<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/10/world/10toilet.html>
November 10, 2006
Toilets Underused to Fight Disease, U.N. Study Finds
By CELIA W. DUGGER

The toilet and the latrine, which helped revolutionize public health
in New York, London and Paris more than a century ago, are among the
most underused tools to combat poverty and disease in the developing
world, says a United Nations report released yesterday.

"Issues dealing with human excrement tend not to figure prominently in
the programs of political parties contesting elections or the agendas
of governments," said Kevin Watkins, the main author of the report.
"They're the unwanted guests at the table."

The human cost of that taboo, however, is more unspeakable than the
topic itself, he said. Every year, more than two million children die
of diarrhea and other sicknesses caused by dirty water and a lack of
"access to sanitation."

That is the common euphemism for the reality that more than a third of
the world's people — 2.6 billion — have no decent place to go to the
bathroom, while more than a billion get water for drinking, washing
and cooking from sources polluted by human and animal feces.

At any time, almost half the people in developing countries have one
or more of the main illnesses associated with inadequate water and
sanitation and fill half the hospital beds, the report said. They are
plagued by diarrhea, cholera, typhoid, trachoma and parasitic worms.

The United Nations Development Program's annual attempt to measure
human well-being focuses this year on the dearth of clean water and
adequate sanitation for the world's poor. The report, "Beyond Poverty:
Power, Poverty and the Global Water Crisis," lays out the grim facts.
[YF: The title is actually "Beyond Scarcity," and the report is
available at
<http://hdr.undp.org/hdr2006/>.]

In Kibera, the sprawling slum in Nairobi, Kenya, people defecate in
plastic bags that they dump in ditches or toss into the street — a
practice known as "the flying toilet." In Dharavi, the vast slum in
Mumbai, India, there is only one toilet per 1,440 people — and during
the monsoon rains, flooded lanes run with human excrement.

Across the countryside in Asia and Africa, people are forced to squat
in streams, backyards and fields, befouling the water they drink, the
places where their children play and the plots where their food grows.

The report's authors estimate that it would cost $10 billion a year to
halve the percentage of people without access to safe drinking water
and to provide them with simple pit latrines. But that is less than
half what rich countries spend annually on bottled water.

The report blames the governments of poor and rich countries for
paying too little attention to this fundamental problem.

"Life-saving investments in water and sanitation are dwarfed by
military spending," the report says. "In Ethiopia, the military budget
is 10 times the water and sanitation budget — in Pakistan, 47 times."

The report also notes that since the mid-1990s, aid from wealthy
nations for water and sanitation has declined in real terms, falling
to 5 percent from 8 percent of overall development aid — "a marked
contrast to education, where aid commitments doubled over the same
period." Japan is by far the leader in aid for water and sanitation,
providing $850 million in 2003 and 2004, a fifth of the total.

Some of the most innovative efforts to expand the availability of
latrines and simple sewage systems have occurred in South Asia, the
report says.

In Karachi, Pakistan, a local group began organizing slum dwellers
lane by lane in 1980 to build sewer channels to collect waste from
their homes. Entire neighborhoods then collaborated to construct
larger channels, and the city eventually agreed to finance a trunk
sewer line. The infant mortality rate in the slum, Orangi, has fallen
to 40 deaths per 1,000 births, from 130 in the early 1980s.

In Bangladesh, more than 600 private groups work with communities to
map the places where people defecate and the routes of disease
transmission, helping to fuel demand for sanitation services. More
than 3,000 small businesses have sprung up to produce, market and
maintain cheap latrines.

In India, a private group called Sulabh has built thousands of public
toilets and more than a million private latrines that cost as little
as $10 each in more than 1,000 cities nationwide. The local
authorities pay to build the public toilets, but user fees cover the
costs of running them. The fee is about 2 cents, with free access for
children, the disabled and the destitute.

--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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