Tag Archives: UNICEF

Nigeria, Katsina: state doubles water, sanitation budget

Katsina State [pop. 6.5 million] Government says it has doubled appropriation for rural and urban water supply and sanitation [...] from last year’s less than two billion naira mark [US$ 13.6 million] to this year’s over N4.7 billion [US$ 32 million]. The State’s Water Resources Commissioner, Nasiru Danmusa, said the increase arose out of the current administration’s efforts at ensuring increase and access to safe water and sanitation; as well as increased partnership with stakeholders and external support agencies.

Danmusa said from 2007 to date, the state had spent over N267 million [US$ 1.8 million] on various developmental projects in the area of urban water as well as semi-urban water supply; including rehabilitation of water schemes and construction of new ones.

[T]o check problem of power outages which affects water supply, the state government is supplementing operation of the State Water Board through provision of diesel for utilisation of back-up generators at treatment plants.

Danmusa maintained that to further strengthen the capacity of the state’s Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Agency (RUWASSA), [the] government had [ordered] three sets of borehole drilling rigs with supporting vehicles and accessories.

He also stated that the state is collaborating with UNICEF in the development of a state-wide WASH Multi-Year Investment Plan and Sustainable Sector Policy, and that it is seeking the Federal Government, donor agencies and aid organisations for the completion of ongoing regional schemes and co-financing of new projects in the state.

Source: Danjuma Michael, This Day / allAfrica.com, 20 May 2009

Water and Sanitation Monitoring Platform (WSMP) launches website

The water and sanitation monitoring platform (WSMP) is the name of an ACP-EU Water facility-funded project managed by UNICEF, which is being implemented in Ghana, Mozambique and Nigeria. The project concerns the establishment and operation of national water and sanitation sector monitoring platforms in these countries.

The WSMP comprises of nationally established platforms, which work with national sector stakeholders to generate and disseminate sector specific data and information.

The WSMP website, managed by WEDC, is primarily a portal to direct users to country-level WSMP websites and blogs. This website gives an overview of the project and will host details of news and accomplishments of the respective WSMP platforms. At present [07 May 2009] the Ghana web site is the only country-level website with content.

The WSMP platforms – Ghana, Mozambique and Nigeria will be present at this year’s WEDC International Conference to be held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 18-22 May 2009.

A paper: ‘Making use of available water and sanitation data through independent monitoring programmes’ will be presented by Yaw Sarkodie, team leader of the Ghana Platform on Monday 18 May at 14.00 in Room E.

On Thursday 21st May, the WSMP will host a side-event to be held between 17.30 and 19.15 at the conference venue.

Guinea-Bissau: Instability deprives people of clean water

With 80 percent of the Guinea Bissau capital’s water contaminated with harmful bacteria, residents are used to outbreaks of cholera and other deadly diarrhoeal diseases, but donors say they can fund major infrastructure projects only if stability can be guaranteed. [A recent cholera outbreak] killed 225 people and infected some 14,000, most of them in the capital Bissau. [...] Diarrhoeal diseases constitute one of the main causes of child mortality and morbidity in Guinea-Bissau, which has the world’s fifth-highest level of child mortality with almost one in five children dying before age five.

[...] “The country has been experiencing continuing instability,” said . “This doesn’t allow putting in place large-scale infrastructure systems. To attract big donors, you need to guarantee a long period of stability…You can’t lay water pipes in one month.”

[...] Most Bissauan families draw water from shallow wells they build themselves – often constructed dangerously close to latrines – with population growth in the capital exacerbating the situation, [Silvia Luciani, head of the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) in Guinea-Bissau] told IRIN.

Bernardino dos Santos, director of water association Regional Centre for Low-cost Water and Sanitation (CREPA), said 80 percent of the city wells are contaminated with harmful bacteria.

[...] The problem is the government is poor, donors say. [...] International donors cover most civil servants’ salaries in Guinea-Bissau, Antongiulio Marin, head of infrastructure for the European Commission, told IRIN.

Payment systems for water and electricity supply are in place but do not work properly, says Cesario Sa, director of Water and Electricity services (EAGB) in Bissau. “Collecting revenue for water is not possible in many cases because we do not have the financial resources or capacity to do so.”

[...] “If you go to the Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources [which manages water supply] you will find little to no equipment and officials who are not motivated and hardly paid; who have no telephones, computers or electricity; who are educated to a low standard and hardly trained; and who have very little management expertise,” Marin told IRIN. When donors do engage, he said, they have to cover everything, down to civil servants’ commuting costs.

The EC works with NGOs Médicos del Mundo and the Spanish Red Cross to build solar-powered water points and pumps in and around Bafat and Biombo, 80km and 25km from the capital, respectively, and to support rural community water management committees.

But two severe cholera epidemics in four years have propelled donors to increase water-infrastructure investments. The EC just signed a US$3.9-million project to boost the Energy and Natural Resources Ministry’s water management capacity, and a further $3.9 million to continue rural water support.

The World Bank is about to start building water reservoirs in Bissau and 24km of water pipes at a cost of nearly $6 million, according to Joao Antonio da Silva, technical assistant for EAGB, which works with the World Bank. The construction of two reservoirs for Luanda and Bairro de Ajuda, on the outskirts of the capital, has just been completed, he said.

Meanwhile NGOs and aid agencies, including CREPA, Médicos del Mundo and UNICEF, continue to fill in some of the water supply gaps around the country by building closed wells, water pumps and latrines in schools and villages.

[...] Bissau resident Jose Antonio Borges told IRIN the population cannot afford more delays. “Guinea-Bissau has been facing an electricity crisis since 1998. But this year it is the water crisis that is worst of all because it affects everyone across the country. We can accept the energy crisis, but without water, we cannot live.”

Source: IRIN, 31 Mar 2009

Sierra Leone: Communities take charge, one latrine at a time

Kadiatou Samura proudly showed her pristine new toilet to her Member of Parliament, the leader of her chiefdom and the head of the UN Children’s Fund’s [UNICEF] district office as they toured her village, Kamayintin, in Sierra Leone’s Bombali district. The village was celebrating its status as the chiefdom’s fifth to be declared “free of open defecation”.

The toilet was elegant and simple: an earth floor, walls built from local wood, topped by a conical straw roof. Samura built it herself with the help of 12 other families in the village, who together built 17 toilets in a month. “This toilet has saved us from sickness. Fewer of our children are falling ill from diarrhoea now,” Samura told IRIN.

[...] Just a third of rural Sierra Leoneans have access to clean water and to sanitation facilities, according to UNICEF’s Victor Kinyanjui, water, sanitation, hygiene manager. Diarrhoea is the third leading cause of death in children under five in Sierra Leone.

[...] Reversing old aid models whereby outsiders pay for and construct expensive latrines that villagers cannot afford to maintain, in this approach villagers choose their own latrine models, find the materials locally, raise money if necessary and then build them, said Kinyanjui. Sanitation experts guide villagers on the types of toilet to suit their topography and budget. Samura’s latrine – assuming the free labour of her fellow villagers – cost her nothing, whereas a standard modern latrine can cost up to US$100, according to Kinyanjui – equivalent to a third of annual earnings for most Sierra Leoneans.

[...] UNICEF’s aims to roll it out across 10 districts of the country by 2010, with ActionAid, Plan International, Oxfam, and GOAL, implementing the project.

[...] Mohamed Sankoh, programme manager for ActionAid in Bombali district, told IRIN: “Before, communities realised they were – excuse my language – eating each other’s [faeces] and it made them feel ashamed. Now we have seen a great change in people here, in the way they think”

Not all are convinced by the new approach. District councillor Eric Ceesay prefers the “safe, clean, concrete toilets” that international agencies – including UNICEF – used to build. Some 560 of these have been built over the years, and the district needs a further 1,500, Ceesay said. The community-led facilities are “inconveniently located, they have poor ventilation, and…they attract snakes.”

[...] To reinforce [sustainability of safe hygiene practices], local chiefs should resurrect now moribund local by-laws giving health inspectors the right to assess households’ hygiene levels and to exact fines of up to 16 US cents when they are sub-standard, Serra Limba Chief Kandeh Luseine said.

See also:  CLTS – Sierra Leone

Source: IRIN, 24 Feb 2009

Zimbabwe: cholera still not under control, repairing sewage systems essential

Despite a decrease of the crude case fatality rate, the cholera epidemic in Zimbabwe is still not under control, says  OCHA, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.  As of 19 February 2009, there have been 80,250 registered cholera cases and 3,759 deaths. Case attendance to health facilities is improving as a result of social mobilization activities and decentralization of care close to the affected community.

During a field visit on 18 February 2009 to Budiriro and Glenview, the worst affected areas in Harare, OCHA staff concluded that “it can be virtually guaranteed that cholera will continue to blight” communities unless “repair of dilapidated sewage systems” is made “a priority by the donor and humanitarian community: now and during the crucial ‘recovery’ months (May-August) before the next rainy season arrives”.

UNICEF WASH staff visiting Binga district noted a dramatic reduction in new cases of cholera, but at the same time an upsurge of malaria cases. Binga has less than 5%a low water and sanitation coverage, while recent national assessments have at times reported much higher access rates.

Recent reports indicate that up to 60% of boreholes are not functioning due to small breaks or malfunctions, which could be easily be repaired.

There is still a shortage of water treatment tablets and non-food items, including buckets, jerry cans and soap, OCHA notes.

Large quantities of IEC materials (over 310,000 flyers and 14,000 posters) have been distributed and Public Health and Hygiene Promotion (PHHP) training delivered to over 250,000 people.

See an example of an IEC poster below – a full set of IEC materials in English, Ndebele, Shona language is available here.

Read the full Zimbabwe – Cholera Update Update Report #14 of 20 February 2009 here.

Cholera alert (English) poster. WHO/UNICEF

Cholera alert (English) poster. WHO/UNICEF

Ghana: Government urged to formulate comprehensive sanitation policy

Dr. Yasmin Ali Haque, representative of  UNICEF in Ghana, on Thursday [29 January 2009] urged government to formulate a comprehensive national sanitation policy.

She said this would ensure effective sanitation delivery for the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals on sanitation.

Dr. Haque made the call in Sunyani at the opening of the 2008 annual review and planning meeting of environmental health sanitation directorate of the Ministry of Local Government, Rural Development in Sunyani.

The two-day event was attended by regional environmental health officers, representatives of the Netherlands Embassy in Ghana, WaterAid Ghana, Ministry of Health and Coalition of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) among others.

Dr. Haque noted that Ghana was not on track to achieving the Millennium Development Goals target for sanitation but development partners acknowledged the fact that sanitation improvement was an enormous task for developing country including Ghana.

She said “ In Ghana this task is even daunting as just 10 per cent of the population use improved sanitation facilities and when use of shared latrine facilities is added this increases to 51 per cent”.

Read more: GNA, Modern Ghana,29 Jan 2009

Malawi: rains expose poor sanitation

Malawi is [...] battling a cholera outbreak which has killed 19 people [in Lilongwe] since the onset of the rainy season, an unusually high death toll. Up to 485 cases of the epidemic have since been registered and treated. World Health Organisation records from the 2007/2008 rainy season indicate not even a single cholera case was registered in the country’s capital, Lilongwe, last year, although up to 20 deaths and 1,022 cases were documented in nine of Malawi’s 27 districts.

[...] The country’s health experts have attributed the [cholera] problem to lack of safe water combined with poor sanitation and poor hygiene. [...] “We encounter cholera outbreaks almost every rainy season when people who have little or no access to safe water resort to using untreated water from swamps,” [Malawi's principal secretary for health Chris] Kang’ombe told IPS.

[...] A task force comprising the Ministry of Health, United Nations Children’s Fund – (UNICEF), World Health Organization (WHO) and United Kingdom’s Department For International Development (DFID) is currently working to promote civic education on hygiene and chlorination of water sources in the country to control further cholera outbreaks.

Source: Pilirani Semu-Banda, IPS, 23 Jan 2009

Burkina Faso: Schoolchildren adopt improved sanitation and hygiene

For the students at the Weotenga Primary School [in Weotenga village] in central Burkina Faso, handwashing with soap is anything but a chore. In fact, it’s the latest craze, thanks to efforts by UNICEF to elevate the importance of personal hygiene in the region.

“I always wash my hands with soap after going to toilet,” says Ousmane Compaoré, 12, motioning towards a UNICEF-provided handwashing sink in front of the school’s lavatory.

[...]

In a different village, Natenga, there is a new mud-brick toilet facility roofed with iron sheets and supported by a pile of stones. It is equipped with a ventilation system and a waste outlet mechanism to facilitate emptying.

The village’s Hygiene and Sanitation Programme supervisor, Ouédraogo Congo, proudly shows off the facility, which was built by her husband, a mason, with the support of UNICEF and the Regional Centre for Low Cost Water Supply and Sanitation (CREPA). [...] Since 2005, UNICEF and CREPA have been helping the families in this village acquire latrines.

Read more: Jean-Jacques Nduita, UNICEF, 22 Jan 2009

DR Congo: UK gives UNICEF 37 million USD to boost the attainment of MDG on water and sanitation

UNICEF Representative to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Pierrette Vu Thi together with British Secretary for International Cooperation, Alexander Douglas signed a cooperation agreement for an estimated US$37 million dollars [in Kinshasa on 06 January 2009].The programme supports the national strategy of promoting improved access to water, sanitation and hygiene in rural and peri-urban communities throughout the country through the Healthy Village and Healthy School initiative. [...] The Ministy for Primary, Secondary and Professional Education and the Ministry of Public Health [...] are the primary implementing partners of WASH activities for UNICEF-DRC.

The US$ 37 million grant will be disbursed through UNICEF over a period of four years [and] ill benefit an estimated 9 million Congolese in 12,500 communities and over 750,000 primary school children.

Source: UNICEF / ReliefWeb, 06 Jan 2008

Somalia: acute watery diarrhoea kills dozens in Galgadud

Dozens of people have died in central Somalia’s Galgadud region after an outbreak of acute watery diarrhoea (AWD), medical personnel said on 23 December 2008. The worst-affected area is in and around the town of Balambale [where] 16 people have been confirmed to have died [of whom] 12 were children under five.  [In November, at least 100 people were reported to have died after an AWD outbreak in Abudwaaq, in Galgadud].

So far 139 cases of AWD had been registered in Balambale, said Mahamud Mohamed Isturaye, the district medical coordinator, adding [that there were] reports that some [more] people had died in surrounding villages. He said AWD had broken out after heavy rains, which contaminated water in wells and barkads (water catchments). UNICEF had provided oral rehydration salts (ORS), he added.

[Isturaye]  said medical workers had urged people to keep their children away from contaminated water and to separate the sick from the healthy. “Unfortunately, we do not have chlorine to put in the water points, especially the barkads,” he said.

Source: IRIN, 23 Dec 2008