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Total sanitation: UNICEF-WHO report indicts India, says poorest sections have seen "very little" improvement

By Our Representative
In a major indictment of IndiaтАЩs effort to achieve total sanitation, the United Nations ChildrenтАЩs Fund (UNICEF) and the World Health Organization (WHO) have said in a report that in a report that the country has failed to fight open defecation among its poorest sections of people (click HERE for chart). Pointing out that the тАЬprogress among the poorest has been slowerтАЭ in the entire southern Asian region, the report underlines, тАЬIn India there has been very little change over the last 20 years.тАЭ
The countries that form part of the southern Asian region, according the UNICEF-WHO report, are Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Iran, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. At the same time, the report says, тАЬAll countries achieved significant reductions amongst the richest, and three countries succeeded in eliminating open defecation among this group.тАЭ It adds, тАЬBangladesh is the only country in the region where progress has been faster among the poorest and the gap has been reduced.тАЭ
The 90-page report, titled тАЬProgress on Drinking Water and Sanitation тАУ 2015 update and MDGтАЭ, the result of WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation (JMP), which began in 1990. In 2000, the member states of the United Nations signed the Millennium Declaration, which later gave rise to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). One of the MDGs was the target challenging the global community to halve, by 2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation.
Even as noting that in the Southern Asia region, where the number of open defecators is highest, has made тАЬsignificant improvementsтАЭ, тАЬBangladesh, Nepal and Pakistan have all achieved reductions of more than 30 percentage points since 1990тАЭ, there IndiaтАЩs тАЬ31 per cent reduction in open defecation in represents 394 million peopleтАЭ, significantly influencing тАЬregional and global estimatesтАЭ, the report notes, тАЬDespite significant progress, much still remains to be done.тАЭ
In fact, the reportтАЩs data show, IndiaтАЩs 31 per cent reduction in open defecation from 75 per cent in 1990 to 44 in 2015 stands out in sharp contrast to Pakistan, which reduced it from 49 to 13 per cent; Bangladesh, which reduced it from 34 per cent to 1 per cent; and Nepal, which reduced it from 88 to 32 per cent; Sri Lanka, which reduced it from 13 per cent to 0 per cent. In China, open defecation was just 7 per cent in 1990, which went down to 1 per cent in 2015.
The report says that IndiaтАЩs progress towards MDG target тАУ of achieving 50 per cent improvement in sanitation by 2015 тАУ has been тАЬmoderateтАЭ. In fact, it calculates, between 1990 and 2015, India was able to improve sanitation facilities only by 28 per cent, compared to Pakistan 50 per cent, Nepal 43 per cent, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka 38 per cent, and China 37 per cent. Thus, while Pakistan, Sri Lanka and China have already тАЬmet targetтАЭ, the report says, Bangladesh and Nepal have made тАЬgood progressтАЭ.
Even as quantifying progress of all countries in the world towards achieving total sanitation goals, the report does not, however, give any explanation why the progress in some countries has been тАЬpoorтАЭ, тАЬmoderateтАЭ while in others it is тАЬgood.тАЭ Nor is there any explanation as to why the poorest sections, for instance, in India, have seen very little progress in achieving sanitation goals.

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