Home  |   About Us   |   Contact Us  
    Cricket |  SMS |  Games |  Forum |   Poetry |   Wallpapers |  Fun KalPoint wishes all Muslims a Very Happy Ramadan. May we all be blessed by ALMIGHTY ALLAH with countless bounties of the Holy Month. . Send wishes to your loved ones now. Click at [GreetingsPk.com] to select an e-card.                      The placement list under CAP - 2008 (Computer Science & Home Economics) has been announced and is available now at  [www.resultspk.com]              Euro trades near 7-month low before report on European spending[Details]
   KKI Forex Rates ::. US Dollar [Buying-76.1][Selling-76.4] U.A.E Dirham (D.H) [Buying-20.7][Selling-20.9] Saudi Riyal (S.R) [Buying-20.25][Selling-20.35] Pound Sterling [Buying-134.2][Selling-135.2] Euro [Buying-108.2][Selling-109.2]   [ More Rates ]  

Over 2bn lack sanitation: UN

 Posted on 08 Sep 08

Saturday, July 19, 2008
UNITED NATIONS: More than two billion people around the world still lack adequate sanitation, according to a UN report released here on Thursday.

It warned that barring major gains over the next seven years, the Millennium Development Goal of halving the number of people without access to basic sanitation by 2015 would be missed.

The report was prepared by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the United Nations Childrens Fund (Unicef).

ôAt current trends, the world will fall short of the Millennium sanitation target by more than 700 million people,ö said Ann Veneman, the Unicef executive director. ôWithout dramatic improvements, much will be lost.ö

The largest affected populations are in Africa and southern Asia, where coverage is more than 10 per cent below the rate needed to meet the targets.

In Eritrea, for example, only two per cent of the population received improved sanitation in the form of flush-toilets, latrines, or composting toilets from 1990 to 2006.

In southern Asia, some 778 million people still practice open defecation, putting children at risk for diarrhoeal disease, a leading cause of death for infants in developing countries, according to the report.

Regarding accessible, safe drinking water, the report was more positive: the number of people not using improved drinking water sources has fallen below one billion for the first time since 1990.

ôCurrent trends suggest that more than 90 per cent of the global population will use improved drinking water sources by 2015,ö according to the report.

In several countries, the gains were considerable. Since 1990, Myanmar has managed to increase access to safe water for 68 per cent of the population, and in Vietnam 47 per cent of the population gained access. Sub-Saharan Africa remains one of the few regions in the world that is not on track to meet the safe drinking water targets.

ALSO ON KALPOINT
Info Zone Classified Entertainment