Lessons from three East African cities on why sanitation is such a challenge

Thursday, 19 November 2015 04:24 The Conversation USA Press Releases - The Conversation
Print
imageResidents of Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. Sanitation in the city is extremely poor.Reuters/Tobias Schwarz

More than half of people living in informal settlements in East Africa live in insanitary and overcrowded conditions. The number of people without adequate access to sanitation is around 55% in Kenya, 63% in Uganda and 68% in Rwanda.

Poor sanitation and unsanitary conditions pose a serious threat to health. Governments have failed to address the problem because they have not prioritised the provision of sanitation, particularly to poor people.

The question is: why has there been so little progress in delivering decent sanitation for millions on the continent?

In an attempt to answer this question, my colleagues and I conducted research to understand how supply and demand have affected both the provision of toilets, as well as their use, in Rwanda’s capital Kigali, the Ugandan capital Kampala and Kisumu in Kenya.

Our study compared the similarities and strong differences of the sanitation markets in the three East African cities.

There is clearly no constraint on the demand side. But on the supply side we found a host of problems that are preventing the provision of decent toilets.

What’s stopping toilets being built

We identified a number of key problems. These included:

Solutions

Addressing a range of constraints, rather than single ones, is likely to be more effective.

On their own the above solutions won’t ease the sanitation problems in East Africa. They need to be used together to achieve the required results.

image

Aime Tsinda receives funding from SPLASH EU Funded Research Project

Read more http://theconversation.com/lessons-from-three-east-african-cities-on-why-sanitation-is-such-a-challenge-50916