e-Ariana - Todays Afghan News
 Home 
 News 
 Articles 
 Cartoons 
 Feedback 
 Opinion  
 Contact Us  
 An Ariana Media Publication 05/20/2013
 133 Children Die a Day in Afghanistan

Khaama Press
01/08/2013
By Said Jawad

[Printer Friendly Version]

According to available figures, about 73 percent of people in Afghanistan lack access to clean drinking water and 95 percent do not have access to sufficient sanitation. As a result, diarrhoeal diseases are responsible for the death of 48,545 children every year in the country.

Lack of access to clean drinking water and sanitation is a chronic problem not only in rural areas, but also in most of the Afghan cities which are developing — unplanned — at a rapid rate.

Even in the Afghan capital, Kabul, barely 25 percent of people, according to some reports, have direct access to potable water.

The overall majority of people in Afghanistan do not have access to running water, they fetch water from open sources such as rivers, springs, streams, ponds and wells.

The water taken from the open sources is usually contaminated and its use usually leads to wide-spread water-born diseases.

Afghanistan has 2,775 cubic meters surface water per capita per year. Experts believe that 1,700 cubic meters of water per capita per year is sufficient to satisfy the water needs of the country for domestic use, food production, industrial use, and uses for energy and the environment.

However, Afghanistan lacks the capacity to properly utilize, manage and distribute the water to meet the water demands of its citizens.

It’s not just the water

There is only one health worker per 7,000 Afghans, according to the United National Consolidated Appeal 2012, and one female health worker per 23,000 Afghan females.

The Consolidated Appeal also reports that the number of teachers in schools remains well below international standards, with one teacher per 101 students, and one female teacher for every 344 female students.

The results of the Afghanistan Mortality Survey Report 2010 indicate that nearly 57.4 percent of the population in Afghanistan live within one hour’s walking distance from a public health facility.

Therefore, limited access to medical facilities and the absence of knowledge, skills and the ability to effectively manage diarrhoeal diseases usually leads to the death of 133 children per day.

The government of Afghanistan has reaffirmed its commitment to reaching the Millennium Development Goals (MDG), including increasing access to safe drinking water from 27 to 50 percent and to proper sanitation from five to 50 percent by 2014.

By 2020, they aim to increase access to both by 100 percent.

However, experts believe that the informal development of cities, lack of central sewage systems, large levels of migration from rural to urban areas, political and social instabilities, natural disasters, continuous droughts in most parts of the country, and lack of an effective coordination between government institutions and national and international organisations will make it impossible for the government of Afghanistan to reach the MDG in safe drinking water and sanitation by 2020.

Consumer Rights and Services Organization (CRSO), which is an independent non-governmental organization and promotes consumers rights protection in Afghanistan, calls on the government of Afghanistan and international organisations to seriously work for the development and implementation of an integrated health policy, intersectoral collaboration and communities’ inclusion to effectively address and overcome health problems, including diarrhoeal diseases, and ensure access to clean drinking water and enough sanitation.

Access to clean drinking water and enough sanitation is the basic right of every Afghan citizen; therefore, the government of Afghanistan should take the lead in ensuring that the rights of its citizens are met.

Back to Top



Other Stories:


The socio economic effects of American withdrawal
Khama Press (04/11/2013)

US troops open fire on civilian bus in Herat, 2 killed or injured
Khama Press (04/11/2013)

Uzbek fighters gain support in Afghan north
Al Jazeera (04/11/2013)

Pakistan army tries to win over local population in war-torn tribal region
The Associated Press (04/11/2013)

Afghanistan, the drug addiction capital
BBC (04/11/2013)

Man With Ties to Karzai Dies in a Military Raid
The New York Times (04/11/2013)

Plot to blow up dam hatched in Quetta: NDS
Pajhwok (04/01/2013)

Russia may set up new Afghanistan bases – official
RT, Russia (03/30/2013)

US hands control to Afghan commandos in strategic district outside Kabul
The Associated Press (03/30/2013)

Civilians among 16 killed in Ghazni airstrike
Pajhwok (03/30/2013)

Pakistan terms for Afghan peace talks unacceptable: Faizi
Khaama Press (03/30/2013)

Pakistan denies asking Afghanistan to snap ties with India
The Hindu (03/30/2013)

U.S. Tests a Risky Route for Shipping Gear Out of Afghanistan
The Wall Street Journal (03/30/2013)

How Afghanistan is Beginning to Deal with Workplace Sexual Harassment
TIME (03/30/2013)

An Eternal Return in Afghanistan?
World Policy Journal (03/30/2013)

Russia seeks role in Afghanistan stability after NATO pullout
Khaama Press (03/30/2013)

Afghanistan accuses Pakistan of wrecking peace hopes
NBC News (03/30/2013)

Teenage cycling prodigy leads Afghan women to new freedoms
NBC News (03/30/2013)

Hamid Karzai, confused by the U.S.
The Washington Post (03/30/2013)

U.S. must decide about troops in Afghanistan
The Washington Post (03/30/2013)

In Afghan Child Abuse Cases, Victims Go to Jail
IWPR (03/27/2013)

From Kabul love affair to Afghanistan's first centre for study of its history
The Guardian (03/27/2013)

Quorum problem hits Wolesi Jirga business
Pajhwok (03/27/2013)

How Britain betrayed female Afghan boxers
Morning Star (03/22/2013)

Suicide vest explosion kills 5, injures 6 in Helmand
Khama Press (03/21/2013)

3 Men Beheaded in Kandahar
Tolo (03/21/2013)

Living conditions for Afghan refugees in Iran are decreasing
ReliefWeb (03/21/2013)

US lawmakers call Karzai a wrong choice
Pajhwok (03/21/2013)

How the Taliban wins over Afghans without firing a shot
Global Post (03/21/2013)

Surprising hope for Pakistan and Afghanistan
CNN (03/21/2013)


Back to Top