
The
United Nations on Monday in Abuja ranked Nigeria among top five
countries in the world with the largest number of people defecating in
the open.
The UN, which in its recent report, revealed that
34 million Nigerians defecate in the public, however, expressed optimism
that ending the unhealthy practice was possible.
The UNICEF
Communication Specialist (Media and External Relations) in Nigeria, Mr.
Geoffrey Njoku, in a statement on the World Toilet Day, said trends in
the past five years allow for cautious optimism that significant
progress would be made in decreasing the number of people globally who
practise open defecation.
Quoting a joint UNICEF and World
Health Organisation report of 2012, Njoku said, “It is estimated that 34
million Nigerians practise open defecation and Nigeria is amongst top
five countries in the world with largest number of people defecating in
the open.”
According to him, in Nigeria, it is estimated that
diarrhoea kills about 194,000 children under five every year while
respiratory infections kill another 240,000.
“These are largely preventable with improvements in water, sanitation and hygiene,” he stressed.
Globally,
UNICEF is supporting 50 countries including Nigeria to implement
community approaches to total sanitation such as Community-Led Total
Sanitation aimed at empowering communities to identify their sanitation
challenges and take necessary actions to end open defecation.
He
said, “CLTS aims to make all communities free of open defecation by
focusing on social and behaviour change and the use of affordable,
appropriate technologies.
“The emphasis is on the sustainable
use of sanitation facilities, rather than the construction of
infrastructure, and the approach depends on the engagement of members of
the community ranging from individuals, to schools, to traditional
leaders. Communities use their own capacities to attain their objectives
and take a central role in planning and implementing improved
sanitation.”
The UNICEF Country Representative in Nigeria,
Ibrahima Fall, said, “CLTS is simple and an effective way of improving
access to sanitation while also paving the way for their improved
health.”
Meanwhile, a Non-Governmental Organisation, WaterAid
Nigeria, on Monday in Abuja stated that Nigeria had been losing about
N455bn annually due to poor sanitation and bad hygiene.
The
organisation also said about 54 million Nigerian women and girls did not
have safe and adequate sanitation while 17 million of them did not have
a toilet at all.
The Country Representative of WAN, Mr. Michael
Ojo, and Head of Governance, Tolani Busari, at a press briefing on the
World Toilet Day, however, said the crisis could be solved.