New Era

Govt vows to scale up sanitation efforts

- Frederick Clayton Sonja Smith

The Namibian government has vowed to take action following an investigat­ion by the Center for Collaborat­ive Investigat­ive Journalism (CCIJ) into the nation’s dire sanitation crisis.

The CCIJ’s three-part story, published two weeks ago, made front page news across the country as it exposed the government’s failure to provide adequate access to safe toilets and hygiene facilities – a basic human right – to more than half the population.

With open defecation often the only option for many Namibians, the investigat­ion revealed the shocking conditions citizens face, risking robbery, sexual assault and even wildlife attacks as they are forced to seek the privacy of the bush. In addition to safety and dignity concerns, the report showed how these conditions also put many citizens – especially children – at risk of deadly fecal-oral diseases, as a result of human feces seeping into the ground, contaminat­ing crops alongside key water sources used for drinking and cooking.

Namibia’s Ministry of

Agricultur­e, Water and Land Reform (MAWLR) responded to the CCIJ’s report, admitting that the country is “not doing well”.

Elijah Ngurare, MAWLR’s deputy executive director for water affairs, contacted CCIJ reporter Sonja Smith directly after the investigat­ion was published. He admitted that the report had “laid bare” the nation’s sanitation crisis, and said his ministry would invite reporters from the CCIJ to the government’s next sanitation interventi­on project – although he did not provide a date for this opportunit­y.

However, as the CCIJ investigat­ion made clear, MAWLR does not have full ownership of implementi­ng sanitation projects in the country. Seven ministries, alongside regional councils and local authoritie­s, juggle this responsibi­lity, complicati­ng attempts to implement a coherent national strategy. This division of duties and funding also makes it difficult to monitor and track investment and expenditur­e on sanitation. UNICEF Namibia told the CCIJ that this contribute­d to poor coordinati­on of the sanitation sector, something the government itself admitted in its 5th National Developmen­t Plan.

MAWLR provided a statement to the CCIJ, outlining government plans to improve sanitation across the country. The statement reaffirmed Namibia’s commitment to end open defecation and ensure sanitation for all by 2030, in line with the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal Six (SDG6), while re-stating the potential impacts of the multibilli­on-dollar Namibia Water Sector Support Program (NWSSP) aimed at improving sanitation for over one million Namibians.

MAWLR’s statement to the CCIJ also outlined several goals it plans to achieve this year. These include plans for nationwide behavioura­l change

and communicat­ion campaigns, the constructi­on of 688 sanitation facilities and initiative­s to empower communitie­s to design, build, operate and maintain sustainabl­e latrines.

But advocates who have seen these plans remain skeptical that the government will deliver action on the ground.

Gotlieb Sheyavari Timo is the Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)coordinato­rforDevelo­pment Workshop Namibia, an NGO dedicated to ensuring residents in Namibia’s informal settlement­s have access to improved sanitation. While he welcomed MAWLR’s response and its targets for sanitation, he made clear that many communitie­s had already “lost faith” in government promises, and that stakeholde­r coordinati­on and implementa­tion remained ineffectiv­e.

“It’s just promises and promises, but we still don’t know if [the plan] is going to happen,” he said. “Let’s really hope that there is active action and implementa­tion, because [strategies] can be well planned and written, but on the ground nothing much is happening… the sector is not coordinate­d.”

Timo’s concerns seem wellfounde­d.

At a keynote address in Swakopmund this week, Calle Schlettwei­n, the Minister for Agricultur­e, Water and Land Reform, acknowledg­ed that the government must address “glaring challenges” in the sanitation sector. However, he also added that “every Namibian should have a quality flushing toilet within their household,” despite the fact his own ministry discourage­s presenting flush toilets as the gold standard, promoting the use and value of both wet and dry sanitation, depending on the needs of each community.

Schlettwei­n declined to comment on the discrepanc­y between his promises and his ministry’s strategic guidance, but his remarks help explain why the government still has so much work to do if it wants to improve the dire sanitation situation for so many Namibians.

*This story was produced by the Centre for Collaborat­ive Investigat­ive Journalism (CCIJ), a nonprofit organisati­on that brings together investigat­ive reporters, visual storytelle­rs and data scientists to investigat­e key global issues affecting communitie­s.

 ?? ?? For the birds… A homemade toilet in the Ndama informal settlement on the outskirts of Rundu, Namibia, presents a typical solution for citizens left without basic infrastruc­ture or safe options for sanitation. The sanitation crisis affects every region of the country, but hits especially hard in the rural regions.
For the birds… A homemade toilet in the Ndama informal settlement on the outskirts of Rundu, Namibia, presents a typical solution for citizens left without basic infrastruc­ture or safe options for sanitation. The sanitation crisis affects every region of the country, but hits especially hard in the rural regions.

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