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A thirsty world lacks safe water
Geneva - About 2.6 billion people - more than 40 per cent of the
planet's inhabitants - lack basic sanitation, and more than one
billion people still drink unsafe water, two UN organisations warned
yesterday.
Entitled "Meeting the Millennium Development Goals" their report is a
mid-course appraisal of a 25 year plan ending in 2015 to dramatically
improve sanitation conditions and access to clean drinking water
throughout the world. The re[port covers the period from 1990 - 2002.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) and the United Nations Children
Fund (UNICEF) say the plan is "on track" for drinking water, but that
half a billion people- Mainly in rural Africa and Asia- Fell short of
the sanitation targets set for 2002.
The world's poorest and least developed nations, notably those in
Sub-Sahara Africa, suffer most from the dieases caused by poor
hygiene, which hit children hardest of all.
"The growing disparity between the have and the have-nots in terms of
aceess to basic services is killing around 4,000 children every day
and underlies many more of the 10 million child deaths every year,"
Bellamy said. "We have to act now to close this gap or the death toll
will certainly rise," she added.
Diarrhea kills 1.8 million persons every year, mainly children under
five, and the search for scarse drinking water results in 40 billion
hours of lost work in Africa alone, the report says.
But there are also "worrying trends" aggravated by rapid
industrialisation in many industrialised countries, where the
percentage of people with access to clean drinking water and basic
sanitation actually dropped by two per cent between 1990 and 2002.
In the ex- Soviet Union, for example, only 83 percent of the
population live in coditions of adequate sanitation.
"Water and sanitation are among the most important determinants of
public health," noted WHO Dicector - General Lee Jong - wook.
"Wherever people achieve reliable access to safe drinking water and
adequate sanitation they have won a major battle against a wide range
of diseases," he added.
The report did underline some encouraging signs. Efforts to reduce the
number of people without aceess to clean drinking water to 800 million
by 2015 are on track, it said, noting that an additional 1.1 billion
people have gained such acess in the last 12 years.
Progress on this front has been especially rapid in Asia, where the
percentage of the population with access to potable water has
increased from 77 to 83 since 1992. But there are still 675 million
people in Asia, the report estimates, that draw their drinking water
from unsafe sources such as polluted rives and lakes.
The situation in Sub-Sahara Africa is more contrasted. Angola, the
Central African Republic, Chad, Malawi and Tanzania all expanded the
populations with access to drinkable water by 50 percent.
But the region as a whole has only increased that access by nice
percent since 1990, with the result that 58 percent of the area's
population now regularly drinks clean water.
As for hygiene, the report acknowledges that gains made have been
partly offset by population growth and urbanisation. From 1990 to
2992, the percentage of the world's inhabitants with access to basic
sanitation increased from 49 percent to 59 percent, still a long way
from the 2015 objective of 75 percent.
Once again, progress was most rapid in Asia, notably in China, where
the percentage increased from 24 percent to 45 percent. In Sub-Sahara
Africa the percentage of the population with access to basic
sanitation is currently 36 percent, up a modest four percent since
1990.
The average for developing nations is 49 percent, half of the 98
percent rate of industrialised nations.
Source: AFP/VNS - Vietnam News, 27/8/2004
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