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More Nigerians Have Access To Phones Than Toilets
The United Nations International
Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) says more Nigerians have access to
mobile phones than those with access to toilets.
Zaid Jurji,
chief of Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH), UNICEF, said this on
Monday, while speaking at a workshop on European Union Niger Delta water
project, in Rivers state.
He said while 140 million Nigerians have mobile phones, only 97million have access to improved sanitation.
Nigeria’s health sector has suffered serious neglect over the years, with grossly inadequate funding from government.
In the 2018 budget, N352 billion was allocated to the sector out of the budget of N9.1 trillion.
The
resultant effect of this neglect has been various health challenges as
well as poor sanitation, with children mostly affected.
Jurji
also said only 37 percent of health facilities in the country have at
least one usable toilets available to patients while just 39 percent of
Nigerians use an improved toilet that is not shared by more than one
household.
According to him, “without toilets, people are forced
to defecate in the open leading to exposure to disease such as
diarrhoea, cholera and typhoid.
“One hundred and twenty-two
Nigerians, including 87,000 children under the age of five, die each
year from diarrhoea, with the country losing N455 billion annually due
to poor sanitation.”
TheCable had reported how Abuja, the nation’s capital is suffering from poor sanitation and open defecation.
As of 2016, 28.7 percent of the Nigerian population still practise open defecation.
At
the global stage, 2.4 billion persons around the world still don’t have
access to a functioning toilet, with 1.1 billion of that number
defecating in the open.
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