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South Africa's 'world in one country' experienceAfrica is facing a water and sanitation crisis. An estimated one in three Africans do not have access to adequate water supply and sanitation facilities. In sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) 40% of people lack access to a safe water supply and almost half suffer from water related diseases. In the face of these statistics, can the water and sanitation goals be met in Africa? South Africa's new Department of Water Affairs and Forestry (DWAF) reports on the country's experience with water supply and demonstrates that they can. In the first seven years of democratic government in South Africa, seven million rural people were provided with clean water, thus meeting the Millennium target, of halving those without access by 2015, 14 years early. It now aims to achieve full coverage by reaching another seven million by the year 2008. However, sanitation progress has been much slower, but has now become a national political priority following a cholera outbreak in KwaZulu-Natal in 2000. In response to this wake-up call, South Africa aims to address the entire sanitation backlog by 2010 by:
During apartheid, South Africa was a relatively well-off, albeit starkly unequal, middle-income country. With apartheid overthrown, it has been relatively straightforward to redistribute national tax revenues to fund infrastructure that meets the basic needs of the country's poor population. But how can this process be replicated in poorer countries? What is the global equivalent of ending apartheid in South Africa? The DWAF recommends that achieving the water and sanitation goals globally will depend on:
Mike Muller T +27 12 336 7500 |
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