The humble flush toilet, taken for granted
in most rich countries, could be a cheap
but powerful tool to reduce childhood
deaths and boost global development, a
U.N. report stated.
The annual report
of the U.N. Development Program said that
lack of access to clean water and basic
sanitation killed nearly 2 million young
children each year. This amounted to nearly
5,000 deaths per day, most of them preventable,
and made diarrhea the second biggest childhood
killer.
"No access to sanitation is a polite
way of saying that people draw water for
drinking, cooking and washing from rivers,
lakes, ditches and drains fouled with
human and animal excrement," said Kevin
Watkins, the main author.
"The toilet may seem an unlikely catalyst
for human development, but the report
provides abundant and powerful evidence
to show how it benefits people's well
being," he said.
The report cited Peruvian studies that
the installation of a flush toilet in
the home increased by almost 60 percent
the chances of a child surviving to the
first birthday and in Egypt by 57 percent.
The report, "Beyond scarcity: Power,
politics and the global water crisis"
painted a grim picture of global imbalances
and the low political priority accorded
to safe drinking water and sanitation.
"Dripping taps in rich countries lose
more water than is available each day
to more than 1 billion people," it said.
The report called for a global campaign
similar to the Global Fund against
AIDS, TB
and malaria to try to coordinate all the
fragmented efforts of different agencies
working with water.
Watkins said rich countries needed to
show more political leadership and follow
through on promises to implement an action
plan on water made at the G-8 summit in
France three years ago.
"What we've seen since then is no action
and no plan. It's not even on the radar
screen of donor countries and we need
to get it there."
But the report also criticized developing
countries for spending too little on water
and sanitation.
Most sub-Saharan African countries normally
spend 0.2-0.4 percent of budget on water
and sanitation. In Ethiopia the military
budget was 10 times the water and sanitation
budget and in Pakistan 47 times, it said.
The report said two out of three people
in South Asia lack basic sanitation, numbers
that put the region on a par with sub-Saharan
Africa.
The report said the $10 billion price
tag to achieve U.N. goals on increasing
access to water and sanitation should
be put in context. "It represents less
than five days worth of global military
spending and less than half what rich
countries spend each year on mineral water."