November 17, 2008
SACOSAN silent vigil highlights silent killer

A woman lights a candle in Delhi.
Credit: FAN South Asia
WaterAid joined grassroots organizations from Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Pakistan in a silent candlelit vigil in Delhi, India, this weekend.
The vigil commemorated the deaths of one million children killed by diarrheal diseases in South Asia in the last two years.
It coincided with the South Asia Conference on Sanitation (SACOSAN), a biennial ministerial level conference taking place this week in the city.
There is a sanitation crisis in South Asia. There is human suffering on an unprecedented scale.
"There is a sanitation crisis in South Asia.
There is human suffering on an unprecedented scale. Business as usual
by our governments is not an option," said Joe Madiath of Gram Vikas,
an Indian community organization. On the eve of the conference, Madiath
was in Delhi to deliver a declaration drawn up by representatives from
hundreds of South Asian grassroots organizations working to improve
sanitation.
South Asian governments, despite setting targets for universal
access, will not meet the 2015 Millennium Development Goal (MDG)
sanitation target until 2043 – 28 years too late. In South Asia one billion people live without adequate sanitation and 778 million of those people practice open defecation. Government inaction is having devastating consequences for the region’s poorest people.

A candelit vigil in Delhi ahead of the 2008 SACOSAN Conference.
Credit: FAN South Asia
WaterAid fully endorses the call to action which demands that
governments in the region reaffirm and honor their previous
commitments. These include working on the principle that you get what
you measure, meaning that sanitation programs should be designed to
ensure the practice of good hygiene and the eradication of open
defecation. We also strongly support the demand for governments to
recognize and act upon the fact that sanitation and water are basic
human rights.
Oliver Cumming, WaterAid's Sanitation Policy Officer, said: "This
region is facing nothing less than a sanitation crisis. All eyes now
rest on the governments of South Asia as they come together this week.
Now is the time for urgent and immediate action, otherwise we'll be
meeting in 2010 and talking about another million children killed from
entirely preventable diseases."
Tom Burgess, WaterAid's Country Program Officer for Asia said: "We
made it a silent vigil as the sanitation crisis is a silent killer. We
hope that this will raise awareness of the desperate need that millions
of people have for something as basic as a toilet."
For further information please contact WaterAid's Tom Burgess, TomBurgess@wateraid.org, +44 7500 882 341
Read Tom Burgess' blog from the SACOSAN conference
Notes to Editor:
WaterAid enables the world's poorest people to gain access to safe
water, sanitation and hygiene education. Our vision is of a world where
everyone has access to these basic human rights which underpin health,
education and livelihoods forming the first, essential step in
overcoming poverty.
The two day meeting was led by Freshwater Action Network South Asia
and supported by WaterAid and Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative
Council.
Why is sanitation important?
- Economics: Evidence suggests for every $1 invested, $9 is returned in increased productivity
- Health: People earn less and waste more on medicine if they or their family are sick from diarrheal disease
- Education: Girls are highly likely to stay away when there are no separate facilities, and children cannot study while sick from diarrheal disease
- Dignity: Poor sanitation particularly affects women and girls, who also risk indignity and attack. Furthermore, there are thousands of people make a living by removing feces from other people's latrines and carrying it away in baskets on their heads