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UN urges end to 'water apartheid'
bbc.co.uk ^ | 9 November 2006 | David Loyn

Posted on 11/10/2006 2:21:48 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe

A new report from the United Nations Development Programme has demanded a big increase in spending to provide clean water.

The UNDP wants another $4bn (£2bn) a year spent, and says that water has not received the attention it deserves.

Water-borne diseases such as diarrhoea kill far more people than HIV/Aids and malaria combined, it said.

And the difference is particularly stark for children: water-borne diseases kill five times as many children as HIV/Aids.

The report says that water is a key part of human development - and warns that, in particular, sub-Saharan Africa is lagging behind the rest of the world in the provision of basic services.

Rich unaffected

The report says that 2.4 billion people in the world do not have access to safe sanitation.

Some steps are simple and can have dramatic results - just putting in a safe standpipe can reduce mortality by 20%.

But Kevin Watkins, the report's author, says that the world needs to think on a much bigger scale than this.

He says a similar initiative is needed as that carried out 100 years ago in major European cities, including London, to provide water and sewage treatment.

Back then, diseases such as cholera, carried in dirty water, were affecting the rich as well as the poor.

In the modern world of what Mr Watkins calls "water apartheid", the rich do not suffer in the same way, and the incentives for government to act are less.

"You can't help wondering - if the children of the wealthy were suffering the same fate as the children of the poor regarding water and sanitation, if high income women were also walking four hours a day to collect water - whether something would have been done about it."

"I think something would have happened a long time ago."

Huge costs

The report finds that the big arguments about privatisation in recent years miss the point.

There have been some high-profile failures where western companies have not been able to deliver their promises in developing countries.

But slum dwellers in places including Nairobi in Kenya already pay for private water supplies, delivered by truck.

The amounts they pay are huge and this water is more expensive per litre than in London or New York.

The poorest people in Latin America can pay up to 10% of their household income for water.

Climate change

As well as the loss of life and the cost of disease, the time spent collecting water has other economic effects.

The report calculates that the cost to Africa is equivalent to about 5% of the continent's economic growth, about the same amount of growth as is generated by money received in aid.

Mr Watkins says: "This is one of the biggest potential setbacks to human development in Africa for a century."

But he says that water has been left out of recent announcements on development by the richest countries in the world.

The report does not believe that water represents a major security threat, and the prospect of 'water wars' is not as serious as others have predicted.

But it does warn of severe consequences if there is not a major strategic plan for water use across country borders, especially as climate change reduces the capacity of the poorest countries to grow food for themselves.

Growing inequality

The report highlights the growing gap between rich and poor, not only in income, but also in the provision of basic services.

And it shows the glaring gaps not just between rich and poor countries, but between the rich and poor within developing countries.

Children in Indonesia, for example, are four times as likely to die before their fifth birthday if they are born into the poorest 20% of the population instead of the richest 20%.

And the combined income of the richest 500 people in the world exceeds that of the poorest 416 million.

The report says that one of the central challenges of human development is to "diminish tolerance for the extreme inequalities that have characterised globalisation since the 1990s."

"Globalisation has given rise to a protracted debate over trends in global income distribution, but we sometimes lose sight of the sheer depth of inequality, and how greater equity could dramatically accelerate poverty reduction," Mr Watkins said.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: globalapartheid; shakedown; undp
South Africa: World Must Fight "Global Apartheid" on Water Access: Mbeki - November 10, 2006
1 posted on 11/10/2006 2:21:49 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe

Oh geez.


2 posted on 11/10/2006 2:22:22 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: Tailgunner Joe
The report says that one of the central challenges of human development is to "diminish tolerance for the extreme inequalities that have characterised globalisation since the 1990s."

I once read a demented treatise by Marx and Engles that suggested a similar approach.
3 posted on 11/10/2006 2:25:54 PM PST by kinoxi
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To: Tailgunner Joe

Yea!so what.Let the UN run to these thired world despots and get the money from them;but don't even think of bumbing the money you need from the American Taxpayer.


4 posted on 11/10/2006 2:26:24 PM PST by puppypusher
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To: dfwgator
And the combined income of the richest 500 people in the world exceeds that of the poorest 416 million Making the 500 richest poor, will not help the 416 million
5 posted on 11/10/2006 2:27:07 PM PST by JoanneSD
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To: Tailgunner Joe
...In the modern world of what Mr Watkins calls "water apartheid", the rich do not suffer in the same way,...

So, dog gone it, let's make the rich suffer too.
6 posted on 11/10/2006 2:28:26 PM PST by rottndog (WOOF!!!)
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To: Tailgunner Joe

If the UN wanted to do some good, they should stop supporting left-wing, incompetent corrupt governments in sub-Saharan Africa.

Even minimally competent local governments would address basic water and sewage infrastructure.

The UN liberals must be terribly conflicted - in their heart of hearts they really yearn to re-colonize Africa in order to provide the population decent water, power, schools, roads, medical facilities, etc. that the local kleptocracies fail to provide, and yet they must hate themselves for having those colonizing feelings.


7 posted on 11/10/2006 2:30:51 PM PST by SirJohnBarleycorn
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To: SirJohnBarleycorn

Here's a free market solution:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1736456/posts


8 posted on 11/10/2006 2:35:57 PM PST by rottndog (WOOF!!!)
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To: Tailgunner Joe

If any sub-Saharan African wants to come to the tap on the side of my house, they can have all the water they want. It is not "Apartheid" that I don't install a pipe across the ocean to Africa.

BTW, when are we going to stop using "Apartheid" as the all-purpose word for everything bad. There are worse things that Apartheid happening in Zimbabwe or Sudan today, for example.


9 posted on 11/10/2006 2:49:47 PM PST by gridlock (My Prognosticator Unit is busted, and stuck on "ROSY". Predictions may be unreliable.)
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To: gridlock

I was wondering what they want the US to do in this case --pipe water across the Atlantic? This is so stupid. You don't have water, DON'T LIVE THERE. live where the water is...


10 posted on 11/10/2006 2:51:49 PM PST by duckbutt ( If you let a smile be your umbrella, then most likely your butt will get soaking wet.)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
"You can't help wondering - if the children of the wealthy were suffering the same fate as the children of the poor regarding water and sanitation, if high income women were also walking four hours a day to collect water - whether something would have been done about it."

You'd only wonder if you're an idiot who never read a history book. Something was done about it, by the people involved, not by some international nanny state. And because it was done by the people involved their lives were enriched by it, not made more dependent on said nanny state. This isn't about class warfare, it's about education and initiative.

11 posted on 11/10/2006 2:57:54 PM PST by Billthedrill
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To: Tailgunner Joe
a fraction of that amount spent on water desalination research would radically change the world. There are breakthroughs already that will lower the price of desalination.
12 posted on 11/10/2006 3:09:56 PM PST by ckilmer
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To: rottndog
...In the modern world of what Mr Watkins calls "water apartheid"...

And in reply Yankeedame -- well known Freeper, raconteur, and yenta -- described Mr Watkins has having "a head full of bugs."

13 posted on 11/10/2006 3:12:45 PM PST by yankeedame ("Oh, I can take it but I'd much rather dish it out.")
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To: Tailgunner Joe

I'm entirely in favor of giving people clean water. Why, then, am I accused of some sort of racial discrimination?


14 posted on 11/10/2006 3:25:58 PM PST by popdonnelly
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