End
Water Poverty welcomes the commitments made at the Sanitation and Water
for All High Level Meeting. More and better targeted funding is needed
if these ambitious goals are to be reached.
An
unprecedented number of Ministers of Finance, Development and Water
from 40 countries, along with development banks and civil society, came
together today for this historic meeting to accelerate efforts to bring
clean water and safe sanitation to millions.
Ministers
of Water, Sanitation, Environment and Health from across Africa and
Asia announced that in each of their countries they will strive to
decrease open defecation by 15%, improve access to water by 5% and
increase access to safe sanitation by 7% by 2014. These promises would
provide 56 million people with safe drinking water and 78 million people with sanitation over the next two years (WaterAid figures).
Rudy
Amenga-Etego, from the African Civil Society Network on Water and
Sanitation (ANEW) who represented civil society at meeting said: “We’re
pleased to see ambitious commitments being made to get water and
sanitation to our citizens. We now need to see new funding, clear plans
and better targeting to make sure these promises can be kept.”
Yakub Hossein, from the Freshwater Action Network South Asia (FANSA) said: “Only
by working together, can we ensure that we start to see real progress
for the poorest and most vulnerable communities. As civil society we
commit ourselves to working together with governments and communities to
tackle this crisis as well as ensuring that world leaders keep the
promises they made today.”
Some developing countries went even further. Benin committed to increasing its budget allocations for 2013-2014 by 100% per year for basic sanitation, whilst Burkina Faso
committed to allocating at least US$35m to water and sanitation
annually and promised to eradicate open defecation by 2015. Kenya
pledged that a further 20 million people would gain access to drinking
water and sanitation by 2015 and Nigeria promised to progressively
increase the budget allocation for water and sanitation over the next
three years.
Crucially, developing countries called on donor countries to support them in reaching these ambitious targets by increasing resources and expertise for water and sanitation and better targeting aid to the poorest countries and communities.
Donor countries responded by making commitments of their own, with the UK announcing that they are doubling their commitment for water and sanitation over the next two years from 30 to 60 million people globally.
Dutch
Minister for European Affairs and International Cooperation Ben Knapen
announced a new initiative between the Netherlands and UK to bring water
and sanitation to an additional 10 million people in nine countries in
West and Central Africa. In all, the Netherlands intends to scale up
its assistance to reach 25 million more people globally over the next
four years.
Knapen said: “In
the current economic climate we are not taking this decision lightly.
We are giving a significant amount of money to UNICEF to help in this
work, but when you count the health and economic benefits, and in
particular the lives of children, the government of the Netherlands believes this is unquestionably the right call.”
Andrew Mitchell, Secretary of State for International Development, said:
“For too long, water and sanitation has not received the priority it
deserves from the international community. That is why the Coalition
Government will commit to helping over 60 million people access basic
services, such as communal water pumps.”
Other donors followed suit with Germany
committing to reaching 30 million people in Sub-Saharan Africa with
water and sanitation by 2015, focusing on “the poor and extremely poor
population… and the most vulnerable, such as slum dwellers and
children.”
USAID
Administrator Rajiv Shah announced that USAID will join the Sanitation
and Water for All Partnership. Australia will also join the partnership.
End
Water Poverty welcomes these commitments but emphasises that there is
still a funding shortfall if countries are to reach these ambitious
targets and get water and sanitation to those most in need.
Rolien Sasse, CEO of Simavi in the Netherlands and End Water Poverty civil society representative on the SWA steering committee said: “Civil society now has a crucial role in both supporting governments to deliver and holding them to account on these commitments –End Water Poverty members will be leading the way.
Sanitation and Water for All
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