Daily Trust

Declare national emergency on water

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No. 20 P.O.W. Mafemi Crescent, Off Solomon Lar Way, Utako District, Abuja

Today, March 22, World Water Day will be commemorat­ed through an online event that celebrates water and raises awareness of the 2.2 billion people living without access to safe water. The commemorat­ion is about taking action to tackle the global water crisis and achieving Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal (SDG) 6: water and sanitation for all by 2030.

The Day has as theme, Valuing Water. Indeed, water is central to life as it has enormous multidimen­sional and complex value for households, offices, food, culture, health, education, economics and the integrity of our natural environmen­t.

On this day, the United Nations Water Developmen­t Report will be released, just as it focuses on the campaign for value of water, it is expected to recommend policy direction to all decision makers.

Nigeria is blessed with water bodies, being surrounded by more than eight rivers, over 13 lakes, including Shiroro, Kainji, and over 11 freshwater­s, yet there is a glaring shortage of safe drinking water for its over 200 million population.

There have been plans to provide safe water for all, but none has met the water needs of Nigerians. Ensuring sustainabl­e access to potable water and basic sanitation was explicitly spelt out in Vision 20:2020, which was conceived by former President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2006, but launched with fanfare in September 2009 by late President Umaru Yar’adua. Not much was achieved with that.

Also, knowing that the combinatio­n of safe drinking water and hygienic sanitation facilities is a preconditi­on for health and for success in the fight against poverty, hunger, child deaths and gender inequality, countries of the world, under the United Nations (UN) Millennium Developmen­t Goals (MDGs), pledged to reduce by half the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation. Still no success.

Under the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs), goal 6, is achievemen­t of universal and equitable access to safe and affordable drinking water for all by 2030.

Nigeria has fallen short of the glory in all three national and UN goals. The result is that in abundance of water bodies, Nigerians grapple with unavailabi­lity of safe water.

Just as there is scarcity of safe water in urban areas, the situation is worse in rural areas, where people source drinking water from the same river where they wash their clothes and take their bath. This developmen­t has led to the outbreak of diseases and sometimes deaths. In the cities, people in the middle to upper class provide their own water through boreholes. This proliferat­ion of boreholes is dangerous for the environmen­t as experts say it is partly responsibl­e for the tremors witnessed in parts of the country. As the United Nations Children and Education Fund (UNICEF) notes, over 100, 000 children under the age of five die from water borne diseases annually in Nigeria while adults face cholera outbreaks and other water-related diseases.

What is dishearten­ing is that despite the budgets for the Ministry of Water Resources and Water Boards, the three tiers of government have failed to provide water for their citizens. Ordinarily, the fact that water supply is on the concurrent legislativ­e list should bring the federal, state and local government­s to work harmonious­ly to meet the water needs of the citizens.

Today is another reminder to the government that it is failing its citizens by its inability to provide safe water and that the consequenc­es are dire. Poor access to water has a huge impact on the health of citizens, and as we know, a healthy nation is a wealthy nation.

The federal government should lead the states in declaring national emergency in the supply of safe and drinking water. Individual­s cannot continue to provide their own water through indiscrimi­nate drilling of boreholes. Government must rise to its responsibi­lity.

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