| A message from
the Executive Director
The theme this year
of World Habitat Day on 6 October spearheaded
by the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro
is water and sanitation. Never before
has there been such clear international
consensus that sustainable development
starts with health and dignity. These
fundamental conditions of human development
cannot be met without sustained investment
in safe water and basic sanitation.
According to UN-HABITAT
estimates, 60 per cent of the world's
population will be living in urban areas
by 2015, the year set by world leaders
to achieve the water and sanitation
related Millennium Development Goals.
It is further estimated that 90 per
cent of the population increase between
now and 2015 will be in urban areas.
And most of that increase will be in
the inner-city slums and squatter settlements
of developing countries. In the slums
of Nairobi, the bustees of Kolkata
or the favelas of Rio de Janeiro,
providing safe water and basic sanitation
to the urban poor is a critical challenge
facing the world today.
Recognizing this challenge,
the Governing Council of UN-HABITAT
has called for concerted action by the
international community help developing
countries achieve the Millennium Development
Goals related to water and sanitation.
The Commission on Sustainable Development
will also focus on water, sanitation
and human settlements during the first
cycle of its deliberations (2004-2005)
following the World Summit on Sustainable
Development.
A strong political
commitment at both the national and
local level will be crucial to achieving
success. This was underscored by this
year's G8 Summit, , which adopted an
Action Plan for Water, committing leaders
of the world's wealthiest and most powerful
countries to give priority assistance
to poorer nations that make a political
commitment to place safe drinking water
and basic sanitation at the top of their
poverty eradication and sustainable
development agendas.
The urban water crisis
must be recognised for what it really
is: a crisis of governance - weak policies
and poor management, rather than a crisis
of scarcity. Cities need sound
policies and the political will to back
them up; strengthened institutions and
trained managers to run them; a responsible
private sector and an enlightened public
sector to work hand in hand; and finally,
informed public opinion and active participation
of communities to draw upon the vast
resources of the civil society. In short,
cities need an enabling environment
which would allow all stakeholders to
pool together their resources to meet
their needs.
Sanitation and hygiene
promotion should receive priority in
their own right. In fact, the focus
of the international community on water
in the past has often masked the growing
problem of poor sanitation. This is
the most dehumanising aspect of the
daily battle for survival of the urban
poor. In countries around the world,
a publicly stated government policy
on sanitation and hygiene is long overdue.
There is an alarming
decline in per capita investment in
both water and sanitation in the cities
of most developing countries. The annual
flow of resources to the sector will
have to increase all round if the Millennium
Development Goal related to water and
sanitation is to be reached. In fact,
these resources will have to be doubled,
at a minimum.
Systematic tracking and review of progress
towards water and sanitation targets
will be equally important. Monitoring
and assessment will also help target
international cooperation for the poor
more effectively.
World Habitat Day this
year is an opportunity to build on the
global consensus to meet this critical
challenge.
Anna Kajumulo
Tibaijuka
Executive Director

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WORLD HABITAT
DAY will be celebrated
around the world
on
6 October.
The main ceremony
will be in Rio de Janeiro.
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