UN spotlights 2.4 billion people without adequate sanitation

Ban Ki-moon

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. AP Photo

UNITED NATIONS — Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is using World Toilet Day on Thursday to spotlight one of the least talked about and most important contributors to disease and malnutrition: poor sanitation and hygiene that affect about a third of the world’s population.

According to the United Nations, 2.4 billion people lack adequate sanitation and nearly one billion have no toilet facilities and are forced to relieve themselves in open areas.

READ: UN’s large inflatable toilet marks global crisis

The U.N. Millennium Development Goals, which are supposed to be achieved this year, call for cutting in half the proportion of the population without access to basic sanitation.

Ban said that by many accounts, this will be “the most-missed target.”

That’s why the U.N. launched a “Call to Action on Sanitation” in 2013 and aims to end “open defecation” by 2025, he said. TVJ

RELATED STORIES

Lack of sanitation, clean water killing kids, says Unicef 

90 percent of Filipino households don’t practice proper toilet hygiene, sanitation

Read more...