Friday, 7 August 2015

Water Aid - Great Stink


MP backs local WaterAid activists' “Great Stink” call for taps and toilets for all

Local MP Fiona Bruce met WaterAid activists Mark Barker from Sandbach and Tina Lamont from Holmes Chapel to back  WaterAid’s call for the UK Government to lead the way in ending the global water and sanitation crisis. This campaign marks 150 years of Britain’s modern sewer systems.

They presented Fiona with a report entitled 'Another Great Stink' which has been personally presented to over 100 parliamentarians this month. The report reminded them that Britain’s first life-saving sewerage system was created following the ‘Great Stink’, when the stench of the polluted Thames was so unbearable, it sent MPs running from the House of Commons clutching handkerchiefs to their faces and spurring them into action to clean up the city. 

Mark and Tina said “It’s very easy for us to take clean water and toilets for granted, but for millions of people across the world, these basic necessities are a luxury. It shouldn’t be this way. The report shows parliamentarians what life was like in Victorian Britain when people lacked access to safe water and there was no decent sewerage system. I’m proud of the UK’s commitment to international development and hope our Government will listen to our call to take action to ensure everyone everywhere has clean water to drink and somewhere safe to go to the toilet. Together, we can make it happen.”

Fiona, who has recently been re-elected to Parliament's International Development Select Committee for a second term, said: “ Our parliamentarians acted decisively 150 years ago to provide proper sanitation to people in this country and I fully support WaterAid's drive to ensure that everyone in the world has the same basic neccessities of clean water and proper toilets. Our Government has a great record in international development and I will urge them to make water and sanitation a top goal in UK and world aid priorities.”

The opening of the first modern sewage pumping station in 150 years ago, designed by Sir Joseph Bazalgette, helped prevent cholera outbreaks in London. The disease had had a devastating impact across the country since its arrival in 1831, similar to the effect of Ebola in West Africa today. This marked the start of Britain’s drive to protect public health through good sanitation with similar transformations following across the country.

This year also has a global significance, as the framework for the development priorities for the international community until 2030 is being agreed in September.
                                                    
Mark and Tina were among 115,056 supporters who signed WaterAid’s ‘Make It Happen’ petition calling for taps and toilets for everyone everywhere which was recently presented by WaterAid Chief Executive Barbara Frost to Baroness Verma, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Department for International Development. Barbara said:

Our own history shows how water and sanitation can transform a nation, helping to create a healthier and more prosperous society.

Today, 650 million people across the world still lack access to clean water and 2.3 billion have nowhere safe to go to the toilet. Life in a densely populated slum bears far too close a resemblance to UK cities in the 1800s, representing a real and growing threat to global health and stability. Diarrhoea caused by unsafe water and poor sanitation is the second biggest killer of under-fives worldwide, claiming the lives of 1,400 children every single day.[i]

“The stink may be a bit further from Westminster now; but that’s no reason not to act.
With the right political will, we can solve the global water and sanitation crisis. This year we have a unique chance to right this wrong as world leaders agree the new Sustainable Development Goals to eradicate poverty over the next 15 years. Only with investment in sanitation can we achieve a safe and secure future for everyone everywhere.”


WaterAid is calling for increased investment in water and sanitation in order to achieve improvements in health and other development areas, as having access to these simple services is the foundation to climbing out of poverty. For example, for every £1 invested in sanitation there's a return of around £5 in increased productivity.[ii]

 The charity is calling for the UK Government to:

·         Increase the proportion of aid spent on water, sanitation and hygiene by at least 1% every year over the next parliament to enable the UK to become a leader by 2020.
·         Maximise the impact of UK Aid investments by making sure that water, sanitation and hygiene services are in all health clinics, schools, maternal, newborn and child health strategies, and plans to tackle gender inequality.
·         End Aid Dependency by working with developing country governments to deliver and sustain water, sanitation and hygiene services as part of sustainable national plans.
·         Support the adoption and implementation of a dedicated Sustainable Development Goal for water and sanitation, with targets for universal access to basic water, sanitation and hygiene by 2030.

Find out more at http://www.wateraid.org.




[i]               Adapted from UNDP (2006) Human development report, page 29.

[ii]               World Health Organization (2012) Global costs and benefits of drinking-water supply and sanitation interventions to reach the MDG target and universal coverage, page 4.