By Kazeem Akolawole
The Federal Government has inaugurated a 40-man committee which will develop the National Water and Hygiene Sanitation (WASH) Policy for Nigeria.
The Minister of Environment, Mohammed Abdullahi, revealed this while inaugurating the committee said the government has continued to take several critical steps towards changing the poor situation of the water and sanitation sector.
He added that inadequate sanitation has made people vulnerable to pandemics and disease outbreaks which have had fatal consequences on the populace.
According to the minister, WASH is no longer just a human need but a human right and an indispensable issue occupying a premium place in the international development agenda.
Further according to the minister, “In Nigeria, WASH is considered so critical to the lives and well-being of citizens that it is embedded in the mandates of multiple Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) at the Federal and State levels, to get everyone working at the same time to accelerate positive change in the sector.
“WASH is no longer just a human need but has become a human right and an indispensable issue occupying a premium place in the international development agenda, as the right to WASH is a prerequisite for enjoying several other rights, including economic, cultural and social rights.
“The first target of Sustainable Development Goal 6 (SDG6) is to provide access to safe drinking water for all while the second is to achieve access to adequate and equitable sanitation and hygiene for all by the year 2030. Therefore, the achievement of all the other SDGs is heavily dependent on the realization of SDG 6.”
The development of the WASH Policy, the minister added, is fundamental to effective planning, result-oriented programming and efficiency in financing that is necessary to address the current unpleasant narrative.
The Country Director of WaterAid Nigeria, Evelyn Mere, in her submission, stated that recent data from the 2021 WASH National Outcome Routine mapping (WASHMORM), has shown that only 10 per cent of the population had access to basic water, sanitation, and hygiene services.
Mere said while 68 million Nigerians lack access to basic drinking water services, 113 million people lack decent toilets, and 48 million people practice open defecation.