Water should be a basic human right, say researchers
June 30th, 2009 - 3:02 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, June 30 (ANI): Researchers, in a recent article in the journal PLoS Medicine Editorial, have argued that despite recent international objections, access to clean water should be recognized as a human right.
At the March 2009 United Nations (UN) meetings, coinciding with the World Water Forum, Canada, Russia, and the United States refused to support a declaration that would recognize water as a basic human right.
But, this flies in the face of considerable evidence that access to water, which is essential for health, is under threat.
The UN has estimated that 2.8 billion people in 48 countries will be living in conditions of water stress or scarcity by 2025.
Three reasons are outlined for why access to clean water should be declared a basic human right.
Firstly, access to clean water can substantially reduce the global burden disease caused by water-borne infections.
Millions of people are affected each year by a range of water-borne diseases including diarrhea, which is responsible for 1.8 million potentially preventable deaths per year, mostly among children under the age of five.
Secondly, the privatization of water, as witnessed in Bolivia, Ghana and other countries, has not effectively served the poor, who suffer the most from lack of access to clean water.
As Maude Barlow, senior advisor on water issues to the president of the General Assembly of the UN, has argued, “high water rates, cut-offs to the poor, reduced services, broken promises and pollution have been the legacy of privatization.”
Thirdly, the prospect of global water scarcity, exacerbated by climate change, industrial pollution, and population growth, means that no country is immune to a water crisis.
The United States is facing the greatest water shortages of its history, and in Australia severe drought has caused dangerous water shortages in the Murray-Darling river basin, which provides the bulk of its food supply.
According to researchers, a human rights framework offers what the water situation needs-international recognition from which concerted action and targeted funding could flow; guaranteed standards against which the protected legal right to water could be monitored; and accountability mechanisms that could empower communities to advocate and lobby their governments to ensure that water is safe, affordable, and accessible to everyone. (ANI)
- UN declares access to clean water, sanitation a human right - Jul 29, 2010
- 44 per cent Pakistanis drinking unsafe water as world observes Water Day today - Mar 22, 2011
- Nearly half of Pakistanis drinking unsafe water - Mar 22, 2011
- UN warns 3.5 million children at water-borne disease risk in flood-hit Pakistan - Aug 17, 2010
- Water shortage can cause global conflict, warns UN - Mar 23, 2010
- Privatising water is denying people a human right: UN President - Mar 20, 2009
- UN declares famine in two southern regions of Somalia - Jul 20, 2011
- India has more 'multidimensionally poor' than Pakistan - Nov 03, 2011
- Stocks run out in Pakistan's flood-hit areas: UN - Oct 30, 2011
- Hindus laud UN for declaring safe drinking water as human right - Jul 31, 2010
- UN declares access to clean water a human right - Jul 29, 2010
- 612 million Indians 'multi-dimentionally poor' - Nov 02, 2011
- Allahabad farmers take out rally to spread river pollution awareness - Apr 02, 2011
- 3.5 mn Pakistani flood victims drinking dirty water: UN - Aug 26, 2010
- Central help sought as Orissa's cholera epidemic worsens - Sep 14, 2010
Tags: climate change, dangerous water, darling river, global burden, global water scarcity, industrial pollution, maude barlow, medicine editorial, murray darling river, plos medicine, preventable deaths, privatization of water, russia and the united states, water borne diseases, water crisis, water issues, water rates, water shortages, water stress, world water forum