I chose to focus on the health issue of clean drinking water in Afghanistan. This part of the world is of particular interest to me. My heart goes out to the women and children who suffer at the hands of corrupt leaders - both political and religous.
I can say that these issues will affect my future work because I will be sensitive to the needs of these people.
Children in Afghanistan trying to pump water from a well.
Clean, safe drinking water is a basic right. A right which over 1.2 billion people
around the world are denied. A lack of clean water affects sanitation, health, food
supplies and preparation and economic development.
Afghanistan has a population of 22 million people, 70% of which is undernourished and
one in four children die before the age of five. Only 13% of people have access to improved
water sources and the situation has worsened due to inadequate rainfall over the last two
years causing the government to declare 12 districts drought-affected.
Johan,
ReplyDeleteDrinking water is a necessity for our health. The health and economic impacts to all governments dealing with these issues are staggering. Today's water crisis is not an issue of scarcity, but of access to clean, healthy water. Some household in today's society don't even have access to clean, pure and healthy water. Every day, lack of access to clean water and sanitation kills thousands, leaving others with reduces quality of life.
Thank you for this post. I neglected how we as US citizens receive water, clean water everyday and really don't have to worry about it. Thank you for bringing this to my attention. We as a people have so much to be greatful for!
ReplyDeleteI agree that having clean water available is a human right! It's so tragic that so many do not have such a basic need met. Thank you for providing us with such valuable information! Your statisitic are sobering, but give us all information we can use to advocate for programs that work to provide safe water to these areas.
ReplyDelete