People's Water Summit: Women and Girls "Bear Brunt" of Global Crisis
As a new report shows an estimated 650 million of the world’s poorest people still lack access to water that is safe to consume and 2.5 billion people lack basic sanitation, warriors from the frontlines of this global crisis—many of them women and girls—are gathering in New York on Tuesday to affirm that water is a human right.
The World Water Day event is being billed as an alternative “People’s Summit” to the invite-only White House Water Summit also taking place Tuesday, and will “ensure the voices of those directly impacted and working on the ground as advocates on the human rights to water and sanitation are heard,” according to organizers. Scheduled to coincide with the the 60th Session of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women, sponsors of the panel include Food & Water Watch, the U.S. Human Rights Network (USHRN), Alabama Center for Rural Enterprise, and WaterAid.
The latter group, an international non-profit headquartered in New York, released a report Tuesday entitled, Water: At What Cost? The State of the World’s Water 2016. It finds that in 16 countries, more than 40 percent of the population does not even have access to a basic water facility like a protected well.
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In turn, “[p]eople from impoverished, marginalized communities have no choice but to collect dirty water from open ponds and rivers,” the report reads, “or spend large chunks of their income buying water from vendors”—in some cases, more than half their family’s daily income.
“The price paid by these communities—in wasted income, ill-health, and lost productivity—is extremely high, and has a devastating impact from the family to the national level,” WaterAid declares.
“Women and girls in many cases bear the brunt of this global water and sanitation crisis,” the USHRN said in a call-to-action. “It often falls to them to collect water from further and further away, or to provide care to family members who fall ill from poor water or sanitation conditions. Open [defecation] can increase risks of sexual violence. Inability to manage menstruation with dignity can create barriers to education or to work. Water shut-offs also place mothers at risk of losing custody of their children, and contaminated water has particularly serious risks for pregnant and nursing women.”
But as the drinking water crises in Flint, Michigan and beyond have acutely shown, these concerns are not limited to developing nations.
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