UNICEF has blamed worsening sanitary situation for the spread of
diseases in Nigeria, saying about one hundred million people lacked
access to sanitary toilets.
This is coming as the Federal Government said 2,771 cases of cholera epidemics was reported this year with 124 deaths.
Speaking
first at the celebration of World Toilets Day, UNICEF Chief Sanitary,
Water and Hygiene Officer, Kannan Nadar described the situation in
Nigeria as very critical.
He said, “Nigeria has about one hundred
million people without access to toilets, this is worrisome, as it is
possible for everyone to own toilet, it doesn’t cost much. “Sanitation
and toilets are fundamental human rights. since it is possible for
everyone to own toilet, it is not justified for people to die of
diseases related to open defecation.”
Minister of Health, Prof.
Onyebuchi Chukwu, said the recent occurrence of cholera epidemics could
be stopped if there was a mechanism to stop open defecation.
He
said, “as many as an estimated 2771 cases and 124 deaths with case
fatality rate of 4.5 per cent were reported, this yearly occurrence of
cholera epidemics could be stopped if there is a mechanism to stop open
defecation which will prevent contamination of water sources and foods
that are major causes of cholera in the country."
The minister
who was represented by the Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Amb.
Sani Bala assured the gathering that government was working on a policy
that will encourage communities and urban centres to embrace good
sanitary and hygiene system.
Head of Governance, WaterAid
Nigeria, Tolani Busari expressed concern that barely two years to the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), Nigeria was yet to address the
problem of poor sanitation.
According to her, “staggering 37
million people still practice open defecation, nearly 100,000 children
under the age of five dying of diarrhea in Nigeria every year as a
result of poor sanitation and water.”
She expressed concerns over
how government was handling of sanitation, arguing that the nation’s
poor handling of sanitation issues is not just restricted to hygiene,
but that, “without a private toilet, women and girls are vulnerable to
violence, intimidation and indignity. Women and girls living in Nigeria
without toilet facilities spend about 3.1 billion hours each year
finding a place to go to toilet in the open.
“Sanitation has
always been the most neglected and off-track of the MDGs, with little
funding, resources or political will to address the crisis. There has
been little or no progress towards the agreed target of allocating 0.5
per cent of GDP to sanitation."
Nairaland
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