Water Advocates
Campaigns for Worldwide Access to Safe Drinking Water and Basic
Sanitation
September 22, 2005
Water Advocates announced its launch as a non-profit advocacy
group focused on increasing funding and raising public awareness
for people without access to safe drinking water and basic
sanitation.
Around the world in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Middle
East and Small Island Developing States, more than 1.1 billion
people lack safe, affordable and sustainable drinking water and
2.6 billion people lack adequate sanitation. Each day 3,900
children die mostly preventable deaths due to unsafe drinking
water. Roughly 80% of the developing world’s diseases stem from
waterborne illnesses or inadequate sanitation.
Safe drinking water not only saves lives; it also has a
direct positive impact on poverty alleviation, educational
opportunities for all, economic development and gender equality.
Where there is a chronic shortage of safe water, people’s time
and energy are spent fetching water for survival rather than on
attending school, increasing economic development and enjoying
time with their family and community.
“Each year between two and five million people worldwide die
from lack of safe water and sanitation. Given this dire
situation, the creation of a US-based advocacy group is long
overdue,” said David Douglas, President of Water Advocates. “We
know what the problem is and we have the knowledge and resources
to save millions of lives – we simply need to extend water to
those without it. Water Advocates and other US nonprofits can
make enormous strides in helping solve this worldwide crisis by
informing the public and ensuring that funding is available for
more projects.”
Water Advocates does not implement water projects or ask for
funding for itself from the general public. Its mission is to
advocate on behalf of those lacking safe, affordable, and
sustainable supplies of drinking water and to raise general
funding for and awareness of this challenge.
While countries are ultimately responsible for providing
their own water, Water Advocates works with civic organizations,
businesses, faith-based organizations, traditional
philanthropies and the US government to complement the work of
developing countries and to hasten the provision of safe
drinking water and basic sanitation facilities. Water Advocates
encourages these groups and the American public to participate
by encouraging their elected officials to support water and
sanitation assistance, through direct involvement in
implementing water projects or through donations to a charity of
their choice.
Source: Water Advocates September
22, 2005 |