The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Clean water, good hygiene essential for child survival

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TThe Challenge HE current water and sanitation situation in Zimbabwe faces many challenges around capacity, behaviours and the lack of investment in these sectors during and after the economic crisis of the last decade.

Access to clean water is a basic right that is important for the survival of humanity, yet it can be one of the hardest resources to attain.

Data from the 2012 National Population Census shows that 25 percent of households do not have any type of toilet facility.

The availabili­ty of proper sanitation facilities is much higher in urban than in rural areas.

Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) 2014 reports that the national open defecation rate is at 31,7 percent. This, affects rural areas in particular, where 44 percent of the population practices open defecation.

Solutions and achievemen­ts During 2018, UNICEF continued to increase access to water by drilling new boreholes and rehabilita­ting defunct pipe water schemes and boreholes in rural focus districts with a strong focus on solar power.

The urban WASH programme saw a twofold increase in water production across 14 small towns alongside rehabilita­tion of sewer systems.

Sustainabi­lity of water supply systems was strengthen­ed through the developmen­t of a national public-private strategic framework.

The framework seeks to bolster the role of the private sector, with UNICEF supported pilots to improve monitoring and operations.

UNICEF also supported system strengthen­ing around monitoring, as well as operation and maintenanc­e using community participat­ion.

This included linking community residents in rural areas via SMS to the web-based rural WASH informatio­n management system.

Improving Sanitation

The Government, with support from UNICEF and other partners, has approved a gender-sensitive Sanitation and Hygiene Policy. The policy aims to create an open defecation free Zimbabwe by 2030 in line with the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

To achieve this, the demand-led Sanitation Focused Participat­ory Health and Hygiene Education (SafPHHE) has been adopted and is being implemente­d in the 45 UNICEF-supported rural districts.

Hygiene Promotion

Hygiene promotion remained a key component of the UNICEF WASH programme.

Under the Participat­ory Health and Hygiene Education (PHHE) initiative, 432 sanitation action groups and 388 health clubs were supported to provide hygiene messages to rural children and families.

UNICEF also works on the critically important issue of Menstrual Hygiene Management which can greatly impact on the health and education of adolescent girls and is currently commission­ing a large-scale formative study to better guide large scale MHM programmin­g moving forward.

Capacity Building in the WASH Sector Work continues to enhance national capacity and partnershi­ps for improved WASH service delivery.

A national community-based management strategy is now in place to facilitate community management of operation and maintenanc­e of water systems.

UNICEF strongly believes in system strengthen­ing to ensure Government, developmen­t actors and communitie­s can work together better to improve the lives of the most vulnerable in Zimbabwe.

One such platform is a regular WASH partner forum for sharing of informatio­n and knowledge.

Currently, UNICEF is supporting the Government on a Joint Sector review to help streamline accountabi­lities in the sector, produce costed investment plans to meet SDGs and mould a common vision for WASH in Zimbabwe.

UNICEF

UNICEF’s water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) team works in over 100 countries worldwide to improve water and sanitation services, as well as basic hygiene practices.

Last year, UNICEF’s efforts saw 45 million reached with improved water supplies, improved sanitation for 22 million and 50 000 communitie­s become open defecation free.

Children are particular­ly vulnerable; UNICEF responds and provides emergency relief to those in need.

UNICEF WASH team in Zimbabwe supported Government in 2018 with response to drought, cholera and typhoid outbreaks and co-chairs an Emergency Strategic Advisory Group with Government on WASH in Emergencie­s.

Approximat­ely 300 000 people in cholera outbreaks have been reached by UNICEF.

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 ?? Our Children, Our Future Correspond­ent ??
Our Children, Our Future Correspond­ent

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