Keo Samon, a rice
farmer in southeastern Cambodia, had no toilet in her home. Nor was
there even an outhouse or latrine for Keo and her husband and five
daughters. Instead, they would defecate on land around the home, or in
the rice fields.
That changed after the Water Supply and Sanitation Council, a United Nations partner, began to work with her village.
Keo’s
family, along with 30 others, attended community-led awareness
sessions, built simple dry toilets and joined the drive to make their
village ‘open defecation-free’.
“In the past, I
did not know the consequences of defecating outdoors. It was simply my
habit, like others in my village. We were not aware of the importance of
good hygiene. But now, I am very excited to have my latrine,” Keo said.
What
good does a toilet do? More than you may imagine. Adequate sanitation
prevents disease or malnutrition caused by contaminated water.
Open
defecation – practiced by more than 1 billion people around the world –
is among the main causes of diarrhoea, which kills more than three
quarters of a million children, aged five or under, each year.
Sanitation
is also a necessary path to protection and empowerment for women and
girls. When schools lack toilets, girls stay home when they are
menstruating.
When adequate sanitation is
unavailable, women and girls are forced to take their private needs to
the open, leaving them subject to sexual abuse.
Finally
there is the economic argument. Poor water and sanitation costs
developing countries around $260 billion a year -- 1.5 per cent of their
gross domestic product.
On the other hand, every dollar invested can bring a five-fold return by keeping people healthy and productive.
So,
it is difficult to understand why, in 2013, 2.5 billion people around
the world still lack access to adequate sanitation. More people have
cell phones than toilets in today’s world.
Since
the adoption of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in the year
2000, global poverty rates have been reduced by half. So has the
proportion of people without access to improved sources of water. 200
million slum dwellers live better lives.
Enrolment
in school has increased dramatically. The global mobilization behind
the MDGs has been a remarkable success that has changed the world’s
approach to development for the better.
Yet,
with just over 1,000 days remaining before the 2015 deadline for
achieving the MDGs, we are not even close to reaching the goal on proper
sanitation.
That is why I am, on behalf of
the Secretary-General and the UN, launching a call to action on
sanitation as we mark the beginning of the International Year on Water
Cooperation.
There are three things we can do to speed up progress on sanitation.
First, we should speed up the elimination of open defecation – country by country, community by community, family by family.
We need to talk about the problem, not turn our heads away from a subject many find uncomfortable.
Second,
we need to strengthen cooperation. The water and sanitation challenge
is everybody’s business. We need everyone to play their part. National
governments need to lead by making commitments.
Local
governments can work with communities to help them to help themselves.
The private sector can invest in the health of their employees and the
environment. And civil society organizations can monitor progress and
advocate for solutions.
Third, we should scale up the projects that work. Simple, affordable actions have already proved their worth.
Between
1990 and 2010, about 1.8 billion people gained access to sanitation – a
significant achievement. Many countries have tackled this problem
within a generation.
Doing nothing is not an option. The social, economic and environmental cost is simply too high.
Let
us commit now to end open defecation and provide adequate sanitation
and safe water for all – so women and girls can live with dignity; so
our children can survive and communities can thrive.
Keo in Cambodia reports that all her family members are now using the latrine. They are drinking safe water.
“I
ask all families in my village to start building latrines for their
use. This will help our village to end open defecation and bring good
health for everyone, especially our children.”
Keo has set an example. Let us follow -- one community at a time. Nobody can do everything - but everybody can do something.
The writer is Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations
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