Pollution > Kyrgyzstan Improving Basic Hygiene and Sanitation
Kyrgyzstan Improving Basic Hygiene and Sanitation
17/11/2008
For
the first time in Central Asia, the International Conference
\"Ecological Safety in the International Year of Sanitation\" had
ministers, parliamentarians, village teachers, and university
professors speak about the down to earth issue of safe management of
human faeces and urine.
"I am used to speak about renewable energy, but this is the first time I have been asked to speak at a conference on sanitation and toilets, and I must confess, it is not an easy topic to discuss. We see that the lack of safe sanitation is a real problem in Central Asia", said Holger Green, Ambassador of Germany in Kyrgyzstan.
"We are concerned that sanitary conditions have been
deteriorating, especially in rural areas; there are hardly any schools
that have clean toilets or hand washing facilities in this country, and
as sanitation
is not seen as "bankable", funds by development banks are almost
not available and the budget of the Ministry of Education is almost
empty", says Sascha Gabizon, Executive Director of the Dutch NGO Women
in Europe for a Common Future, one of the main organisers of the conference.
"It was the first time in Kyrgyzstan that a two day conference was focussed on both policy
solutions and on innovative technical solutions to improve the water
and health situation", says Carola Bjorklund, senior diplomat of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Norway, "and it is a strong signal to
the governments, that the conference resolution calls for the Central Asian countries to ratify the international protocol on water and health".
"We have a number of donor projects providing piped water supply to villages, but if sanitation
is not addressed at the same time, we find that often waste water and
toilet waste end up in puddles in the streets or gardens, or are
lead into a nearby stream, a hygienic risk for the local population",
said Mrs Sharshenova of the ministry of health of Kyrgyzstan.
"Human faeces contain many bacteria, and my research in the Aral Sea
region shows increased incidence of diahrrea and dysentery among
children under the age of 2, which can amongst others be linked to
children being exposed to raw faeces in the yards" says Dr. Susanne
Herbst of the University of Bonn, "it is essential that any sanitation system safely manages human excreta".
"Unfortunately international donors are still promoting pit latrines"
says Dr. Claudia Wendland of WECF, "but most families can not pay for
the pits being safely emptied. Instead, we have demonstrated that
sustainable sanitation toilet systems are available which not only allow safe treatment of faeces, but also safe reuse of urine as a fertiliser, and, a great plus, sustainable sanitation toilets can be used indoors and still do not need water for flushing".
The 200 participants of the conference
were invited to visit 3 demonstration projects showing how
wastewater from kitchens and bathrooms was efficiently cleaned
using a "soil filter", a sealed pond in which sand and plants clean the
wastewater to a quality of bathing water, The participants also visited
2 different types of dry urine diverting toilets. The cost of the
toilets vary between 200 and 450 Euro, including a wash facility and
light, this is much cheaper than having to build a flush-toilet and
connecting to a sewage system, which in most villages does not exist in
any case. The cost of the soil filter for 5 people amounts to about 950
euro, also less expensive than connecting to a sewage system.
Dr. Sabyrjan Abdikarimov, deputy minister of Health of Kyryzstan, concluded that the conference
had raised an issue of essential importance for the health of Central
Asian's population, and that his ministry will be engaged with all
stakeholders, nationally as well as in the regions, to work for
preventive health protection through better sanitation facilities and education.
The eastern part of England also is partly reclaimed from the sea,
centuries ago. The marshlands now are a valuable agricultural area. Of
course, maintenance is needed to keep the water where it belongs and at
the same time making it work. This video explains the 'how' of it by
the Water Management Alliance, showing pumps, dedicated machines and
ways of working with water.