UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations says six billion of the world's seven billion people have mobile phones but only 4.5 billion have access to toilets or latrines, so the UN is launching a global campaign to improve sanitation for the 2.5 billion people who don't have it.
UN Deputy Secretary-General Jan Eliasson called their plight ''a silent disaster'' that reflects the extreme poverty and huge inequalities in the world today. Eliasson told a press conference Thursday that the issue must be addressed immediately for the world to meet the UN goal of halving the proportion of people without access to sanitation by the end of 2015.
World leaders set a series of Millennium Development Goals to combat poverty at a summit in 2000, and Eliasson said the sanitation goal lags farthest behind. While most people don't want to talk about the problem, Eliasson said, ''it goes to the heart of ensuring good health, a clean environment and fundamental dignity for billions of people.'' The UN said action must include eliminating by 2025 the practice of open defecation, which perpetuates disease.
The number of people resorting to open defecation has decreased by 271 million since 1990, but it is still practiced by 1.1 billion people, or 15 percent of the world's population, the UN said. It is one of the main causes of diarrhea, which results in the death of more than 750,000 children under the age of 5 every year, the UN said. Eliasson said 22 countries account for more than 80 percent of open defecation in the world.
According to a UN official, the countries are Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Cambodia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Nepal, Nigeria, Pakistan, Sierra Leone, Zambia, Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Chad, Congo, Niger, Sudan and South Sudan.
Martin Mogwanja, deputy executive director of the UN children's agency UNICEF, said at the present rate of progress, the UN sanitation goal will be reached in 2075 instead of 2015, which is unacceptable.
The global economic gains from investing in sanitation and clean water are estimated at $260 billion per year, the UN said. By contrast, poor sanitation affects economic growth, costing countries between 0.5 percent and 7.2 percent of their GDP.
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