Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Gender: Lack of Clean Water and Sanitation Affect Women Most

Poor water and sanitation affects women more in African societies, the African Development Bank (AfDB) has said.
The added that the discrepancy is gender based as African women bear the brunt through inequality, especially when it comes to access to education for girls and women.
“In Africa drawing water, transportation, storage and use, and cleanliness of public and private facilities are mostly the responsibility of women who are most affected by scarcity of water and insufficient water supply,” it said.
In rural areas women and girls are obliged to trek up to 15 kilometers every day to fetch water while in urban areas insufficient water supply results in long waiting lines lasting hours and causing social conflicts.
“Poor sanitation facilities also cause high number of girls drop out in school when they reach puberty that is why water and sanitation programmes should have gender equality in planning,” AfDB added.
AfDB said that under its Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Initiative launched in 2003 in partnership with other donors 51 million people have access to clean drinking water and it has aided in building sanitation facilities for 34 million people, of whom 50 per cent are women.
The initiative seeks to involve a gender approach while offering water and sanitation projects to contribute in reduction of water-related chores and increase rate of school attendance for girls, increase income generating activities and create healthy environment.
“These projects need better representation by women in decision-making committees which decreases acts of violence and aggression against women who fetch water from long distances,” the bank said.
Women should also be involved during financing and management of water resources between institutions which will transform the current cultural and social order in the continent.
“This cooperation will also contribute to the eradication of poverty and underdevelopment faced primarily by women and children,” it stressed.
Manuel Odeny © 2013

1 comment:

  1. Hello Manuel,

    I really appreciate this piece you wrote! My name is Beverly Hill, and I am President of the Gendercide Awareness Project, gendap.org, a nonprofit dedicated to raising awareness and action regarding the 117 million women who are demographically missing today in Asia and Africa.

    I am contacting you to ask permission to use the photo from this blog for a girls' education campaign that our organization is planning. We are raising funds to educate poor, at-risk girls in several developing countries. We are putting ads in airports with text that reads:

    * A POOR ILLITERATE GIRL, (photo of girl)

    * GROWS UP TO BE A POOR, ILLITERATE WOMAN. (photo of woman)

    * YOU CAN CHANGE THIS ! HERE’S HOW... (photo of a school girl in her uniform)

    * EDUCATE A GIRL, CHANGE A LIFE FOREVOR

    I'd like to ask your permission to use this wonderful photo as the second photo in the ad.

    Thank you for your kind consideration, and please check out our website www.gendap.org.

    Beverly Hill, President, Gendercide Awareness Project, gendap.org

    ReplyDelete