Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Wednesday, November 18 2020 - 02:00
AsiaNet
Global leaders welcome the Sanitation and Hygiene Fund as key to increasing investment
GENEVA, Nov. 17, 2020 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

The Sanitation and Hygiene Fund will be critical to dramatically scale up 
investments to reach everyone with sanitation services, United Nations Deputy 
Secretary-General has said as the new financial mechanism to drive billions of 
dollars into the sanitation sector was launched today.

Speaking at the launch of the new Sanitation and Hygiene Fund, Ms Amina J. 
Mohammed described safe sanitation and hygiene as "critical to the response 
that we want to see, first, because it is about human dignity. Second, it is a 
health issue." 

The coronavirus pandemic has made clear the fundamental role that sanitation 
and hygiene play in stopping the spread of disease. But it has also exposed the 
vast inequities that exist in access to sanitation, hygiene and menstrual 
health. 

The Deputy Secretary-General emphasized that "basic hygiene of washing your 
hands and being able to have a toilet that is accessible is key [to enabling 
healthy communities] in the longer term."

The Sanitation and Hygiene Fund is seeking US$2 billion over the coming five 
years to support countries in bringing sanitation, hygiene, and menstrual 
health to all. 

"We know that money, well utilized, has the ability to drive positive and 
lasting change," says Dominic O'Neill, Executive Director of the Sanitation and 
Hygiene Fund. "This is not only a struggle to improve health; it is a fight for 
respect and basic human rights and an end to stigma."

The online launch event was moderated by international broadcaster Ms Zeinab 
Badawi, and is available on the SHF website [http://www.shfund.org/ ]and its 
YouTube channel 
[https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCORgS9tX3mbv6jslMswERxQ?view_as=subscriber].

Also participating in the launch programme was Vice President Yemi Osinbajo of 
Nigeria, who said, "The Sanitation and Hygiene Fund is in many senses a 
lifesaver. One of the features that I particularly like is that it is tied to 
measurable performance."

Ms Henrietta Fore, Executive Director of UNICEF, called sanitation and hygiene 
"a great equalizer for children." 

"During a lockdown, how do you cope with the fact that your household does not 
have a toilet? This is particularly difficult for girls and women. If everyone 
had access to sanitation and hygiene in households, in their schools, in their 
health facilities and communities, it would make an enormous difference in our 
world," she said.

"Good sanitation has to be a public good. Governments have to own the fact that 
sanitation is their problem to solve, and that they have ways to solve it," Ms 
Fore added.

Currently, half the world's population do not have access to safely managed 
sanitation. 620 million children attend schools that do not have toilets. 1 in 
3 schools do not have even basic sanitation and hygiene services, and 1 in 5 
healthcare facilities have no sanitation services whatsoever. The estimated 
cost of lack of sanitation and hygiene is US$222 billion per year in lost 
productivity, increased health expenditures, and economic output.

This is a truncated version. Read the full-length press release here: SHF 
launch 
[https://www.shfund.org/media/global-leaders-welcome-sanitation-and-hygiene-fund
-key-increasing-investment]. 

For more information:

Mr Hiroyuki Saito
Head of Corporate Communications and Advocacy   
hiroyuki.saito@wsscc.org   
+41-79-684-35-98

Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1336470/Zeinab_and_DSG.jpg 
Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1336471/Zeinab_and_UNICEF_ED.jpg 
Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1336472/Dominic_O_Neill.jpg 

Source: Sanitation and Hygiene Fund