WaterAid in Liberia and Sierra Leone calls for action to improve WASH in schools this Global Handwashing Day

As the world celebrates Global Handwashing Day on Sunday October 15, WaterAid in Liberia and Sierra Leone has today renewed its call for improvements to water, sanitation and hygiene in schools.

One in three schools around the world do not have regular access to water, basic private toilets, or a way to wash hands with soap.

In Sub-Saharan Africa, as many as 50% of schools are without access to water.

Students in Monrovia discussing the importance of handwashing, as part of Global Handwashing Day on the United Nations (UNMIL) Radio

Students in Monrovia discussing the importance of handwashing, as part of Global Handwashing Day on the United Nations (UNMIL) Radio

Thirsty children cannot learn, nor can children who are worried about where they might be able to relieve themselves. And children who are ill from dirty water or because they cannot wash their hands with soap are often unable to go to school at all.

An estimated 443 million school days are lost every year because of water-related illnesses.

WaterAid Global Head of Campaigns Savio Carvalho said:

“Clean, plentiful water, good sanitation and good hygiene including handwashing with soap are absolutely essential to effective education, wherever you are in the world. Yet more than a third of schools are without even rudimentary access to water.

This Global Handwashing Day, we are calling on governments and donors to take action on this injustice.”

Access to water, sanitation and hygiene at school is also a matter of gender equality: Girls are more likely to miss lessons or to drop out completely once they start menstruating if their school does not have a decent toilet where they can change menstrual cloths in dignity and privacy.

Globally, 1 in 10 people don’t have clean water, and 1 in 3 people don’t have a decent toilet. It is a health crisis which claims the lives of 289,000 children under five each year, and which leaves girls and women particularly burdened and at risk, from the moment of birth, throughout their school years and into adulthood and old age.

Through the UN Global Goals for Sustainable Development, world leaders have promised to ensure everyone everywhere has access to safe water and sanitation by 2030. To keep that promise, ensuring water, sanitation and hygiene in every school must be a priority.

WaterAid’s vision is of a world where everyone has access to safe water and sanitation.  The international organisation works in 35 countries across Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Pacific Region to transform lives by improving access to safe water, hygiene and sanitation in some of the world’s poorest communities.  Since 1981, WaterAid has reached 23 million people with safe water and, since 2004, 21 million people with sanitation.

  • Around 289,000 children die each year from diarrhoeal diseases caused by dirty water and poor sanitation. That’s about 800 children each day, or one child every two minutes.
  • Over 844 million people (around one in ten) are without access to clean water
  • Over 2.3 billion people (around one in three) live without improved sanitation
  • For every £1 invested in water and sanitation, an average of £4 is returned in increased productivity.
  • Just £15 can help provide one person with access to safe water.
  • For details on how individual countries are keeping their promises on water and sanitation, please see our online database, WASHWatch.org.