Though the world has reached the Millennium Development Goal of
cutting by half the number of people without access to safe drinking
water five years ahead of the 2015 deadline, most Africa countries are
not about to.
This is according to a report by the UN children agency-UNICEF and World Health organization.
The report released ahead of the 6th World Water forum in Marseilles
France indicates that 89 percent of the world’s population, or more than
six billion people, now use improved drinking water sources.
Between 1990 and 2010, more than two billion people gained access to
piped water supplies, protected wells and other improved drinking
sources.
But according to the same report over 780 million people in the world
are still without access to improved sources of drinking water. This
group accounts for 11 percent of the global population and the largest
fraction is in Sub Sahara Africa.
The report indicates that Sub-Saharan Africa and Oceania are not on track to meet the MDG drinking water target.
The heartbreaking truth is that 605 million people will be without an
improved drinking water source and 2.4 billion people will lack access
to improved sanitation facilities by the turn of 2015.
Commenting on the report the United Nations secretary general Ban Ki
moon commended this achievement. “This achievement is a testament to the
commitment of Government leaders, public and private sector entities,
communities and individuals who saw the target not as a dream, but as a
vital step towards improving health and well-being” he noted. “Of
course, much work remains to be done”, the secretary general cautioned
adding that achieving the MDG drinking water target is a major step, but
ultimately, only one step on a long journey that we have yet to finish.
The report suggests a number of ways to help areas that are far-off
the target like sub-Sahara African and Oceania. “Continued efforts are
needed to reduce urban-rural disparities and inequities associated with
poverty; to dramatically increase coverage in countries in sub-Saharan
Africa and Oceania; to promote global monitoring of drinking water
quality; to bring sanitation ‘on track’; and to look beyond the MDG
target towards universal coverage”, the report recommends.
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