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Billions globally lack ¡®water, sanitation and hygiene¡¯, new UN report spells out

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Billions globally lack ¡®water, sanitation and hygiene¡¯, new UN report spells out

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Some 2.2 billion people around the world do not have safely-managed drinking water, while 4.2 billion go without safe sanitation services and three billion lack basic handwashing facilities, according to a new report from the United Nations Children¡¯s Fund (UNICEF) and the World Health Organization (WHO).

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¡°Mere access is not enough¡± said UNICEF¡¯s Kelly Ann Naylor, Associate Director of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH). ¡°If the water isn¡¯t clean, isn¡¯t safe to drink or is far away, and if toilet access is unsafe or limited, then we¡¯re not delivering for the world¡¯s children¡±.

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The Joint Monitoring Programme report, ¡°Progress on drinking water, sanitation and hygiene: 2000-2017: Special focus on inequalities¡±, finds that while significant progress has been made toward achieving universal access to WASH, there are huge gaps in the quality of services provided.

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¡°Children and their families in poor and rural communities are most at risk of being left behind¡±, Ms. Naylor said, urging Governments to ¡°invest in their communities if we are going to bridge these economic and geographic divides and deliver this essential human right¡±.

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The report reveals that since the turn of the century, 1.8 billion people have gained access to basic drinking water services, but vast inequalities in accessibility, availability and quality prevail.

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Estimates show that 1-in-10 people still lack basic services, including 144 million individuals who drink untreated surface water. And the data illustrates that 8-in-10 people in rural areas lack access to these services.

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¡°Countries must double their efforts on sanitation or we will not reach universal access by 2030,¡± said Maria Neira, WHO Director, Department of Public Health, Environmental and Social Determinants of Health.

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¡°If countries fail to step up efforts on sanitation, safe water and hygiene, we will continue to live with diseases that should have been long ago consigned to the history books¡±, she spelled out. ¡°Investing in water, sanitation and hygiene is cost-effective and good for society in so many ways¡±.

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Every year, 297,000 under-age-five children die from diarrhea linked to inadequate WASH. Poor sanitation and contaminated water also help transmit diseases, such as cholera, dysentery, hepatitis A, and typhoid.

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¡°Closing inequality gaps in the accessibility, quality and availability of water, sanitation and hygiene should be at the heart of government funding and planning strategies¡±, Ms. Naylor stressed. ¡°To relent on investment plans for universal coverage is to undermine decades worth of progress at the expense of coming generations¡±.

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Source: United Nations (www.un.org)

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