KARACHI: In order to decrease global inequalities, the new SDGs call for ending open defecation and achieving universal
access to basic services by 2030, states a new report by the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF.
The Joint Monitoring Programme report, Progress on Drinking Water, Sanitation and Hygiene: 2017 Update and Sustainable Development Goal Baselines, presents the first global assessment of “safely
managed” drinking water and sanitation services. The overriding conclusion is that too many people still lack
access, particularly in rural areas.
“Safe water, sanitation and hygiene at home should not be a privilege of only those who are rich or live in urban centres,” says Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General, World Health Organization (WHO). “These are some of the most basic requirements for human health, and all countries have a responsib
ility to ensure th
at everyone can
access them.”
The reporter further added that some 3 in 10 people worldwide, or 2.1 billion, lack
access to safe, readily available water at home, and 6 in 10, or 4.4 billion, lack safely
managed sanitation.
The report introduces and defines the new indicators of safely
managed drinking water and sanitation services. Estimates of safely
managed drinking water services, the indicator for SDG target 6.1, are presented for 96 countries including Pakistan, while estimates are provided for safely
managed sanitation services (target 6.2) for 84 countries. SDG target 6.2 also includes hygiene, and the JMP has re branded itself as the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene. This first SDG report presents data on the availab
ility of hand washing facilities with soap and water in the home for 70 countries.
The report finds that in 2015, 29 percent of the glo
bal population (2.1 billion people) lacked safely
managed drinking water services – meaning water at home, available, and safe. 61 percent of the glo
bal population (4.5 billion people) lacked safely
managed sanitation services – meaning use of a toilet or latrine that leads to treatment or safe disposal of excreta. Data on hand washing were too few to make a global estimate, but in sub-Saharan Africa, 15 percent of the population had
access to a hand washing fac
ility with soap and water.
“The 2.1 billion people without safely
managed drinking water services includes 1.3 billion people with basic services, meaning an improved water source located within 30 minutes; 263 million people with limited services, or an improved water source requiring more than 30 minutes to collect water; 423 million people taking water from unprotected wells and springs, and 159 million people collecting untreated surface water from lakes, ponds, rivers and streams,” the report stated.
The 4.5 billion people without safely
managed sanitation services includes 2.1 billion people with basic services, meaning an improved sanitation fac
ility which is not shared; 600 million people with limited services, or an improved sanitation fac
ility which is shared; 856 million people using unprotected latrines or bucket toilets, and 892 million people practicing open defecation, the reported added.
Published in Daily Times, July 15th , 2017.