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Billions Struggle Without Clean Water
or Basic Sanitation
UNICEF
and World Health Organization
(New York, August 26, 2004) More than 2.6 billion
people-- over 40 percent of the world's population-- do not
have access to basic sanitation, and more than one billion
people still use unsafe sources of drinking water, warns a
report released today by the World Health Organization (WHO)
and UNICEF.
Entitled "Meeting the Millennium Development Goals (MDG)
Drinking Water and Sanitation Target - A Mid-term Assessment
of Progress," the report details the progress of individual
countries, regions, and the world as a whole between the MDG
baseline year of 1990 and the halfway mark of 2002. It
makes two significant predictions on reaching the 2015
goals, based on progress to date:
--The global sanitation target will be missed by one-half
billion people-- most of them in rural Africa and Asia--
allowing waste and disease to spread, killing millions of
children and leaving millions more on the brink of survival.
--The world is on track to meet the drinking water target.1
The severe human and economic toll of missing the sanitation
target could be prevented by closing the gap between urban
and rural populations and by providing simple hygiene
education, say WHO and UNICEF.
The agencies warned that a global trend toward urbanization
is marginalizing the rural poor and putting huge strain on
basic services in cities. As a result, families living in
rural villages and urban slums are being trapped in a cycle
of ill-health and poverty. Children are always the first to
suffer from the burden of disease caused by dirty water and
poor hygiene, while the wider impact of unhygienic
environments drags back economic progress and erodes good
governance.
“Around the world millions of children are being born into a
silent emergency of simple needs,” says Carol Bellamy,
UNICEF’s Executive Director. “The growing disparity between
the haves and the have-nots in terms of access to basic
services is killing around 4,000 children every day and
underlies many more of the 10 million child deaths each
year. We have to act now to close this gap or the death toll
will certainly rise."
"Water and sanitation are among the most important
determinants of public health. Wherever people achieve
reliable access to safe drinking-water and adequate
sanitation they have won a major battle against a wide range
of diseases," says WHO Director-General Dr. Lee Jong-wook.
Developing regions of the world, such as sub-Saharan Africa,
are most at risk. But the report also highlights some
worrying trends in the industrialized regions, where
coverage figures for clean water and basic sanitation
facilities are estimated to have decreased by 2 percent
between 1990 and 2002. In the former Soviet Union, only 83
percent of people had access to adequate sanitation
facilities. With economic and population pressures growing,
these percentages could decrease.
The consequences of inaction today are severe, according to
WHO and UNICEF. Diarrheal disease currently takes the lives
of 1.8 million people each year– most of them children
under five- with millions more left permanently
debilitated. Over 40 billion work hours are lost in Africa
to the need to fetch drinking water. And many children,
particularly girls, are prevented from going to school for
want of latrines, squandering their intellectual and
economic potential.
Reversing this trend and moving toward universal coverage
for water and sanitation will take more than money, said
Bellamy and Lee. National policies based on the principle of
"some for all" rather than "all for some" have been the key
to improvements in many countries. And at the local level,
resources have to be retargeted to include the poorest
communities, with local government and the private sector
cooperating to bring affordable solutions.
"To meet the 2015 targets, countries need to create the
political will and resources to serve a billion new urban
dwellers, and reduce by almost 1 billion the number of rural
dwellers without access to adequate sanitation facilities.
Otherwise we risk leaving millions, if not billions, out of
the development process," says Dr. Lee.
WHO and UNICEF say the report, which is the first in a
series looking at progress in water and sanitation coverage,
should be a wake-up call to all global leaders. Every
country still has work to do to eliminate disparities in
basic services and the data show clearly how that can be
done before the MDG deadline of 2015.
There are also some very encouraging signs. Great gains in
water and sanitation coverage have been made against
considerable odds in many countries. This progress came as a
direct result of political prioritization and a drive to
find locally effective solutions.
"This report is important because it proves that significant
improvements are possible in a short space of time, even in
the poorest countries,” says Ms. Bellamy. “By identifying
trends now, and committing to course corrections, we have a
real opportunity to ensure that by 2015 these basic
essentials of life are available to all."
UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund, and the
World Health Organization are two agencies of the United
Nations with the (evident) mandates to protect the world's
children and health. Their websites are
www.unicef.org and
www.who.int
1Eight Millennium Development Goals
were agreed by the Member States of the United Nations at
the Millennium Summit in 2000. The targets state that the
proportion of people worldwide not having access to an
improved water source and the proportion of people worldwide
not having access to adequate sanitation facilities should
be halved between the baseline year of 1990 and 2015.
(Return to text.)
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