Water solution remains pipe dream-Global Dimensions
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa --The problem of providing safe water
and sanitation for many of the world's poor has occupied delegates
on the third day of the Earth Summit.
The World Summit on Sustainable Development, being held in Johannesburg
amid tight security to prevent disruptions from protesters, is tackling
how to alleviate poverty while still protecting the environment.
On the key issue of water, poor countries have accused rich countries
of failing to live up to past promises.
Nearly one in five people or 1.1 billion men, women and children
have no access to fresh water, according to the United Nations,
while a 2.4 billion lack adequate sanitation.
"To service the human community of India with sanitation and
water is a Herculean task...The world community should come forward
to help us through the U.N. organisations," Indian Environment
Minister T.R. Baalu told Reuters.
India saw the worst start to the monsoon season in 15 years in
July, bringing drought to many areas. Water tables in countries
as far apart as the U.S. and China are steadily declining because
of over-consumption.
At a Millennium U.N. summit two years ago, world leaders agreed
to "halve the proportion of people who are unable to reach,
or to afford, safe drinking water" by 2015.
Spending by states on fresh water investments would have to double
to $180 billion to meet those goals, the U.N. has estimated.
Some delegates want to add a target for sanitation, a move resisted
by the U.S. but supported by the European Union.
"It's important not only that people should be able to get
drinking water but to be able to get rid of waste water," Danish
Environment Minister Hans Christian Schmidt told The Associated
Press.
In other developments at the 10-day summit, progress was made between
rich and poor states on demands by Third World countries for more
aid finance and fairer trade.
"We have agreed on 99 percent of the text on finance,"
John Ashe, a Caribbean delegate who has been brokering a compromise,
told a news conference.
Officials also agreed to reaffirm pledges on opening markets to
Third World exporters but remained divided over wording on the issue
of "globalisation," he said.
About 20,000 delegates from more than 200 countries had gathered
for the summit.
An agreement at the weekend to try and protect diminishing stocks
of fish in the world's oceans had buoyed spirits. (Full story)
South Africa has deployed at least 10,000 extra police and troops
to prevent a repeat of the violent confrontations that marred previous
international gatherings in Seattle and Genoa.
About 200 Johannesburg street hawkers marched to the tightly-guarded
convention centre on Wednesday, demanding that police allow them
back on the streets near the summit venue.
"We want the summit to help us talk to this government of
ours who stops us from working," said hawker Sonia Baloi.
In a joint editorial in the International Herald Tribune, the leaders
of South Africa, Brazil and Sweden urged their counterparts to put
words into action next week.
"To watch passively as poverty increases, the wealth and information
gaps widen and environmental degradation continues is not only a
human and moral failure. It is also an enormous waste or resources
especially human resources, the most important fact for sustainable
development," said Thabo Mbeki, Fernando Henrique Cardoso and
Goran Persson.
To encourage the protection of the environment coupled with social
and economic development, they urged a global partnership with "clear
targets and timetables."
Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/africa/08/28/summit.water.glb/index.html
|