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World Toilet Day (2013) commemoration
Chitungwiza
Residents Trust (CHITREST)
November 23, 2013
Chitungwiza Residents
Trust (CHITREST) joins the rest of the world to commemorate the
inaugural World Toilet Day, a day set aside at the instigation of
Singapore and co-sponsored at the United Nations General Assembly
by 121 other member states.
Superficially, the idea
looks not worthy attention but facts on the ground speak otherwise.
According to the World Bank 2.5 million people the world over have
no access to toilets which translates to 37% of the world population.
Ironically, 6 million of the world population has access to cell
phones.
The UN resolution seeks
to address this global sanitation crisis which has been overlooked
for years as people feel it is taboo to talk of this critical element
of public health. It is not surprising among all the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) the sanitation goal is off mark in 80%
of world countries.
Furthermore, the commemoration
reminds governments, civic organizations and other key stakeholders
to influence policies that increase access to proper sanitation.
World statistics indicate that currently 2.5 billion people out
of no choice resort to open air defecation which is extremely harmful
and indeed a serious public health threat.
The obtaining reality
is saddening as it is well known that poor sanitation is a major
contributing factor to diarrhoeal diseases, which are the second
leading cause of death in children under the age of 5 years.
Coming back home in Zimbabwe,
CHITREST is worried by the health time bomb that is looming in Chitungwiza.
We are aware of an area in St. Mary’s where residents have
been using the bush system for more than 5 years. Most unserviced
residential areas in our town do not have water and sewer connections.
This has led residents to dig wells and construct Blair toilets.
When this happens on a 200 m2 stand, the chances of the water table
being polluted from the Blair toilet are very high, exposing residents
to typhoid, cholera and other water-borne diseases.
In the period July 2012
to June 2013, Chitungwiza Town Council’s Health Services department
had 692 cases of typhoid with 2 deaths. It is in this regard as
we commemorate the World Toilet Day; we alert city fathers, council
officials and other stakeholders that all is not well with our sanitation.
We need to improve on sewer reticulation and water provision lest
we slide back to the 2008 episode of typhoid and cholera outbreak.
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