Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Africa Water, Sanitation Jan -Feb 2014 Vol.10 No1 | Page 3
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January - February 2015 Vol 10 No. 1
Contents
27 Africa Must Prioritize Water in its
Development Agenda
Although African countries
REGULARS
Publisher
S.N. Mwaniki
Email: [email protected]
2 Comment
3 News in Brief
38 Publications
Editor
Kariuki Wangai
Email: [email protected]
32 Water & Sanitation 40 Roundup
Events
41 Calender 2015
33 People
42 Buyers’ Guide
have been lauded for their
efforts towards ensuring that
people have access to safe
drinking water in keeping with Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs), they have nonetheless come under
scrutiny for failure to prioritize water in their development
agendas.
36 Health
Assistant Editor
A. Ayiro
FEATURES
Editorial Consultants
Befrina Igulu (Ms)
Email: [email protected]
Dr. Judith Nyunja
Email: [email protected]
Eng. Malaquen Milgo
15 25 Years after Rights Convention, Children
Still Need More
Protection
UNITED NATIONS, Nov
14 2014 (IPS) - Next
week marks 25 years since the adoption of the Convention
on the Rights of the Child, a historic commitment to children
and the most widely accepted human rights treaty in
history.
Email: [email protected]
Raphael M. Kabando
Email: [email protected]
Eng. Prof. Patts M.A. Odira
Email: [email protected]
Peter Mwaura
Email: [email protected]
Eng. Ephraim Kisembo
Email: [email protected]
John Rao Nyaoro, HSC
Email: [email protected]
Regional Representatives:
Rwanda
Contact: Dr. F. Otieno
Tel: +254 722 456 279
Uganda and South Sudan
Contact: Cyrus Ruheni
Tel: +256 773 124 075
Zimbabwe
Contact: Marjory Kusotera-Dzapata
Institute of Water and Sanitation
Development
Box MP422, Mount Pleasant
Harare, ZIMBABWE
Tel/Fax: 263-4-735035, 799049/50
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Moss Colman
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©2013 Transworld Publishers Limited
16
World Wetlands Day
2 February
With our theme this year as
“Wetlands for our Future”, we
want to highlight the choices
ahead of us all, considering the all-too-real threat to
wetlands around the world.
20 An Emerging Fecal Sludge Management
System in a Post-Conflict Situation: The Case
of Juba
According to a 2013
baseline survey by
SUWASA at least 55% of
households have access
to personal toilets, mostly
pit latrines or pour-flush
toilets that require emptying and fecal sludge management.
Continued use of onsite sanitation facilities is expected as
the piped water supply network serves only 20% of the
city’s growing population.
29 Mauritius: Government Programme
2015-2019 - Ensuring a Proper Domestic
Water Supply, Electricity Production and
Distribution
Government Programme 2015-2019 spells out the
major reforms to be brought to the public utilities
sector, especially in relation to domestic water supply,
electricity production and distribution as well as waste
management. Addressing the long standing problem of
water supply in the country remains a priority.
30 World Economic Forum
Water scarcity is recognized
as one of the most tangible
and fastest-growing social,
political and economic
challenges we face today.
To meet economic growth aspirations, our global demand
for water is projected to exceed available supply by 40%
by the year 2030, exposing a very real risk of potential
disruptions to business operations, and their supply
chains.
35 Power Africa tiptoes around Inga 3 dam
How do you support a massive energy development
project without “officially” supporting it? In Africa, the
U.S. government may have found a way.
Construction of the Inga 3 dam in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, while controversial, could, by
some experts’ estimation, achieve U.S. President Barack
Obama’s ambitious goal for Power Africa in one fell
swoop and provide 40,000 megawatts of energy to a
power-starved continent. A chorus of African developers
want Inga 3 to happen, but the dam is riddled with risk
and could “tarnish” the U.S. initiative’s brand.
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Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene • January - February 2015
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