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ARGENTINA
Water - Some Waste It, Some Want It
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - In Argentina, the availability of water far outstrips demand, yet 11 percent of the population still lacks piped water, while a large proportion of the rest squanders it without a second thought.
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Palestinians Thirsting for Justice in Water-Starved Occupied Territories
By Thalif Deen
STOCKHOLM - In the strife-stricken Middle East, oil has always been in the realm of politics. But in the Israeli-occupied territories of Gaza and the West Bank, oil has been supplanted by water.
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Africa Remains Hamstrung in Battle for Water and Sanitation
By Thalif Deen
STOCKHOLM - The statistics coming out of Africa are staggering: 40 percent of Africa’s 1 billion people live in urban areas and 60 percent live in slums, where water supplies and sanitation are "severely inadequate", according to the Nairobi-based U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP).
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'Sustainable Development Must Start with People'
By Thalif Deen
STOCKHOLM - When world leaders meet in Brazil next June for a U.N. Conference on Sustainable Development, the third since the landmark 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, the question lingering in the minds of many is: what really is "sustainable development" in the context of a fast-changing world of growing poverty, hunger, pollution, political repression and social unrest?
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Mega Cities Could Trigger Water Shortages and Social Unrest
By Thalif Deen
STOCKHOLM - The rapid growth of urban population - described as one of the world’s major demographic trends - has triggered an explosion of "mega cities" in Asia, Latin America and Africa, causing a breakdown in basic services, including water supplies and sanitation facilities.
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Too Much Water As Dangerous As Too Little
By Thalif Deen
STOCKHOLM - The international community is running the risk of losing the battle for water and sanitation in many cities around the world.
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Q&A
Water Will Be Lifeblood of Smart Urban Expansion
U.N. Bureau Chief Thalif Deen interviews ANDERS BERNTELL, executive director of the Stockholm International Water Institute
UNITED NATIONS - The world's water map is being significantly redrawn due primarily to the mass migration of people into urban centres, threatening one of life's vital resources.
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Water Crisis Offers Chance for Unity over Strife
By Kanya D'Almeida
WASHINGTON - As record-breaking temperature highs and rapidly melting ice caps fuel fears about impending "water wars", some experts in Washington say that the threat of full-blown conflict is exaggerated, adding that robust institutions and solid treaties could transform water crises into international cooperation.
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Bolivian President Denounces Water Privatisation
By Haider Rizvi
UNITED NATIONS - "Water is life. Water is humanity. How could it be part of the private business?" asked Bolivian President Evo Morales Wednesday, stressing the social and economic consequences of the growing trend of private ownership over water supply and delivery systems in many parts of the world.
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Right to Water Still a Political Mirage
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - When the international community commemorates the first anniversary of a historic General Assembly resolution recognising the right to water and sanitation as a basic human right, there will be no joyous celebrations in the corridors of the United Nations, come Jul. 28.
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Sanitation Moves Up Global Development Agenda
By Sunaina Perera
UNITED NATIONS - With nearly 40 percent of the world's population lacking adequate sanitation, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation announced an initiative Tuesday to invest 42 million dollars in new grants to help "reinvent the toilet".
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HEALTH
Water, Sanitation Could Erase Cholera and Guinea Worm
By Isolda Agazzi
GENEVA - The World Health Assembly could adopt landmark resolutions asking governments to improve water and sanitation to eradicate cholera and guinea worm, the latter of which exists in just four countries in Africa. While safe drinking water and toilets are the most cost-effective public health measures, they have not been a priority for most developing countries.
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DEVELOPMENT
Chinese Step In, Efficiently
By Sanjay Suri
ISTANBUL - For Jany Chen from Shanghai, concern often-raised in Europe and North America about the Chinese invasion of Africa is a lot of wasteful talk that deserves to be flushed down the toilet. Efficiently.
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BOTSWANA
Capital Upgrade for City's Sewers
By Alma Balopi
GABORONE - The evidence of Gaborone's inadequate sewerage system hangs in the air over the Botswana capital's low income area. Pit latrines dominate, and residents complain that the city doesn't empty them frequently enough. But the end may be in sight.
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KENYA
Sustainable Energy in the Heart of the Slums
By Miriam Gathigah
NAIROBI - Talk about foul foundations: the Katwekera Tosha Bio Centre is built on the stuff that goes into toilets. This community centre in the Nairobi slum of Kibera goes well beyond solving sanitation problems - it is a model for green energy, a meeting place for locals, and turning a profit for its operators.
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MADAGASCAR
Applying Local Resources to Sanitation
By Lova Rabary-Rakotondravony
ANTANANARIVO - "We're calling on all citizens," said Riovoarilala Rakotondrabe, putting the final touches on a giant poster announcing a massive community clean-up for the coming Sunday.
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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
New Rule Puts Brakes on U.S. Public Housing Demolitions
ARGENTINA: Fair Trade Going Strong Amid Global Crisis
UNICEF Funding Falls Short Leaving Millions of Children at Risk
Photos of Armed Children Ignite Scandal in Venezuela
Latin America Takes a New Look at Neglected Diseases
Lawmakers, "Experts" Spin Tales of Iranian Terror in Latin America
Social Media Saved Africa's Oldest Community Station
Finnish Contest No More Between Right and Left
INDIA-PAKISTAN: Food Heals Historic Hostility
Malawi's Consumers Have a Right to Fuel and Forex Black Market
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News in RSS
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.