With the aim of enhancing access to fundamental sanitation services throughout the state, the Enugu State Government launched the African Sanitation Policy Guidelines (ASPG) project on Friday.
Mr. Dubem Onyia, Special Adviser to the Enugu State Government on Water, provided an explanation of the project’s justification at the occasion of the project’s debut in Enugu State.
“The state is domesticating the ASPG project in order to develop and implement workable sanitation policies that can help improve the lives of millions of people across the state.
“The project is not just about providing access to clean water and sanitation, but about empowering communities to take ownership of their own sanitation needs.”
He said: “Sanitation is a fundamental human right, yet millions of people in Africa lack access to basic sanitation facilities.
“This has a significant impact on their health and wellbeing, and it hinders their ability to lead productive lives.
“According to a recent report by the World Health Organisation (WHO), over 50 per cent of the population in sub-Saharan Africa lack access to basic sanitation facilities, which has led to increased cases of preventable diseases such as diarrhea, cholera, and typhoid fever.”
“The ASPG project is another step in the right direction,” Onyia said, praising WaterAid for its relentless efforts to increase access to clean water and sanitation in underdeveloped nations and in Enugu State.
To advance the project more quickly, actual decision-makers/heads of Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) must be brought on board, according to Mr. Adebayo Alao, Team Leader, Institutional Technical Assistance 3rd National Urban Water Sector Reform Project – Water Corporation, Enugu state.
Alao pointed out that the goal of the ASPG project was to coordinate numerous efforts in sanitation policies, programs, and frameworks in order to increase their effectiveness for the general public.
“The decision of Enugu state to domesticate this project is laudable and shows the seriousness and desire for the government to be open and get it right for the greater benefit of the people of the state,” he said.
Collaborating, Mr Solomon Akpanufot, the State Programme Lead, WaterAid, said that Enugu state was lucky to be one of the few states WaterAid would help launch the ASPG project in.
Akpanufot said that WaterAid was looking forward to having all the MDAs and stakeholders in sanitation, hygiene, water and health to key-into the project.
“We want to look at various policies of the various stakeholders and MDAs on sanitation and find out if there are still some gaps as well as see how government, WaterAid and other partners can address the gaps within the shortest time possible,” he said.