This was
disclosed by UNICEF specialist on Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Mr
Moustapha Niang at European Union-UNICEF WASH media dialogue in Uyo in
Akwa-Ibom state.
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has disclosed that 57 million Nigerians do not have access to safe water supply and that 15 million people in the country still drink water from rivers, lakes, ponds, streams and irrigation canals.
Moustapha said
45,000 children under the age of five die annually from diseases caused by poor
access to water, sanitation and hygiene.
He expressed worry over prevalence of open defecation in Nigeria to the
extent that 46 million people in the country still practice Open Defecation. He
added that out of the 46 million Nigerians that practice Open Defecation, 33
million live in rural areas and that 130 million Nigerians are using unimproved
sanitation facilities in which more than half of those affected are rural
dwellers.
Moustapha noted that
in the North-East, only 23 percent and 9 percent of Internally Displaced People
(IDP) have access to water and sanitation respectively and that 75percent of
WASH infrastructure destroyed in affected Local Government Areas. He warned that Nigeria is unlikely to meet
the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG-6) targets unless necessary steps are
taking to address issues of water, sanitation and hygiene and called on
government and all stakeholders to do the needful to rescue the situation. He
explained that UNICEF is currently piloting sanitation financing in 3 States
currently and that 90 Sanitation Entrepreneurs (Toilet Business Owners-TBOs)
have been identified, trained and are now providing improved sanitation
services to communities and households.
He added that
Federal Ministry of Water Resources (FMWR) and the Central Bank of Nigeria
(CBN) have signed Memorandum of Understanding with 42 micro finance
institutions to provide one-digit interest loans to households to support
sanitation facilities upgrade. He noted
that the Partnership for Expanded Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene (PEWASH)
strategy that was launched by the Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo and
the launching of the National Open Defecation Free (PDF) Road Map were among
the key results of institutional efforts to promote sanitation and hygiene.
His words “Our
priority in 2018 will include giving support to the roll-out of the PEWASH
Strategy and the ODF Road Map and to operationalize the implementation of the
ODF Road map through launching of National Campaign on Eradication of Open
Defecation in Nigeria.” “We will harness
the private sector’s entrepreneurial energies to achieve the higher level
improved sanitation SDG targets through sanitation marketing and financing and
support states in the development of SDG Plans.” “As part of efforts to achieve
the objectives, WASH facilities have been provided in 527 schools and 229 provided
in Health Centers in the selected states between January and May 2017.”
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