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ENERGY-BRAZIL: Putting (Human) Waste to Work
By Fabiana Frayssinet
PETROPOLIS, Brazil - Biodigester technology, which originated in Asia as a natural process for treating sewage waste, is reemerging in Latin America as an integrated system providing cheap energy, improved sanitation, and even attractive landscaping.
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SANITATION-ZAMBIA: Back Policy With Funding
By Kelvin Kachingwe
MANSA, Zambia - Water- and sanitation-related diseases cost communities dearly, particularly in rural Zambia.
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HEALTH-ANGOLA: "It's Normal Here That Children Die Young"
By Louise Redvers
LUANDA - Angelina Silva doesn’t remember the exact dates when her sons died. She just remembers their ages.
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ZAMBIA: Farmers Resort to Human Waste for Fertiliser
By Lewis Mwanangombe
LUSAKA - The economy's down, the price of fertiliser's up. And Zambian farmers are stealing sewage for their vegetable gardens.
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MALAWI: Questions Over Water Stats
By Claire Ngozo
LILONGWE - A set of new research data contests the Malawian government's claims that nearly all of the country’s urban citizens have access to clean water and sanitation.
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Q&A: "Sanitation Is Inextricably Linked to Human Rights"
Nergui Manalsuren interviews Catarina de Albuquerque, the U.N. Independent Expert on human rights, water and sanitation
UNITED NATIONS - Some 1.6 million people die each year due to water and sanitation related diseases, millions of girls do not go to school because of lack of toilets, and prison detainees are denied access to adequate sanitation in some countries as a form of punishment, clear violations of the rights to health, education, and many other human rights.
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DEVELOPMENT: New Threats Aggravate Africa's Water Crisis
By Thalif Deen
STOCKHOLM - The widespread water scarcity in the African continent, impacting on the lives of nearly 300 million people, may be aggravated further by several new threats, including climate change, transboundary disputes and the negative fallout from military conflicts.
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INDIA: When Toilets Were as Scarce as Hen's Teeth
By Thalif Deen
STOCKHOLM - Dr. Bindeshwar Patak, the 2009 Stockholm Water Prize Laureate and founder of a grassroots sanitation movement in India, recounts the days before his country's independence in 1947 when toilets were a rare sight in remote villages and towns under British rule.
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Q&A: "Safe Drinking Water for Astronauts, Not Slum Dwellers"
Thalif Deen interviews Anders Berntell, Executive Director of the Stockholm International Water Institute*
STOCKHOLM - "We can provide astronauts with a safe supply of drinking water when they travel to the moon, but we cannot provide the same service to slum dwellers in Kibera, Nairobi or Dharavi, Mumbai," Anders Berntell, executive director of the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI), told a gathering of over 2,400 participants at the annual World Water Week concluding Friday.
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Q&A: Knowledge Barriers Key Factor in Sanitation Crisis
Nergui Manalsuren interviews sanitation expert Duncan Mara
UNITED NATIONS - Despite longstanding promises by world leaders to halve, by 2015, the number of people without basic sanitation, 2.5 billion still lack access to basic sanitation, and 1.2 billion don't have any form of sanitation at all.
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DEVELOPMENT: Should Water Be Legislated as a Human Right?
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - The growing commercialisation of water - and the widespread influence of the bottling industry worldwide - is triggering a rising demand for the legal classification of one of the basic necessities of life as a human right.
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ZIMBABWE: Neglect Sanitation at Your Peril
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO - A functioning public toilet has become a rare sight in Bulawayo. Across this southern Zimbabwean city of about two million residents, public toilets have all but stopped functioning, the buildings now more useful as platforms for graffiti and campaign posters than as public conveniences where people answer the call of nature.
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Q&A: Sanitation No Longer a Dirty Word in India
Thalif Deen interviews DR. BINDESHWAR PATHAK, the 2009 Stockholm Water Prize laureate
UNITED NATIONS - In India, many moons ago, nobody dared talk about toilets - a subject that was taboo, particularly at mealtime.
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HEALTH: Private Sector Boosts Public Toilets in Poorer Nations
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - The United Nations is disappointed that most governments in the developing world have made relatively little progress in providing basic sanitation facilities to nearly 2.5 billion people who still have no access to toilets.
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HEALTH-LAOS: Inadequate Sanitation Denting GDP
By Nergui Manalsuren
UNITED NATIONS - Poor sanitation and hygiene costs the Lao People’s Democratic Republic 193 million dollars per year, an estimated 5.6 percent of gross domestic product, according to figures from the Water and Sanitation Programme (WSP) of the World Bank.
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ARGENTINA: Huge Loan to Flow into ‘Open Sewer’ River
By Marcela Valente*
BUENOS AIRES - Local residents and environmentalists are eyeing with cautious optimism a major loan from the World Bank to the Argentine government to clean up the Matanza-Riachuelo river that runs through Buenos Aires - the country's most polluted waterway.
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News in RSS Despite improved sanitation worldwide last year, there are still about 2.6 billion people - or about 41 percent of the world population - lacking adequate toilet facilities.

The United Nations says the annual cost of meeting the water and sanitation targets in the Millennium Development Goals by 2015 is about $11.3 billion, of which $9.5 billion is for sanitation alone. The world body is currently assessing the successes and failures of the International Year of Sanitation 2008. Meanwhile, the Seoul-based World Toilet Association (WTA) - working in some of the world's poorest nations, including Cambodia, Cameroon, Ghana, Kenya, Laos and Mongolia - is calling for "a new toilet culture and a toilet revolution".

The MDGs call for a 50-percent reduction in the number of people living without adequate sanitation or toilets.

Millennium Development Goals
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)
Education - The Key to Development
The Southern Africa Water Wire
Asia Water Wire
News in RSS
CLIMATE CHANGE: Dark Clouds Gathering Over Copenhagen
MEXICO: Women Package the Sweet Taste of Nostalgia
POLITICS: Thai-Cambodia Diplomatic Row Bares Decades-Long Rift
SRI LANKA: Colombo’s Diplomatic Sparring Games with EU, U.S.
CLIMATE CHANGE-US: Too Little, Too Late for Copenhagen?
HONDURAS: Unilateral "Unity Government" Announced; Deal "Dead"
RIGHTS-NICARAGUA: Mudslinging Match Between Gov't, Activists
MIDEAST: Lessons from the Karine A -Déjà Vu All Over Again
AFRICA: We Are the Government
U.S.: "War Comes Home" with Ft. Hood Shootings
More >>
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SANITATION SAVES LIVES AND HELPS THE ENVIRONMENT AND THE ECONOMY
by Therese Dooley
UNQUENCHABLE THIRST: THE WORLD WATER BUSINESS
by Riccardo Petrella
MDGS AT MIDPOINT : THE MONEY IS THERE, THE POLITICAL WILL ISN'T
by Kumi Naidoo

UN Millennium Development Goals
World Toilet Association (English)
World Toilet Association (Korean)
International Water and Sanitation Centre
UNICEF on Sanitation
BBC on Toilets
MDG Monitor - Tracking the Millennium Development Goals
United Nations Non-Governmental Liaison Service - Millennium Development Goals
MDGs Choike - a portal on Southern civil societies

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IPS gratefully acknowledges the support provided by the World Toilet Association in South Korea for special coverage of issues related to sanitation.