Isaar Trust International

Providing Humanitarian Aid. Educating the Poor. Helping the Orphans

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Home Water Irrigation & Sanitation

Water Irrigation & Sanitation

Water is a basic need of all human beings, without which people cannot survive.

It is shocking to hear in this modern era of technology and excess material resources that there are millions still without water.

It is our collective duty to work tirelessly to provide the source of life to all human beings everywhere.

We are regularly providing mechanisms and building infrastructures within communities, along with our partners, to provide a system of water irrigantion for domestic, agricultural and industrial usage.

Please join us in this work.

 

 

What is the problem?


There is a global crisis in water and sanitation

There is a global crisis in water and sanitation. Billions of people live in the kind of squalor and disease that was eradicated long ago in the rich world.

Without sanitation and water there can be no sustainable development in health, education and livelihoods, locking people into a cycle of poverty and disease.

This crisis is one of inequality and poverty. If it is not tackled decisively, it will prevent and undermine progress made in reducing poverty, in achieving universal primary education, and improving people's basic health. 

End Water Poverty aims to change policy and practices according to these key principles:

  • Equity - by targeting services at the most marginalised groups, such as older people, the poor, disabled people and women
  • Poverty reduction
  • Sustainability of services and water resources
  • Accountability, so that key decision-makers are held to account by the poor through transparent and open planning processes

How are poor people in developing countries affected by this crisis?

  • 884 million lack access to clean water
  • 2.5 billion lack access to basic sanitation

It is a crisis that is killing as many as 5000 children a day - the equivalent of 20 airliners filled with children lost everyday to an entirely preventable public health crisis.

It is a crisis driven by inequality and poverty, where the burden falls most heavily on women. It is girls who are denied an education because they are tasked with fetching water or drop out of school in adolescence because of inadequate sanitation facilities. And as adults, women continue to waste hours each day in the search for water and inevitably look after the children that are ill or dying from diarrhoeal diseases.

It is a crisis that hampers economic growth and income generation

In Africa, an estimated 5% of GDP is lost to illnesses and deaths caused by dirty water and the absence of sanitation.

What effect does climate change have on this crisis?

In the coming years, climate change is expected to put increased pressure on water resources. Where water and sanitation services are poorly managed, the effects of climate change are going to make matters much worse. Unless water resources are protected and shared equitably, poor and marginalised communities will suffer most.

What are governments doing about this crisis?

Water and sanitation are services that the poor almost always put as one of their top three priorities. However, the international development community and developing country governments treat them predominantly as marginal issues. The volume of spending on the sector has remained largely stagnant over the last ten years, and it has actually fallen in terms of the relative increases in overall aid spending and spending on health and education.

Put simply, the water and sanitation sector is in crisis because there is a lack of political will to push through changes that benefit the poorest and most vulnerable people.

 

ALL DONATIONS MOST WELCOME.

ANYBODY WILLING TO GET INVOLVED IN HELPING TO GET THIS PROJECT OPERATIONAL MOST WELCOME.

 

 

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