Category Archives: toilets

West Cape News: Diarrhoea kills increasing number of under 5’s

We need toilets and taps – not NGOs that want to teach us how to wash our hands…

http://www.khayelitshastruggles.com/2009/03/diarrhea-kills-increasing-number-of.html

Diarrhoea kills increasing number of under 5’s

Brenda Nkuna

The number of children under five dying of or being admitted to Western Cape hospitals for diarrhea increased for the last period in which figures are available, says the Western Cape Health Department.

Diarrhoea claimed the lives of 149 children under five years old over the 2007/2008 period. This was out of 7,790 admissions to hospitals, said provincial health spokesperson Faiza Steyn.

This comes as this summer’s gastroenteritis season – which peaks in the hot months between October and March – draws to a close. Cases increase over this period because of an increase in flies and unsanitary conditions, especially in areas where there are a lack of services.

Although not providing figures for the current year, Steyn said in the year from April 2007 to March 2008 the number of cases were larger than in previous years and “many more children” required admission for re-hydration.

However, although figures had not yet been compiled, this increase did “not necessary” apply to the 2008/2009 year, she said.

Gastroenteritis, caused by viruses, bacteria and parasites, results in mild to severe diarrhea and can cause life-threatening dehydration in young children.
Steyn blamed the increase on a higher birth rate and an increase in migration.

She said hot spot areas included Delft, Gugulethu, Kraaifontein and Khayelitsha.

In the informal settlement of QQ section in Khayelitsha, parents complain that they battle to keep their children healthy due to a lack of services.

Veliswa Sidumo, 25, an unemployed mother of a two-year-old girl, said her child had developed a bad rash and she had no choice but to keep her in her shack until her condition improved.

She said she used a variety of household cleaning products to kill germs, but this did not help when her daughter played in sand outside where she was exposed to flies, human faeces and dirty water.

She said there were no toilets in her area. People used buckets as toilets and often spilt the contents outside her shack.

Another resident, Nosibabalo Dyasi, 25, said she was concerned about the number of children playing at a dump site near her shack, because they did not wash their hands.

She said due to a lack of clean water, people thought that washing hands was a waste of water.

Dyasi, an unemployed mother of a four-year-old girl, said parents were aware of existing diseases and how to prevent them, but due to unemployment they were unable to afford cleaning products.

“It’s hard to raise children here. Their lives are in danger, but where can they go?” she asked.

Steyn said sick children should be taken to a clinic “immediately” and parents should tell staff if a child had diarrhoea.

She said parents should continue feeding their child while sick. But they should make sure bottles and teats were clean.

They should wash hands after changing nappies, before preparing food and before feeding, she said. — West Cape News

Sunday Tribune: Development plan sparks outrage

Another (partial) victory….

Development plan sparks outrage

http://www.sundaytribune.co.za/?fSectionId=&fArticleId=vn20081205110201169C507038

5 December 2008, 12:52
By Heinz de Boer

There were howls of protest when the eThekwini Municipality resolved
that it would compel landowners to allow the city to provide toilets and
water to squatters who invade plots of land.

The decision on who will ultimately foot the bill has not been
finalised, although each case will be decided on individually.

It was one of the smallest, yet controversial items on the agenda on
Thursday at the last full council meeting in 2008.

The recommendation was pushed through with the support of all political
parties besides the DA.

Tabled as a “response to the lack of sanitation facilities in informal
settlements located on private land”, the adoption of the item has paved
the way for Water and Sanitation head Neil Macleod to serve notice on
“errant” landowners who do not comply with the council resolution.

Residents who turn a blind eye to the notices could expect municipal
engineers to step in and provide the essential services at a cost to the
general rate paying public.

Councillors had earlier approved a R175-million budget, to be spent over
the next two years, to provide temporary toilet facilities and sewer
connection for 318 informal settlements.

Municipal plans to force the general public to pay for squatters could
however be compared to a “land grab”, the DA said.

An attempt to have the recommendation altered to give homeowners the
option to refuse water and sanitation services to be installed on their
property was outvoted by the ANC and its allies.

“There are people who cannot afford to fence their land; and they don’t
wish to have these informal settlements on their land.

“By going in and putting in these facilities it amounts to a land grab.
People should be afforded the right to say, ‘not on my land’,” DA
councillor Gillian Noyce said.

But ANC Councillor Sipho Khuzwayo said all landowners were not victims
of squatting, with some actively encouraging the formation of informal
settlements on their land to turn a quick buck.

“We find that the landowners are benefiting from the people because they
charge rent. So they must be forced to provide them with sanitation
facilities because they benefit financially.

“The DA was suggesting a reference back (to have the item discussed at
executive or committee level before being voted on at full council),
because there are no white people in informal settlements,” Khuzwayo
said.

Mercury: ‘Flying toilets’ serve the desperate in Kenya

UN-Habitat is in Nairobi and so the local reality of slumlordism in the Kibera settlement there has been turned, in their documents that set the agenda for ‘global best practice’, into a universal phenomenon. But many settlements in KZN come out of the popular democratic politics of the 80s and are not run or rented by slumlords. But in spite this here in KZN shack settlements now face a state assault in the name of combating slumlordism and shack farming…The discourse of the UN is being used to justify an assault on the poor with the aim of expelling the poor from the cities. But there are some genuine commonalities between Durban and Nairobi. A global failure to provide basic sanitation to shack settlements (on the grounds that they are illegal, informal, temporary etc) means that flying toilets (and not slumlordism) are a genuinely global phenomenon. Continue reading