The people of Angwan Jukun Community of Awe Street Makurdi,
Benue State have been enjoined to protect their water source which is the River
Benue and also manage domestic water use.
The call was made during an advocacy and training session held
in the community to commemorate the 2019 World Water Day.
Organised by civil society actors under the auspices of Climate
and Sustainable Development Network (CSDevNet) in collaboration with Gender and
Environmental Risk Reduction Initiative (GERI), Gender and Community
Empowerment Initiative and Good Health Living Environmental Foundation
(GOHLEF), the session comprised community leaders, women groups, youth and
children.
While facilitating the session on protecting water source, Mr.
Victor Asobo, Executive Director of Good Health Living Environmental Foundation
(GOHLEF) advised the members of the community to desist from contaminating the
river as they use the water for drinking, cooking and every other domestic
activity.
“indiscriminate dumping of refuse blocks water channels and
can give rise to
breeding of mosquitoes as well as using pesticides on farms
close to the river as they are washed into the river and continued consumption
may lead to liver and kidney infections,” he said.
He also stated that using chemicals for fishing destroys the
ecosystem and therefore charged them to use fishing nets and hooks instead.
Mr. Raymond Terban Programme Officer, Gender and
Environmental Risk Reduction Initiative, urged members of the community to
inculcate good hygiene practice and maintain proper sanitation around their environment.
He went further to emphasise the need to stop defecation in
and around the river as it is their major source of water and clean water is a
prerequisite to healthy living thus the recognition of water as a human right by
the United Nations.
Sustainable Development Goal 6 (SDG 6) states that
availability and sustainable management of water for all should be achieved by
2030.
Today, billions of people are still living without safe water
which means safely managed drinking water service: water that is accessible on
the premises, available when needed and free from contamination and the 2019
World Water day’s theme is aimed at leaving no one behind.
On this premise, the civil society leaders took the people of
the community through the process of water purification using water guard. This
was demonstrated by Shirley Anikpe Programme Officer, Gender and Community
Empowerment Initiative, as she showed them the ways they could measure their
water and the quantity of water guard to use for each content. Other common
ways of purifying water such as boiling and sieving water before drinking were also
emphasized.
Engr. Peter Danjuma, a member of the Angwan Jukun community who
spoke on their behalf appreciated the sensitization exercise and promised that
the community will inculcate the practices emphasised by CSDevNet and partners
to protect their only source of water.
No comments:
Post a Comment