Monday, February 24, 2020

ELIMINATION OF PIT LATRINES: MONUMENTAL FAILURE BY US GOVERNMENT


If there is one area in which the current government has failed miserably, it is in the campaign launched more than a decade ago to eliminate the use of pit latrines nationwide.

Before we were ushered into the new millennium, government had vowed to rid the country of pit latrines and subsequently funds were allotted in the national budget on a yearly basis for the same. A yearly average of SR 500 000 was earmarked annually for the project and an army of the ruling party’s activists under the guise of District Administration staff trotted uphill to identify and eliminate the latrines as part of the district projects.


Apart from the obvious discomfort of odour, pit latrines have the potential of leaching into underground water and threatening human health through contamination.

Only last year in Cabo Verde, the recently retired Minister for Health, Mr Jean Paul Adam, while addressing the African Health Forum, gave credit to the government of which he was part. He lauded Danny Faure’s government for its sustained investment in the elimination of pit latrines in attaining sustainable health security for the country. He was certainly aware of his government’s failure in that respect.


Sadly, pit latrines still form part of our landscape and unless government is truly committed to alleviate poverty, pit latrines will be there to stay. In a country where district projects are subjected to political interference, massive failures are bound to be the order of the day.

Source: Seychelles Weekly