A recent
report by a British relief and development agency
brings out the plight of 2.4 billion people worldwide,
almost all of them in Asia, Africa and Latin America,
who suffer from poor sanitation and lack of clean
drinking water. More than two million children die
every year of diarrhoea and people suffering from
water-borne diseases occupy half of the world's hospital
beds, says the British Charity 'Water Aid and Tearfund’
in a report titled, The Human Waste.
Rapid urbanisation is worsening the crisis. The Bangladesh
capital Dhaka has seen its population grow from 250,000
in the early 1970s to 10 million today. In Africa
138 million people lived in the urban areas in 1990.
By 2020 the number will go up to 500 million, with
200 million living in cities with a population of
a million or more. By 2025, 20 of the 29 sub-Saharan
countries will be facing water shortages, up from
only 8 in 1990. 80 per cent of the diseases in developing
countries are caused by poor hygiene, contaminated
water and poor sanitation.
Most of these diseases are preventable if people had
access to safe drinking water and sanitation facilities.
An investment of US $ 16 billion a year will halve
the number of people without toilets and save millions
of lives. This amount is a fraction of the US $ 722
billion the world spent on defence in 1999.
The report calls for increased aid from the West,
and urges the British government to give the lead
by increasing its overseas aid to 0.7 per cent of
the GNP. But Western governments that frequently shed
crocodile tears and promise more aid for developing
countries, inevitably link aid donations with "sound"
policies, implying a no holds barred privatisation
by countries wanting to avail of such "benevolence".
Following the renewed aid pledges by OECD members
at the Monterrey conference on poverty held in March
2002, the World Bank issued the "African Development
Indicators 2002", calling on the West to deliver.
It pointed out that while African countries have mostly
adopted the policies demanded by the West, aid flows
are still shrinking. Mozambique, for instance, witnessed
a fall in aid from US $ 1 billion in 1990 to US $
804 million in 1999.
Even if Western governments deliver on the promises
made at Monterrey, there is no guarantee that the
money will be spent on sanitation. British Development
Minister Clare Short said recently in Johannesburg
that British capital is looking for countries which
provide "good governance", citing the example
of China. The obvious implication is that countries
that wield an iron hand to discipline populations
can expect increased aid and investment.
The West is now more willing to provide aid to back
economic reforms, implying the opening up of the economy,
including the strategic public sector industries,
to market control.
However, Economist Joseph Stiglitz in a recent article
in the Financial Times has pointed out, investment
in a market economy misses out on rural roads, on
health and education. Overseas aid is money well spent,
he has argued, adding that US Treasury Secretary Paul
O’Neill's statement that disbursal of US aid
depends on evidence that aid works is just an excuse
not to hike their aid commitments. Since more often
than not, poor people under corrupt regimes have little
say in the running of their governments, denying aid
to these countries would be to victimise the poor
for no fault of theirs, he says.
Despite increasing economic activity and globalisation,
poverty worldwide is on the increase. Some 1.2 billion
people now live on less than US $1 a day. Of the 4.4
billion people in developing countries:
60 per cent lack basic sanitation
30 per cent do not have access to clean water
25 per cent lack adequate housing
20 per cent do not have access to acceptable health
services
20 per cent of children do not complete the equivalent
of primary schooling.
The erosion of public health services and increased
medical costs owing to privatisation, along with the
handing over of drinking water distribution to the
private sector in several countries, will only worsen
the crisis in health and sanitation and lead to more
preventable deaths and diseases.
April 19, 2002.
[Based on: (i) 'Report
shows impact of poor sanitation on world's health'
by Barry Mason, on April 18, 2002 in www.wsws.org
(ii) COMMENT & ANALYSIS: Overseas aid is
money well spent: by Joseph Stiglitz in Financial
Times, Apr 15, 2002 (iii) http://www.longman.com.au]
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