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      rom: www.nottingham.ac.uk Published April 29, 2008 09:48 AM
 Safe water? Lessons from KazakhstanDespite significant efforts to improve access to safe water and 
    sanitation, a new report co-authored by an expert at The University of 
    Nottingham, argues that much more needs to be done.
 A major survey in Kazakhstan found that, despite meeting the UN definition 
    of what constitutes safe water, a large number of people reported suffering 
    from illnesses like hepatitis and gastroenteritis.
 A key United Nations Millennium Development Goal is to halve the number 
    of people without access to safe drinking water and sanitation by 2015. This 
    is seen as crucial to reducing poverty and infant mortality.
 But, as the research shows, the MDG definition is too narrow and can be 
    misleading. If the definition is used, it shows that over 90 per cent of 
    people in Kazakhstan have access to safe water and sanitation. But the 
    definition does not take into account the distribution, supply, quality and 
    reliability of the supply. When these factors are considered, the actual 
    number of people with access to safe water drops to less than 30 per cent.
 
 Access to safe water is a serious issue in many parts of the world, which, 
    like Kazakhstan, have experienced recent economic, social or political 
    turmoil.
 
 Sarah O'Hara, Professor of Geography at the University, says: “The accepted 
    international definition of an improved water source focuses primarily on 
    distance to supply and the amount of water that it can provide. A household 
    connection for example would meet the definition of a safe water supply. But 
    our research shows that just because a house in Kazakhstan has a piped water 
    supply, does not mean that the water is safe.”¯
 
 One of the biggest problems uncovered in the report is the disruption to 
    water supplies. On average more than 70 per cent of respondents said their 
    water supply was routinely interrupted, rising to 97 per cent in certain 
    areas. Interruptions occurred as often as 14 days a month, and lasted for up 
    to 12 hours a time.
 
 This, Professor O'Hara says, is at the heart of the health concerns: “There 
    are a number of problems here. Firstly there are the obvious health problems 
    associated with not being able to flush a toilet or wash your hands. But 
    also significant is the fact that when there is no water flowing through 
    pipes, the lack of pressure allows contaminants to flow in through cracks 
    and faulty joints. It gives bacteria the chance to thrive. We also found 
    that some water pipes were laid in the same trenches as sewer pipes, which 
    can allow cross contamination when the water supply is interrupted.”¯
 
 The report shows that the health concerns are shared by the people of 
    Kazakhstan. Even in houses with connections to water supplies 53 per cent of 
    people treat the water by boiling it. This goes up to 56 per cent where 
    people have an intermittent supply and have reported gastroenteritis.
 
 Is Kazakhstan unique? Professor O'Hara thinks there is a very strong chance 
    that the rest of former Soviet countries are running similar risks with 
    similar situations.
 
 Encouragingly, the government of Kazakhstan has accepted the results of the 
    survey and is now planning an investment strategy to tackle the issue, using 
    the information.
 
 “We're obviously very pleased at the response from the Kazakh government, 
    but there are deeper concerns here and we feel the survey shows that the UN 
    definition of what's considered safe, is too rigid and it's easy for 
    governments to do the minimum of work to meet this international standard, 
    when in effect they're ignoring the problem. The UN needs to revisit this 
    issue and look seriously at how it monitors progress.”
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