Opinion
Why PDP Needs Bamanga Tukur
Yesterday was World Water Day. The United Nations earmarked 22nd of March, every year as the date.
Water as we all know is a necessity for life, provision of improved water supply is one of the basic social responsibilities of government and Safe water provision is one of the core components of water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) delivery.
Nigeria, with land area of 924,000km is endowed with about 267 billion cubic metres of surface water and about 52 billion cubic metres of ground water annually. These generous endowments are capable of meeting Nigeria’s current and future demands.
Not surprising, in a survey of rural areas throughout Nigeria, rural residents consistently identified access to water as their number one priority. The 2008 National Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) conducted by the National Population Commission (NPC) estimated that jsut about half of the total population in the country has access to improved water supply with the situaion worse in the rural areas than urban.
This level of access to improved water supply was coroborated by 2007 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) conducted by National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). The World Water Day celebration offers a chance for the Rivers State Government to spot-light these issues. There should be action to make a measurable difference in the lives of Rivers people.
Government should take up the challenge. The positive impact that will quake all the nooks and crannies of the state for better access to clean water, as demonstrated with the building of schools, roads and health centres. Every naira invested in water yields an estimated millions of naira worth of production activity.
There should be politial will on the side of the local and state governments to address the issue. While there have been advances, progress is hampered by population growth, wide spread poverty and insufficient awareness to address the problem. But the greatest problem is lack of political will.
Water is essential to life for basic health and survival as well as food production and economic growth. Here in the state, we are presently facing lack of access to basic supply of clean water in our various towns and communities. And this has enhanced the vulnurability of the rural folks to diseases.
It has frequently been argued in the international fora that the acknowledgement of water as a human right may prove to be the most important step in addressing the challenges before the state government in providing the people with the basic element of life.
A re-occuring theme in the debate on water as a human right has been the recognition that water is a necessary pre-condition to all human rights. It has also been argued that without equitable access to minimum requirement of clean water, other established right, such as right to standard of living adequate for health and well being as well as civil and political rights are not attainable.
Thus, while the world leaders have acknowledged that access to potable drinking water is a basic human right, they do recognise that the cost recovering principle should be applied for water usage beyond those needs. Supply system will not be sustainable unless there is investment to maintain and expand the system to meet the needs of development and a growing population.
The Rivers State Government should come up with series of measures aimed at securing meaningful progress to bring economic gain.
Above all, the Rivers State Water Board should be strengtherned to ensure the provision of potable water in Port Harcourt and other urban towns in the state. Besides, the state Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Agency (RUWASSA) should be saddled with the mandate of providing water bore-holes and reticulation of water in the rural communities. In addition, it should ensure the training of local manpower and maintenance of water bore-holes and such facilities with the Local Government Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Department.
This is one way that the celebration of the world Water Day can be meaningful to the ordinary Rivers people, because it will ensure availability and access to clean water in the state.
Napoleon writes from Port Harcourt.
Adah Napoleon
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