities are also not easily accessible for most slum residents," said Mwangala, who heads AMREF's Kibera integrated healthcare programme. Kibera, on the southwestern edge of central Nairobi, is one of the largest and most densely populated slums in sub-Saharan Africa.

Most people operating health “facilities” in the slums are quacks, he said. “There is a lack of quality control, with the people in most of these clinics lacking skills."

The urban poor fare worse than their rural counterparts on most health indicators, according to a report, Profiling the burden of disease on the residents of Nairobi slums prepared by the African Population and Health Research Center (APHRC).

Pneumonia, diarrhoeal diseases and stillbirths account for more than half the deaths of children under-five, while HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, interpersonal violence injuries and road traffic accidents account for more than two-thirds of deaths among people aged five years and older, stated the report.

The poor health status of slum children is in part due to continuous exposure to environmental hazards coupled with a lack of basic amenities.

"The chances of one becoming sick are high because of the poor sanitation; most of the houses are also poorly ventilated," according to Leonard Wawire, a teacher in the Mathare slum.

"Here, there are no trees to clean the air; any plant growing is usually growing out of waste," Wawire said.

Prevention measures

Eliya Zulu, APHRC’s director of research, told IRIN it was important to adopt a holistic approach to healthcare for the urban poor, one that focused as much on prevention – through improved nutrition and immunisation against major childhood diseases – as on treatment.


Photo: Julius Mwelu/IRIN
Grace Opondo, a resident of Mathare slums
“Increasingly, most people in the urban areas are living in deplorable conditions yet it is generally assumed that the better hospitals and schools are in the urban areas,” Zulu said.

When conducting general health surveys, urban areas tend to rank better than rural areas in terms of the health indicators. This, however, failed to bring into focus the health situation of the urban poor, he said.

The problems of the urban poor have often been overlooked while rural areas are seen as more vulnerable to shocks.

"In the rural set-up there is a sense of normalcy; you can have your toilet, the community also has a stream from which they draw their water - this is not the case in the slums," Mwangala of AMREF said.

Many deaths in the slums are caused by preventable and treatable conditions, according to the APHRC report; inadequate sanitation encourages the spread of skin and waterborne diseases.

In a bid to improve sanitation in Kibera, a Kenyan NGO, the Umande Trust, is running a project that not only provides quality toilets for residents but also transforms human waste into biogas and liquid fertiliser.

Residents in areas such as Katwekera and Laini Saba in Kibera, pay two shillings (three US cents) to use the toilets and showers, according to Josiah Omotto of the Trust. For a subscription of 80 shillings ($1.19) a month, households get unlimited access to the facility.

The buildings’ basements house bio-digester domes, which turn human waste into methane and liquid fertiliser.

''When you are sick you buy medicine from the local shops; if you are lucky you recover because the medicine is not usually the right one''
According to Omotto, these help reduce the local use of firewood. Already, he said, the methane from the facility in Laini Saba was being used for fuel by a local nursery school. There are plans to construct similar facilities in other slums to supply the gas to residents living near the facilities.

So far, at least 500 residents are benefiting from each facility.

The division of environmental health in Kenya's Ministry of Health is finalising policy documents aimed at ensuring that 90 percent of households have access to, and make use of, hygienic, affordable, functional and sustainable toilet and hand-washing facilities.

The policies also aim at reducing the national rate of preventable sanitation-related diseases by half.

aw/am/mw

Theme(s): (IRIN) Children, (IRIN) Environment, (IRIN) Health & Nutrition, (IRIN) Water & Sanitation

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Sanitation briefing


updated October 2008


Risky sanitation for children in Nepal
Risky sanitation for children in Nepal © Mark Naftalin
Progress towards the sanitation target within the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) has been extremely disappointing. Defined as a facility which removes excreta from the risk of human contact, “safe” sanitation encompasses covered pit latrines as well as flush toilets. Since its belated addition to the MDGs in 2002, the sanitation target has been the Cinderella of the cause, attracting little over 10% of funds available for water and sanitation programmes.

Development agencies must accept some responsibility, their publicity cameras preferring to linger on happy children working the pump handle, drops of water glistening in sunlight. Latrines offer less inspiring images and copy. Even the UN’s declaration of the period 2005-2015 as the “International Decade for Action - Water for Life” betrayed neglect of sanitation, in presentation if not intent.

The consequence is that 18% of the world’s population – including half of the population of South Asia – continues to suffer the indignity of open defecation, mostly in rural areas. Global access to safe sanitation increased only from 54% to 62% in the period 1990-2006, leaving 2.5 billion people without access, a figure which has barely changed in recent years. In sub-Saharan Africa progress from 26% to 31% extrapolates to arrive at the target sometime during the 22nd century.

The development industry has recently taken great strides to redress its lopsided focus on drinking water. The UN corrected its earlier omission by proclaiming 2008 as the Year of Sanitation and the development agencies have overhauled their presentations.

For example, the suggestion that diarrhoea is caused by drinking contaminated water presents an incomplete picture and more attention is now given to the link with unsafe sanitation and poor hygiene practices which ultimately are a major contributor to child mortality. The specialist international agency, WaterAid, has been referring to “sanitation and water” in its communications, inverting the more familiar phrase.

A further important output of this fresh approach has been the calculation that sanitation projects deliver highly impressive economic returns of $9 for each $1 of investment, thanks to lower healthcare costs and less disruption to school and work attendance.

more background and useful links:

OneWorld Water and Sanitation Guide

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Kenya: Mathare Slum Dwellers Protest over Water

Casper Waithaka

30 September 2009

Nairobi — Transport on a busy Nairobi road was paralysed on Wednesday following violent protests over water due to illegal connections.

Police were called in to quell the protests and restore order along Juja Road as Mathare slum dwellers lit fires to protest over the disconnection of water.

Nairobi City Water and Sewerage Company communications officer, Ms Grace Some-Mwangi, said the disconnection had been prompted by the operation of illegal connections by many slum dwellers.

The slum has had flowing water even as other city areas continue to suffer rationing due to the shortage caused by a prolonged dry spell. The water company reconnected supply.

Pelted with stones

A number of people were injured and were treated at the nearby Moi Air Base dispensary and Kenyatta National Hospital. Motorists faced the full wrath of the crowd, which consisted mostly of young people, as they pelted vehicles with stones and shattered windows.

Thieves also took advantage of the situation to steal from people caught up in the ensuing confusion. Hundreds of passengers from Huruma were left stranded as matatus used alternative routes to escape the protests.

Ms Millicent Awori, a resident of Bondeni, said the protests were inevitable as they could not survive without water. "It was disconnected unfairly and we do not have the money to buy the commodity at high prices," she said.

However, other residents blamed water vendors for the protests. They said the vendors had made illegal connections that they were trying to protect. Representatives of the water company, residents and the government are expected to meet today to chart the way forward.

Ethiopia: OSA Calls for Assessment of Lake Koka Pollution - Letter to Pittards

September 28, 2009 at 4:42 am

Gadaa.com

Gadaa.com received a letter from the new president of the Oromo Studies Association (OSA), Dr. Haile Hirpa, with the subject: “Re: Pollution of Lake Koka” and addressed to the management of the Ethiopia Tannery S.C. (ETSC), Pittards plc.


Case Study: April 2009 - This KMBC news reports on the link between chromium and brain tumor. The chromium was a by-product of a tannery in Cameron, Missouri (USA). Chromium was one of the chemicals found in lakes along the Ethiopian Rift Valley and a nearby tannery in Ethiopia. More @ Gadaa.com/Environment

It’s to be noted that the former president of OSA, Dr. Abebe Adugna, wrote a letter to the management of ETSC to take responsibility for the pollution of Lake Koka, clean up the lake and compensate residents for damages; Dr. Adugna’s letter came after the airing of the Al Jazeera documentary on the subject in February 2009.

Pittards plc denied the accusations in a letter sent to OSA in June 2009 stating that OSA’s evidence (a study about Lake Koka’s pollution) was from 2003 whilst Pittards took over ETSC in 2005. Pittards plc also affirmed its commitment to environmental stewardship and offered a meeting with OSA in the future to discuss the subject.

While letters are traded between OSA and ETSC management, thousands of people still remain affected by chemical poisoning in drinking water fetched from the polluted Lake Koka - with no action from the government of Meles Zenawi. Mr. Zenawi, who has ironically and deceivingly become the negotiator of African environmental issues at the UN Copenhagen Climate Change Conference 2009, has turned a blind eye on the thousands of people affected by Lake Koka’s pollution; the lake is located less than a hundred kilometers from his Palace. Mr. Zenawi has no moral authority to speak of the environmental ills the West has caused to Africa while his environmental policies at home are resulting in Lake Koka’s pollution and others listed at Gadaa.com/Environment.

——– Full Text of Dr. Haile Hirpa’s Letter to the Management of ETSC ——-

September 27, 2009
Mr. Reg Hankey
Pittards PLC
Sherborne Road, Yoevil
Somerset, England BA21 5BA

Re: Pollution of Lake Koka

Dear Mr. Hankey:

I am writing in response to your June 1, 2009 letter to my predecessor as President of the Oromo Studies Association (”OSA”), Dr. Abebe Adugna.

On behalf of OSA, I appreciate your stated commitment to sustainable development in Ethiopia and your willingness to engage in a dialogue on this important environmental issue, which impacts so many Ethiopians. I also appreciate your invitation to meet on this issue.

I respectfully disagree with your suggestion that my predecessor’s May 3, 2009 letter was not “fully research[ed].” As you know, a scientific study published in August 2002 observed that effluents from Ethiopia Tannery Share Company (“ETSC”) facility:

might very likely contain highly toxic forms. In cases where such forms are available, bioaccumulation of the metals by aquatic biota is inevitable. Such metal accumulations are also very likely to occur in the biota of the terrestrial areas around these lakes.

A preliminary determination of heavy metal concentrations in the extract of watermelon grown around Lake Koka contained alarmingly high concentrations of [chromium, iron, nickel and lead].1

As reported by “People and Power,” many local residents identify the Pittards-run facility as an ongoing source of pollutants contaminating Lake Koka.2 A local farmer whose livestock grazes by the tannery’s effluent stream recounted: “What comes from this factory has killed the cattle. It burns the plants. It’s no good for harvesting. It’s no good for people either.”3

Indeed, when interviewed on the subject, you apparently were unwilling to definitively rule out the Pittards facility as a source of pollutants: “Saying it’s all associated with the tannery in the northwest that we’re associated with is probably incorrect. That’s not to say that we’re saying there aren’t some issues. I don’t know if there are or aren’t. . . .”4

Unlike your earlier statement, your June 1, 2009 letter now denies without reservation that the tannery “is responsible in any way for any pollution found in Lake Koka.” None of the evidence you cite in your letter, however, appears to exonerate the tannery.

· While you mention that the tannery does not discharge effluent directly into the lake and that the effluent liquors are used to irrigate land within the boundaries of the ETSC compound, you do not state that those effluents are free of pollutants or that any pollutants do not find their way to the lake water. To the extent Pittards has conducted or is aware of any recent scientific studies showing that the heavy metals and other pollutants found around Lake Koka in the August 2002 study are not being discharged from the tannery, I ask that you please make those available.

· While you mention the tannery’s ISO 14001 accreditation, it is our understanding that obtaining ISO 14001 status does not require a firm to reduce pollution below specified levels or to use particular pollution control technologies. It is further our understanding that a firm does not even need to be in compliance with applicable regulations, but rather must declare a commitment to the goal of compliance. Moreover, critics have noted the conflicting interests of the consulting firms that perform ISO 14001 audits, which may call into question their reliability. I ask that Pittards make available all materials relating to ISO 14001 audits of the ETSC facility.

· While you include a statement from the Ministry of Trade and Industry (“MTI”), the MTI does not reference any recent water quality studies or other scientific evidence in connection with its claims. The statement merely recites – oftentimes word for word – the assertions made in your letter. I ask that Pittards make available any studies or other reports conducted by or on behalf of the MTI or any other agency of the Ethiopian government relating to the tannery.

As my predecessor mentioned in his May 3, 2009 letter, Pittards can still do much good to help address this situation. As an initial matter, I ask that Pittards work with OSA and other appropriate organizations to conduct environmental assessments of the Lake Koka area in order to establish conclusively the sources of pollutants and to assist the relevant authorities in Ethiopia in devising and implementing a viable remediation plan. If Pittards believes that it is not causing harm to the Lake Koka environment, participation in such an endeavor would go a long ways towards dispelling the belief among local residents and others about the tannery’s impact. Participation would also provide very tangible evidence of Pittards’ stated commitment to sustainable development in Ethiopia. I would be happy to arrange a meeting with Pittards by representatives from my group to devise a plan agreeable to all interested parties.

I look forward to hearing from you.

Sincerely,

Haile Hirpa, Ph. D
OSA President

References:
1. G.M. Zinabu & Nicholas J.G. Pearce, “Concentrations of heavy metals and related trace elements in some Ethiopian rift-valley lakes and their in-flows,” Hydrobiologia 429, 171-178 (2003) (emphasis added, internal citations omitted).
2. “Green Lake,” People and Power (aired February 21, 2009).
3. Id.
4. Id.

* The letter in .Doc format.

————————–

RELATED:
- Oromia - Environment in Peril @ Gadaa.com/Environment
- OSA Website
- OSA: The Ethiopian Tannery Responsible for Lake Koka Pollution
- Oromia: Pittards plc and the Ethiopian Ministry of Trade/Industry Respond to the Oromo Studies Association’s Concern About the Pollution of Lake Koka

Ghana: NGOs Institute Sanitation And Hygiene Awards

Ghanaian Chronicle (Accra)

Michael Boateng

25 September 2009


African Media Aid (AFRIMA) and Global Media Foundation (GLOMEF), human rights and social development non-governmental organisations (NGOs) based in Sunyani, will from next year institute Sanitation and Hygiene Awards to recognise outstanding achievements of organisations, individuals and communities in the country, in the area of sanitation and hygiene.

The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of AFRIMA, Raphael Godlove Ahenu, who announced this, said the awards would help motivate individuals and organisations to support and mobilise communities to improve upon their sanitation and hygienic conditions.

Mr. Ahenu was speaking at the launch of a campaign dubbed, "Access to Clean Water and Sanitation." The event was on the theme: "Investing in Water and Sanitation: A Wise Investment for Health, Dignity and Development," at Odumase in the Sunyani West District of the Brong-Ahafo Region.

The CEO of AFRIMA noted that records indicate that over 1.8 million children die from diarrhoea, which could be prevented with access to clean water.

He continued that school days were lost to water-related diseases, and that the majority of the populations in developing countries, suffer from health problems caused by lack of clean water supply and poor sanitation.

According to him, a survey conducted by AFRIMA in the Brong-Ahafo Region, indicates that many schools and communities in the region do not have toilet facilities and potable water.

Mr. Ahenu said it was against this background, that AFRIMA/GLOMEF initiated the campaign, with the main goal of creating public awareness on the negative effects of unsafe water and poor sanitation.

He said under the campaign, toilets and water would be provided for needy communities and schools. The District Chief Executive (DCE) for Sunyani West, Kwadwo Osei Asibey, in a speech read on his behalf said, considering the importance of water and sanitation in the life of man, it falls on all to invest in those sectors, to ensure quality life.

He noted that the assembly had rehabilitated seven boreholes in some communities, at the cost of GH¢4,090, and commended AFRIMA/GLOMEF for the initiative, and pledged that the Assembly would support the campaign.

The District Environmental Health Officer, Isaka Adamu, on his part, appealed to the Sunyani West District Assembly to provide the sanitary inspectors in the district with motorbikes, to make them more mobile in their duties.

Kenya: Water Kiosks to be set up in Estates

Johnstone Ole Turana

30 September 2009


Nairobi — Water selling points are to be constructed in Nairobi's housing estates in a bid to ease the shortage of water facing residents.

The Athi Water Services Board, (AWSB), which has invited bids for the construction of the water kiosks, is also seeking to improve sanitation facilities in informal settlements and arrest illegal connections that are being used to divert water and rob the Nairobi Water and Sewerage Company of revenue.

"The construction of the water kiosks is intended to ease the high cost of water residents are paying to existing privately-owned water outlets", said Kenneth Owuocha, public relations officer at the Athi Water Services Board.

The AWSB is mandated to develop water and sanitation infrastructure within its area of jurisdiction and hand over such facilities to the Nairobi City Water and Sewerage Company for management.

The plans envisage the construction of 10 water kiosks and 12 ablution blocks as well as the improvement of the sewer lines and provision and installation of 376 individual and 50 communal water meters.

The programme will cover Kahawa Soweto village, Gitathuru, Madoya, and Mahira villages. Other informal settlements that will benefit from the construction are Kambi Moto and Kiambiu villages.

According to Mr Owuocha, the installation of the meters will reduce the level of unaccountable water use and curb revenue loss to the water company. The board faces the daunting task of upgrading its ageing infrastructure which has been blamed for water leakage and illegal connections.


The improvement of water and sanitation facilities in the informal settlement is a five-year programme funded by the European Union. It comes at a time when the country is facing acute water shortages as failure of rains that has led to drying of major rivers across the country.

Nairobi and its environs are currently undergoing a water rationing programme.

According to the water board, "Kenya is a water scarce country and with intermittent drought the acute water shortage is exacerbated. Hence the urgent need to develop adequate storage facilities that will guarantee adequate water supplies in the face of unpredictable weather patterns."

The current crisis is blamed on the failure to implement previous recommendations to expand water reservoirs.

Kenya: Slum Dwellers to Get Sh1.7 Billion Sanitation Upgrade

Nairobi)

Allan Odhiambo

30 September 2009


Nairobi — Thousands of poor urban households will gain access to water and sanitation services in a Sh1.7 billion deal targeting the slums.

"This initiative specifically targets the slums," Mr David Stower, the Water PS, told journalists in Nairobi on Tuesday after signing the agreement on behalf of the government.

The targeted water and sanitation projects will be run as part of a special initiative dubbed the Urban Programme Concept (UPC) and funded through a multilateral agreement between Kenya, the German government and the European Union (EU).

"Households in these urban slums have serious challenges in accessing water year round," the PS said.

Funds from the Sh1.7 billion grant will be managed and disbursed by the Water Services Trust Fund (WSTF) even though the actual implementation of the project will be carried out by Water Service Providers(WSPs) operating in the target areas.

Some 800,000 people are expected to benefit from the initiative to be implemented over the next four years, starting with locations that fall under the Lake Victoria North Water Services Board (LVNWSB).

Estimates by the Water ministry show that only about 60 per cent of Kenya's urban population has access to water while only 55 per cent have access to basic sanitation facilities.

"We expect this initiative to improve the lives of households," Mr Eric van der Linden, the Head of the European Commission delegation in Kenya said.The WSTF made the first call for proposals under the UPC initiative earlier this year.

According to initial estimates, the first phase was projected to encompass 15 projects to reach 100,000 inhabitants of low income urban areas with quality water at a cost of Sh100 million.

Each of the five WSPs that fall within the territory of the LVNWSB including Western, Eldowas, Nzowasco, Amatsi and Kapsabet were invited to submit three proposals each.

A total of 12 proposals were received, with 9 approved upon evaluation.

Call for proposalsAccording to the scope of work outlined in the approved proposals, some 42 new water kiosks will be built, 20 existing ones renovated and 97 new yard taps constructed.

In addition, the existing water supply pipeline within the region will be extended by 25,585 meters and an elevated tank with a storage capacity of 648 cubic meters installed.

On completion, the nine new projects approved in this initial phase within the LVNWSB zone are now projected to cost Sh74 million and to about 150,000 people.

Another call for proposals is expected to be announced next week with the WSFT looking to finance about 25 projects at an estimated cost of Sh200million and to benefit 300,000 people in the low income bracket.

The signing of the funding agreements for this call is planned for January 2010 upon the evaluation and approval of the proposal.

WSTF chief executive officer Mrs Jacqueline Musyoki said the fund targets supplying water to 1.4 million people and sanitation facilities to 400,000 people by 2011.

"Currently the urban poor pay more for water that is of poor quality and the women and girls take longer to fetch water," she said.

Mr Stower said projects under the UPC would be rolled out in urban areas such Nairobi, Mombasa,Nyeri and Kisumu where thousands of poor households have difficulties in accessing the basic services.

Meanwhile the government expects the current water shortage in Nairobi and its environs to ease in the when the anticipated October-December rains come.

"The Ndakaini dam is currently at 30 per cent of its capacity but we expect it to fully recover within a short time if the rains come.

The rehabilitation of the Sasumua dam is also near complete and we expect stable supplies," the PS said.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

New water, sanitation and hygiene programme takes off in Ethiopia


News, 7/23/2009 | Embassy of Finland, Addis Ababa

Following a 15-month planning phase, the Finland-Ethiopia Rural Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene Programme in Benishangul-Gumuz (FINNWASH BG) has officially moved to its implementation phase for the period of 2009-2012. The programme targets the Northern administrative zone Metekel, with five woreda-districts, and a population of some 250.000.

A Gumuz girl using a newly installed water point. Photo: Antti Inkinen.A Gumuz girl using a newly installed water point. Photo: Antti Inkinen.

The overall objective of the programme is to help the Benishangul-Gumuz regional state to achieve the country's ambitious plan to extend access to water and sanitation to 98% of the inhabitants in Metekel by the end of 2012. Outlined in Ethiopia's principle WASH strategic plan named the Universal Access Plan (UAP), this is a considerable task, particularly taking into account that at the end of 2008 access rates in rural Ethiopia average 52%.

Finland has been active in the water supply sector since the beginning of its Rural Water Supply and Environmental Programme (RWSEP) in 1994 in the Amhara regional state. During RWSEP, currently in its fourth and final phase, an innovative mechanism to channel grant funding for water point construction was devised (the Community Development Fund - CDF). Focusing on community-driven management, CDF, has shown excellent results in terms of construction speed, effectiveness cost-efficiency, and sustainability.

Replicating the success in other areas

After promising results in Amhara, Ethiopia officially requested support from Finland to help replicate it in other areas. Accordingly, Benishangul Gumuz, and particularly the Metekel zone adjacent to the RWSEP programme areas, was jointly selected for replication.

The planning phase aimed to establish a clear way forward in an area that is scarcely populated, poorer in economic terms, has less infrastructure, great distances and less accessibility, particularly in terms of CDF applicability. During this phase, capacity has been built, studies conducted, community demand ensured and, importantly the first 82 water points constructed.

While challenges exist, with enhanced information based on hands-on experience, the joint cooperation has now been able to plan and budget for four years of WASH development.

For more information, please contact the Embassy of Finland in Addis Ababa: antti.inkinen@formin.fi, or martha.solomon@formin.fi

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This document

Updated 7/23/2009

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© Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland 2006 | About this site | Web Communications Unit

A Snapshot of Sanitation in Africa (Water supply andSanitatio)

This tabulation has been prepared by the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply andSanitation (JMP2) as its contribution to the Second African Conference on Sanitation and Hygiene, held in Durban, South Africa in February 2008. It contains a new set of sanitation coverage estimates for Africa for the year 2006 based on preliminary JMP estimates.

The estimates presented in this document originate from data collected by national statistics offices along withother relevant institutions through national censuses and nationally representative household surveys, including Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS), Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) and World Health Surveys among others.


DOWNLOAD THE DOCUMENT
http://www.who.int/entity/water_sanitation_health/monitoring/africasan.pdf

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Kenya: A Struggle for Survival As Food, Water, Power Miss



Catholic Information Service for Africa (Nairobi)

24 July 2009


Many Kenyans are facing perhaps the worst struggle for survival in living memory as they have to make do with diminishing supplies of food, water and electricity.

Early in the year the government declared the famine afflicting 10 million people a national disaster, but the evidence months later indicates that the problem has worsened.

This week, the ministers for water and irrigation, agriculture, special programmes, livestock and energy briefed President Mwai Kibaki on the food, water, and energy crisis and discussed measures to address the shortages.

Details of a comprehensive report on the situation handed to the president were not made public, but he promised that everything will be done to save the endangered lives.

Water and Irrigation Minister Charity Ngilu said the government will drill 250 water boreholes across the country, 50 of which will be in Nairobi, to address the acute water shortage. Already 15 boreholes have been drilled in the capital where water vendors are doing roaring business. The remaining 35 boreholes will be completed by the end of August.

Agriculture Minister William Ruto outlined the measures his ministry is taking to bridge the grain shortfall in the country occasioned by insufficient rains in the main grain producing areas.

Importation of duty-free maize has been extended to January next year. Arrangements have also been made to ensure adequate free and subsidized fertilizers and certified seeds to farmers to boost production.

Energy Minister Kiraitu said his ministry has taken measures to ensure the production of an extra 246 megawatts to meet the country's increasing demand for electricity. Money has also been set aside for emergency power production.

Livestock Minister Dr. Mohammed Kuti noted that the ongoing drought in parts of the country has affected 3.3 million cattle, 9 million sheep and goats, 150,000 donkeys and the lives of 524,000 households.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Uganda: Pay Less And Save With the Prepaid Water Mach

Source: The Monitor
Sharon Omurungi

23 July 2009


Kampala — For a long time, many of Uganda's water users have had to grapple with the difficulties that stem from the water metre. For many of them it has been and still is difficult to decipher how their water bills come about. Sometimes, you may find yourself paying much more money than you should pay because you use the water less often and this can be frustrating.

Recently the prepaid water machine was introduced by the country's National Water and Sewage Corporation. The facility comes in handy to help you know the amount of water that you use within a given period. It also helps you to plan ahead for the amount of water that you intend to use.

Mr Jeff Kiiza Kabagambe, Head of Technical, Urban Pro Poor Project says, "the machine owner takes their token to the nearest vendor and recharges it once the water is finished. This can be recharged up to the amount of water that you want."

A pre paid water machine is an electrical water metre (it operates electronically). There are three categories of the prepaid machine which include; the Communal Water Dispenser (CWD) and the Public Water Point (PWP)

"These two are self explanatory; that is, CWD and PWP, and the tariff is for the low income earners; in other words, it functions like a normal phone booth," Mr Kabagambe explains.

The second one is Yard Tap (YT) which is installed in an enclosure of a minimum of eight homes or families.

"For the CWD, PWP and YT, they have the same operating system where after installation at a recommended location, the community around is mobilised to go for token registration for every home or any person working in the area." Mr Kabagambe says.

He adds that a token is registered free and it is the unit you have to use in order to use the system to dispense water at any of the unit you come across.

The third is the House Hold (HH) that is installed on private/ domestic premises or commercial premises; that is, washing bays and institutions. The HH uses only one programmed token, which is restricted to one metre.

The prepaid machine is far cheaper than the conventional metre because instead of the original Shs50 or 100 per jerrican, each 20 litre jerrican on the prepaid machine costs Shs19.64.

The general charge on a prepaid water machine is Shs982(one thousand litres) per water unit.

"National Water Sewerage Corporation (NWSC) has been selling a 20litre jerrican at Shs17.43 (this is a tariff for the poor) but the people who could afford to apply and serve or sell to the poor have been over-charging them, thus asking for Shs50 to 100 a jerrican while on a pre- paid one using a token to draw water can be able to get a person three to six jerricans on the same amount of money," Mr Kabagambe says.

Mr Kabagambe says the pre paid machine was mainly set up for the poor to be able to access safe water at affordable costs.

Apart from the water being cheap, the machine teaches and helps one to save water because the customer pays before consumption.

For one to get the prepaid machine, they can go to the project office in Kisenyi 11 parish called Urban Pro Poor or any nearest NWSC office to get information on the machine.

"In this case, no one looks for you to pay your bills. This system does not have a conventional metre and it does not subject to disconnection since it is pre paid and NWSC lose nothing. It is up to the token holder to disconnect or reconnect themselves," Mr Kabagambe said.

About owning a prepaid machine Mr Kabagambe says it is only a House Hold type that can be owned as a business. The YT, CWD and PWP can only be owned privately.

Mr Kabagambe says there are many benefits of owning a pre paid machine. For instance, one can access water on the actual price of NWSC ensuring that one is in full control of what they can afford. For example, one can load a given amount on his/ her token based on their budget. There is a 24/7 access supply on CWD, PWP & YT machines and there is no end- of- month bills and disconnections on YT & HH.

Mr Kabagambe explains, "NWSC has benefited from the operation because there are (fewer arrears ; there is reduced cost on our part. Revenue collection for pre paid machines has never dropped since it started."

A child drinking water from a tap. The prepaid water metre will help reduce the problems that come with wrongful billing.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Tap Water in 42 States Contaminated by Chemicals

EWG Tap Water Probe Reveals 141 Unregulated Chemicals Flowing into U.S. Homes

By Larry West, About.com

Public water supplies in 42 U.S. states are contaminated with 141 unregulated chemicals for which the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has never established safety standards, according to an investigation by the Environmental Working Group (EWG).

Tainted Tap Water Used by Millions of Americans

Another 119 regulated chemicals—a total of 260 contaminants altogether—were found by the environmental group in a two-and-a-half-year analysis of more than 22 million tap water quality tests. The tests, which are required under the federal Safe Drinkingfederal Safe Drinking Water Act, were conducted at nearly 40,000 utilities that supply water to 231 million people.

Pollution Threatens Tap Water Quality
According to a report by the EWG, the top 10 states with the most contaminants in their drinking water were California, Wisconsin, Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, Texas, New York, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Illinois—in that order. EWG said the biggest sources of contaminants were agriculture, industry and pollution from sprawl and urban runoff.

Utilities Need More Enforceable Standards for Tap Water
EWG's analysis also found that almost all U.S. water utilities comply fully with enforceable health standards once they are developed. The problem, according to the environmental group, is the EPA's failure to establish enforceable health standards and monitoring requirements for many tap water contaminants.

"Our analysis clearly demonstrates the need for greater protection of the nation's tap water supplies, and for increased health protections from a number of pollutants that are commonly found but currently unregulated." said Jane Houlihan, vice president for science at EWG, in a prepared statement. "Utilities routinely go beyond what is required to protect consumers from these contaminants, but they need more money for testing, and for protection of vital source waters."

Additional Information:

Saturday, July 11, 2009

G-8 Renews Gleneagles Aid Pledge to Africa, Statement Says



By Steve Scherer

July 10 (Bloomberg) -- Group of Eight countries today renewed their 2005 $50-billion pledge on aid to Africa and promised to coordinate efforts to improve water and sanitation on the continent, according to statements by leaders meeting in L’Aquila, Italy.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon last month said G-8 countries are $20 billion behind on their pledge made at a previous summit in Gleneagles, Scotland.

Last Updated: July 10, 2009 05:04 EDT

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

10 Sanitation Stories: Case Studies from Around the World

UNICEF publications

These 10 case studies cover a wide range of experiences from the field in the sanitation sector, documenting successes and challenges in various settings.

1. Egypt: Empowered for good: Children in Upper Egypt change environment and sanitation habits [PDF]

2. India: SWASTHH: India’s ‘clean school and village’ movement [PDF]

3. Senegal: ‘Building for life’—in the midst of civil insurgency [PDF]

4. Bolivia: A new-fangled device arrives in the Bolivian Altiplano: the toilet [PDF]

5. Cambodia: A Cambodian village decides to bring sanitation closer to home [PDF]

6. Zambia: Chief Macha’s toilet revolution [PDF]

7. Nepal: School-led total sanitation seems unstoppable [PDF]

8. Sierra Leone: Singing about the unmentionable [PDF]

9. Nicaragua: ‘Being dirty had to end’ [PDF]

10. Bangladesh: Tackling menstrual hygiene taboos [PDF]

The big picture (Watsan)

The big picture

UNICEF Image
© UNICEF/HQ05-2242/Giacomo Pirozzi
A girl in Morocco carries water to her family’s nomadic compound in the Sahara Desert.

Children's rights to an adequate standard of living and to the highest attainable standard of health are enshrined in the Convention on the Rights of the Child. The fulfilment of these rights is the ultimate goal of UNICEF's water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) programmes.

WASH is a central component of the millennium development agenda. Without significant improvements in water and sanitation access and hygiene practices the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) related to child mortality, primary education, disease reduction, environmental sustainability and poverty eradication will not be achieved.

“Safe drinking water and adequate sanitation are crucial for poverty reduction, crucial for sustainable development, and crucial for achieving any and every one of the Millennium Development Goals” – UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon

The MDGs include the specific water and sanitation target of halving, by 2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation. UNICEF is also working to meet a second target of ensuring that all schools have adequate child-friendly water and sanitation facilities and hygiene education programmes. To meet these targets, UNICEF is guided by a new set of strategies that defines the shape of UNICEF WASH programmes to 2015.

UNICEF is part of a growing global effort to meet this challenge. Together with governments, NGOs and other external support agencies, UNICEF is expanding its efforts to meet the WASH challenge.

Achieving the Millennium Development Goals in Water, Sanitation and Hygiene in Africa with a Gender Perspective


Publication Date

September 1, 2005

Summary

A roundtable discussion was organised jointly by the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council (WSSCC) as a side event during the 2005 World Summit that took place at the United Nations in New York from September 14 to 16. Moderated by Ms. Vanessa Tobin, Chief of Environment, Water and Sanitation of UNICEF, the roundtable featured speakers such as: H.E. Marc Ravalomenana , President of the Republic of Madagascar, Minister Maria Mutagamba, Minister of State for Water , Uganda and President of African Minister Council on Water (AMCOW), Minister Hilde F. Johnson, Minister of International Development of Norway, Mr. Kul Gautam, Deputy Director of UNICEF, representing Ms. Ann Veneman , Executive Director of UNICEF and Mr. Roberto L. Lenton, Chair of WSSCC.

The participants discussed how the lack of safe water, sanitation and hygiene awareness remains one of the world’s most urgent health issues. Some 1.1 billion people worldwide still lack safe water and 2.6 billion have no basic sanitation facilities, according to the UNICEF/WHO 2005 report “Water for Life.” Sub-Saharan Africa is the only region likely to miss Millennium Development Goal (MDG) targets on both safe water and basic sanitation, unless the world acts quickly to turn this around. Millennium Development Goal (MDG) no. 7 calls on countries to reduce by half the number of people worldwide who are living without these basic services.

They further discussed how unsafe water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene habits play a major role in Africa's high child mortality rate. Diarrhea is the third-biggest child killer in Africa after pneumonia and malaria, accounting for 701,000 child deaths out of 4.4 million on the continent every year. It also leaves millions of children with chronic malnutrition, the underlying cause of over half of all child mortality. The consequences are particularly severe for African women and children. Despite progress in some countries, currently only 58 per cent of Africans live within 30 minutes walk of an improved water source and only 36 percent have even a basic toilet. Minister Johnson, one of the three co-conveners of the WSSCC initiative 'Women Leaders for WASH,' claims that the problem lies with the “un-sexiness” of sanitation for governments, international organisations and donors alike. "In many parts of the world, sanitation and hygiene are ' woman's issues' and most of those in decision-making positions are men, they seem to be placing higher priority on other issues; this needs to change”, she said.

According to the discussions, education also suffers with more than half of all girls who drop out of primary school doing so for lack of separate toilets and easy access to safe water. In her statement read by her Deputy Director, Mr Kul Gautam , Ms. Veneman reiterated UNICEF’s commitment to the improvement of school sanitation. "In Uganda," said Minister Mutagamba, "we have seen a great increase in the school attendance of girls after having introduced sanitation facilities in schools." Minister Johnson concluded her speech by urging other women leaders, political or otherwise, to join in the struggle: "As women but also as leaders, it is time that we break the taboo of sanitation and that we act to deliver for the target of sanitation and water," she said.

Solutions for addressing this problem were proposed by the participants as follows:

  • Make the case for sanitation and hygiene. We need to convince Heads of States and Governments, donors and finance ministers that there are substantial economic and social gains to be made by investing in sanitation and water supply for the people.
  • Women need to be involved from the beginning! We have talked for so long of mainstreaming gender issues and ensure that they become a natural part of the implementation of water supply and sanitation efforts. Now it is time to act!
  • Equip all schools with acceptable sanitation and hygiene facilities. Involve children as agents of change within their own communities, schools and households. Proper school sanitation and hygiene awareness will also ensure proper education for girls and boys.

Source

Emails from Eirah Gorre-Dale to The Communication Initiative on September 26 2005 and August 7 2006; and email from Carolien van der Voorden to The Communication Initiative on November 2 2006.


Placed on the Communication Initiative site December 07 2005
Last Updated February 05 2009

Involvement / community participation in hygiene and water in ...


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    from the CREPA network in Central and Western Africa. .... perspective of reciprocity in water, sanitation and hygiene solutions research. ...
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Egypt improves access to water and sanitation


Egypt has made great strides in improving access to drinking water and is well-situated to address remaining challenges related to water and sanitation, a United Nations independent human rights expert said today.

tap_dripping

"The level of political and financial commitment to tackle these complicated issues is to be commended," said Catarina de Albuquerque, the Independent Expert on the issue of human rights obligations related to access to safe drinking water and sanitation, as she wrapped up an eight-day visit to Egypt today.

As a result of the Government's "good experience" in these areas in recent years, she said, authorities are better prepared to address obstacles, including extending access to sanitation, ensuring that the poorest can afford their drinking water, improving the quality of drinking water in more isolated and poorer areas and narrowing the gap between rural and urban as well as between formal and informal dwellings.

Among other successful initiatives, the Government, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) and other partners have set up a revolving fund to help the poor access clean water and sanitation through loans that can be paid back in instalments, Ms. de Albuquerque said.

"I saw that this practice has a decisive impact on the daily lives of the people concerned, especially for women and children," she added.

Such achievements in Egypt must be recognized, the expert stressed. "That it considers access to drinking water and sanitation a right for all its people is already to Egypt's credit."

Ms. de Albuquerque was appointed as a UN Independent Expert in September 2008, and reports to the Geneva-based Human Rights Council in an unpaid capacity.

UN News

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Kenya :Water and adequate sanitation remain elusive dreams

Kenya


Provision of safe drinking water and adequate sanitation may remain a pipe dream to developing countries, Kenya included. Reports coinciding with the just ended Earth Summit reveal.
Zachary Ochieng

Late last month, 200 countries met in Johannesburg, South Africa for the just concluded World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD). They all agreed in principle to halve the proportion of people with no access to water and proper sanitation by 2015. However, this may remain a pipe dream.

According to the UN 2002 Human Development Report, over 1 billion people had no access to safe drinking water while 2.4 billion - more than a third of the planet - lacked access to sanitation in the year 2000. But it is the poor people living in neglected and unhealthy environments of the developing world who have borne the heaviest brunt.

In Kenya, a survey jointly conducted by Strategy & Tactics, Research International East Africa (both research consultancy firms) and PriceWaterHouseCoopers, a leading management consultancy firm early this year shows that access to basic services is limited in all provinces except Nairobi. The survey, whose report titled "Kenya: State of the Nation - a report on the Baseline Survey", launched in July 2002, was conducted all over the country.

The survey's terms of reference called for the coverage of all districts in Kenya as well as a representative sample of the administrative divisions. Over 8000 interviews were conducted for the survey, with each province and district having a minimum of 500 and 100 respondents respectively. Random sampling methodology was used to select the respondents.

According to the report, only one in twenty, five per cent, respondents had a flush toilet inside their dwelling, while one in eight, 13 per cent, respondents claimed no access to any kind of sanitation. The report adds that only one in twenty respondents had access to water via a tap in their dwelling with nine per cent of respondents having a tap in their yard. A third of the respondents, 32 per cent, were getting their water from a river or dam, a worrying scenario in terms of water-borne diseases.

The report also notes that the limited access that respondents have to refuse removal services raises important health and environmental issues. Only one per cent of respondents had a local authority that removed their refuse. 35 per cent of the respondents got rid of their refuse by dumping it in the open.

The report further states that fetching water was seen as a woman's job, with 85 per cent of households identifying a female as the one responsible for this activity. Findings also showed that many households spent a larger proportion of the day looking for water. More than 22 per cent of households without a tap in their dwelling or yard spent more than two hours a day fetching water.

Yet access to safe drinking water and adequate sanitation are basic human rights. According to various UN charters, every individual has the right to be protected from diseases and other health hazards posed by insufficient water and poor sanitation.

In May 2002, the United Nations Centre for Human Settlement (UNCHS-HABITAT) and the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council (WSSCC) launched a campaign on Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) for all in Kenya's capital Nairobi. The WASH campaign is part of a global advocacy effort launched to mobilize political support and action around the world, as well as to raise public awareness on the need for sanitation, hygiene and safe water.

Available data shows that the low - income households, slums and informal settlements resort to buying water from private operators at high prices. Private water operators have mushroomed all over the place, with trucks hitherto used for exhauster services having been turned into water tankers. The vended water is often contaminated, posing a health hazard to consumers.

According to WASH, rapid urban growth in Kenya and other developing countries has outpaced the capacity of urban authorities to provide basic services. "The result is a lowering in the quality of life, reduced urban productivity, increased burden of health care and unmitigated environmental pollution".

The HABITAT/Government of Kenya's "Nairobi: A situation Analysis 2001" report paints even a gloomier picture. According to the report, an estimated 1.5million people in Nairobi - about 60 per cent of the city's official population of 2.5million - live in dingy hovels in slums and informal settlements. The report notes that households in Kibera, Nairobi's largest slum and the largest one in East and Central Africa, pay up to five to twenty times for a litre of water than the average American citizen.

Kenya is one of the sixty countries that signed the Bonn Ministerial Declaration assigning high priority to water and sanitation as vital keys to sustainable development. Kenya is a signatory of the Rio de' Janeiro declaration making water, sanitation and hygiene a top priority for action on the continent that is seriously affected by lack of basic water and sanitation services. This, however, remains an elusive goal.

WSSCC chairman Sir Richard Jolly says: "Clean water alone leads only to minor health improvements. Sound hygiene behaviour must be addressed in its own right, with adequate sanitation and clean water as supporting components. While each of the three elements has some health benefits, it is their combined effort that has far greater impact".

According to WASH statistics, some 6000 children die every day from diseases associated with lack of access to safe drinking water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene. In October 1995, the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) convened a meeting of top African water experts, who agreed that the dominant challenge for policy makers and planners for the next decade is the "equity issue of ensuring that everyone gets reasonable access and fair share of safe water".

UNEP also stresses on the need to conserve water for future generations. According to UNEP, for development to be sustainable, it must meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of the future generations to meet their own needs.

VISION 21, an initiative of the WSSCC, offers a practical picture of a future in which the problem of sanitation is brought to an end. The initiative seeks a clean and healthy world - a world in which every person has safe and adequate water and sanitation, and lives in a hygienic environment.

Chapter 21 of Agenda 21 on "solid waste management and sewage related issues" offers an integrated strategy for waste management, which addresses both formal and informal sectors. It includes minimization of waste, promotion of waste recycling and reuse, increasing service coverage and ensuring environmentally sound disposal.

On a positive note, a regional organization, with its Kenya Chapter office in the western town of Homa Bay, has embarked on a project to improve sanitation. The East African Communities Organisation for the management of Lake Victoria and its resources (ECOVIC), in collaboration with CARE Kenya, has started erecting Ecological Sanitation (ECOSAN) toilets in Homa Bay district. The project is to extend to other districts along the Lake Victoria region namely Busia, Bondo, Siaya, Nyando, Migori, Rachuonyo and Suba.

ECOSAN toilets can be effectively used to collect urine and faeces for agricultural use. These toilets are a perfect alternative to the flush- and - discharge and drop- and-store sanitation systems. They work on the principle of sanitized reuse of human waste. The principle builds upon the re-circulation of nutrients rather than water.

Contact the editor by clicking here Editor

Burkina Faso: Schoolchildren adopt improved sanitation and hygiene


January 25, 2009 · Leave a Comment

For the students at the Weotenga Primary School [in Weotenga village] in central Burkina Faso, handwashing with soap is anything but a chore. In fact, it’s the latest craze, thanks to efforts by UNICEF to elevate the importance of personal hygiene in the region.

“I always wash my hands with soap after going to toilet,” says Ousmane CompaorĂ©, 12, motioning towards a UNICEF-provided handwashing sink in front of the school’s lavatory.

[...]

In a different village, Natenga, there is a new mud-brick toilet facility roofed with iron sheets and supported by a pile of stones. It is equipped with a ventilation system and a waste outlet mechanism to facilitate emptying.

The village’s Hygiene and Sanitation Programme supervisor, OuĂ©draogo Congo, proudly shows off the facility, which was built by her husband, a mason, with the support of UNICEF and the Regional Centre for Low Cost Water Supply and Sanitation (CREPA). [...] Since 2005, UNICEF and CREPA have been helping the families in this village acquire latrines.

Read more: Jean-Jacques Nduita, UNICEF, 22 Jan 2009

Categories: Burkina Faso · Hygiene promotion · On-site sanitation · School sanitation
Tagged: , , ,

Uganda: improving district level leadership on sanitation and hygiene


June 15, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Improved water supply and sanitation services are key priorities of Uganda’s Poverty Eradication Action Plan. Statistics show there is a lot of work to be done. Latrine coverage stands at 62% nationally, and 79% of these latrines lack hand-washing facilities. In schools, there is an average of 69 students per latrine.

Sanitation and hygiene are not priorities at district level. Limited funding (budgets for sanitation lag far behind those for water supply), the low profile and priority of sanitation and hygiene and the division of responsibilities and funding among departments that have other key priorities hamper progress.

[...]

Conditions vary substantially across Uganda’s 80 districts, and official coverage statistics do not reflect the condition or use of latrines. Outbreaks of faecal-related diseases such as cholera continue to occur. To address these issues in districts with particularly poor sanitation, the IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre, the Netherlands Development Organisation (SNV) and the Network for Water and Sanitation (Netwas Uganda) launched the Learning for Policy and Practice in Sanitation and Hygiene (LeaPPS) programme. The programme has been implemented in the districts of Kyenjojo, Kamwenge, Arua and Koboko. LeaPPS brings together groups of people who work in hygiene and sanitation improvement, which includes politicians, local government staff, community members, donors, researchers and private sector providers.

Read more: Carmen da Silva Wells, Patience Turyareeba and Brecht Mommen, Source Bulletin, May 2009

Categories: Capacity development · Governance · Participatory management · Policies & legislation · Sanitation · Uganda
Tagged: , , , ,

Africa must pay more attention to water, sanitation


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Coalition wants Africa to pay more attention to water, sanitation
Coalition wants Africa to pay more attention to water, sanitation

The Coalition of NGOs in Water and Sanitation (CONIWAS), has noted that water and sanitation issues were slipping back on the agenda of the African Union and reminded governments to keep the promises they made last year to the sector.

Mr Patrick Apoya, Coordinator of CONIWAS recalled that last year the African Union summit focused on water and sanitation issues and leaders who attended the summit made commitments to accelerate progress towards water and sanitation goals, however, little or no action has been taken to ensure that African countries implement the commitments.

The 13th African Union Summit was held from July 1 to 3, 2009 in Sirte, Libya on the theme: “Investing in Agriculture for Economic Growth and Food Security.”

Mr Apoya expressed the concerns at a meeting jointly organised by his organisation and Water Aid, a non-governmental organisation to brief the media on the progress made in the water and sanitation sector since the commitment were made at the summit last year.

“Access to safe water and sanitation topped the summit’s agenda last year when African leaders made a historic pledge to turn around dismal progress, however, it seems the reality and the rhetoric do not match,” he said.

Mr Stephen Ntow, WaterAid Country Representative, admitted that there had been little action since the last AU summit and said about 780,000 children have died of diarrhoea in Africa since the last summit.

He said about 546 million people in Africa, which constituted about two-thirds of Africa’s population do not have access to safe sanitation and 221 million people defecate in the open.

“About 328 million people do not have access to safe source of water,” he said stressing that in Ghana there were 9,900 child deaths from diarrhoea according to the 2009 UNICEF statistics.

Mr Ntow noted that failure to achieve the Millennium Development Goals on Water and Sanitation would have serious economic cost to the tune of about 15 billion dollars a year as well as a tragic human cost looking at the high diarrhoea mortality rate in children under age five.

Mr Ibrahim Musah, Policy and Research Officer at WaterAid Ghana, emphasised the need for governments to fully implement and monitor commitments on water and sanitation.

He said: “African governments must work closely with international counterparts like the Group of Eight (G8) countries to strengthen the global framework for action on water and sanitation.”


Source: GNA