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The UN declared in 2010 that access to water and sanitation
are human rights, but billions of people around the world are a long way from
realizing these rights.
It is estimated that 2.6 billion people live without proper
sanitation. Over 1.1 billion people have no sanitation facilities at all and
practise open defecation: they go to the toilet behind bushes, in fields,
plastic bags, ditches or along railway tracks.
Lack of adequate sanitation affects women and girls in
particular. Not only do women and girls have different physical needs from men
but they also have greater need for privacy when using toilets and when
bathing. Inaccessible toilets and bathrooms make them more vulnerable to rape
and other forms of gender-based violence.
“Women and girls disproportionate face risks of sexual
violence when they have to walk long distances to sanitation facilities,
especially at night,” argues Catarina de Albuquerque, UN expert on the human
right to safe drinking water and sanitation.
According to Amnesty International, millions of women and
girls have to walk more than 300 metres from their homes to use available
latrines. The common use of “flying toilets” – human waste disposed of in
plastic bags thrown into the open – is a result of the inaccessibility of
toilet facilities.
“In addition to the risk of physical and sexual violence,
women and girls who defecate in the open, especially in the bush, face the risk
of animal attacks,” said the expert.
She said that one study found that women and girls are more
susceptible to snake bites because they tend to move quietly in the bush in
order to be discrete. Snakes and other animals are then not scared away
and are more likely to be surprised by the women’s presence and bite them. Men,
on the other hand, are more likely to walk loudly into the bush scaring snakes
and other animals away.
Women and girls don’t need toilets and bathrooms just for
defecation. They also have a much greater need for privacy and dignity when
menstruating.
“Women and girls have particular sanitation needs when they
are menstruating which are rarely discussed and considered,” said the expert.
“Menstruation remains a taboo in many cultures,” she explained “and, as a
result, the ability to engage in a wide variety of activities – school, work,
movement in general – while women and girls are menstruating is restricted when
they lack access to an appropriate sanitation facility.”
Separate toilets at school, for example, mean more girls are
likely to attend in the first place, and more girls are likely to stay after
puberty to complete their education.
“One important step,” the expert said, “is to ensure
that women and girls are able to participate in decision making and express
their priorities and perspectives.” “Women and girls place higher value on the
need for a private toilet than men, and thus are often willing to devote
household resources to gaining such access. However, women are rarely in
control of the household budget, and access to sanitation remains a low
priority in many parts of the world,” she explained.
Girls are also at greater risk if they cannot wash in
private. Ms Albuquerque cited a man who, almost with tears in his eyes, told
her that his daughter came home saying she did not want to go to school because
the other kids teased and said she smelled.
The father said: ‘I know she smells, but we do not have
water in our place.’ And when the expert asked him, ‘What did you do?,’ he
answered: ‘The only thing I could do was to hug her and cry with her’.”
In June 2011, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon launched the
“Sustainable Sanitation: Five-Year Drive to 2015” a push to speed up progress
on the Millennium Development Goals of improving global sanitation by 2015 and
to ensure sanitation for all.