It seems simple for those in western society...........the use of a decent toilet. It is NOT that way for many in developing countries, and particularly in India. Simple sanitation and hand washing associated with it is a critical issue in developing areas and reducing simple illnesses.
Today marks the
second annual UN World Toilet Day, an
important opportunity to promote global efforts to achieve universal access to
sanitation by 2030.
With a focus on equality and dignity, this year, World
Toilet Day aims to highlight sanitation as a global development priority,
especially for women and girls who must compromise their dignity and put their
safety at risk when lack of access to sanitation forces them to defecate in the
open.
Sanitation impacts multiple sectors of development, but the connection with
gender equality is particularly important.
As outlined in a blog by World Bank Group Senior Director for
Gender Caren Grown and Senior Director for Water Junaid Ahmad, advancing
equality for women in developing countries is not only the right thing to do,
it makes good economic sense.
The relationship between gender equality and
sanitation and water services is reciprocal. Just as investing in sanitation
and water services benefits gender equity, improvements in gender equity can
meanwhile advance improved sanitation and water services.
Ending poverty by 2030 and boosting shared prosperity - the World Bank Group’s
twin corporate goals - is possible only if we continue pressing to fully
understand such obstacles to gender equity and service delivery.
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