Billions still living without access to clean water and sanitation

Today is Blog Action Day: A staggering 2.6 billion people live without a safe toilet and 884 million people lack access to clean water, reports David Taylor.

Every year, the social action website Change.org run a Blog Action Day. Last year, the focus was on climate change, with more than 13,500 people blogging on the issue including Gordon Brown and The Huffington Post. This year, the theme is water and sanitation.

A staggering 2.6 billion people live without a safe toilet and 884 million people lack access to clean water. These problems combine to undermine health, education, economic and gender equality progress.

Diarrhoea, for example, is now the biggest killer of children under five in Africa (source: World Health Organisation) and a massive burden to women and girls particularly as they spend valuable time walking for water and caring for sick relatives instead of going to school or working to support their children.

The previous Labour government were real champions of water and sanitation issues, with the department for international development being a major force behind the launch of the Sanitation and Water for All initiative (SWA) which is a global partnership between donor and developing countries and multilaterals as well as civil society bodies such as the End Water Poverty campaign. It aims to connect aid to developing country plans that will deliver sanitation and water for all.

The current coalition government has, to its credit, given water and sanitation greater profile within DfID, placing it alongside other basic services such as health and education. It is disappointing, therefore, that at the United Nations Human Rights Council just two weeks ago, our government dissociated itself from a resolution that recognised the right to access water and sanitation as a legally binding human right.

The resolution gives water and sanitation a standing equal to other social rights, as well as the legal impetus for states to incorporate the right to water & sanitation in national law – the UK now stands alone alongside only 12 other countries in not recognising this.

As Steve Cockburn, former campaign coordinator for End Water Poverty, points out over at Progress today, this matters because development is far more than signing cheques to build schools or medicines – it is about power, rights, accountability. He writes:

“South Africa’s Water Services Act, for example, enshrines their citizens right to a minimum provision of water, and has been instrumental in driving the government to expand and improve services to its people. Wells and latrines are no longer the in the realm of charity, but in the realm of justice.”

The Coalition should put this disappointing episode behind it by signing up to the resolution, and then get on with pushing up the profile of water and sanitation both inside DfID and also in wider development circles. They can do a great deal in championing the SWA to other countries and donors to make it fully fledged.

Also, as Rushanara Ali, Labour’s new shadow international development minister, stated in Wednesday’s International Development Questions, the coalition must not drop the vital commitments to help 25 million people to gain access to water and sanitation in Africa over the next five years and to help 30 million people in south Asia by 2011.

Lastly, DfID has also just announced bringing the private sector more into development processes in order to stimulate ‘wealth creation’. They should be mindful of the UN statistic that every $1 spent on sanitation and water brings a $9 return to developing country economies – powerful evidence to support government investment in ensuring water and sanitation for all.

Next year campaigners across the globe will join in a global action, The World Walks for Water, to further push the profile of water and sanitation up the agenda – in an initiative organised by End Water Poverty and partners. Let’s hope the UK government and others respond; you can take action by going to EndWaterPoverty.org.

15 Responses to “Billions still living without access to clean water and sanitation”

  1. something worth living for-shayne ward (lyrics)

    […] Billions still living without access to clean water and sanitation … […]

  2. jeff marks

    a bit pessimistic Robert! i’ve already flushed the toilet 3 times and had a bath this morning. and it costs me almost nothing. that’s capitalism for you! who better run the water for you? the government? remember leyland, electricity cuts, the 70s, bread strikes??

  3. idle pen pusher

    Robert is right – only public sector efficiency can deliver the economic miracle and end the need for rationing.

  4. Four-Eyed Frog

    RT @dajohnson01: RT @leftfootfwd: Billions still living without access to clean water and sanitation http://bit.ly/9VaxAD

  5. diarrhoea

    To prevent diarrhoea or traveller’s diarrhoea, there are few words to always bear in mind: COOK IT, BOIL IT, PEEL IT, OR AVOID IT! Since ingestion of contaminated food is the number one cause of acquiring TD, and there are numerous ways of possibly getting them, taking precautionary measures on the food that you consume is a simple step that can take you a long way.

    First of all, if you are not sure or in doubt of the cleanliness of the water supply, don’t dare drink it, and this also applies to ice cubes and other iced drinks since you don’t have absolute assurance where the water used on making them came from. It’s best to drink sealed bottled, purified or carbonated water—and even use them for cleaning teeth. And when you are going to use regular water, be sure to boil it for one minute before consuming it.

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