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No Right To Water On World Water Day

Villagers wash clothes at a irrigation system canal in the outskirts of Vientiane, Laos 22 March 2006. Photo credit: Hoang Ding Nam. Courtesy of AFP.
by Anne Chaon
Mexico City (AFP) Mar 23, 2006
Officials from 140 countries were set to issue a broad declaration on World Water Day on Wednesday, but will stop short of declaring a universal right to the precious resource for which two thirds of humanity face uncertain supplies.

Wrapping up their week-long World Water Forum, ministers are hoping to help shape global strategy to improve water distribution and eradicate waste in order to achieve the UN Millennium Development Goal of halving the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water by 2015.

Government ministers called Tuesday for a global campaign to ensure the survival to the majority of the world's people who are at risk from inadequate or unsafe supplies.

"The lack of water or its poor quality kills 10 times more people than all the wars combined," Loic Fauchon, the head of the France-based World Water Council, said in opening a ministerial session.

"Let us declare the right to water, without ambiguity, as an essential element of human dignity," Fauchon said. Fauchon reminded the ministers that more investments were needed.

He also said political will and "transparency" in management were required, as management was "often incoherent" and tended to favor other sectors.

The World Water Council, which is cosponsoring the Forum along with the Mexican government, is seeking to have the right to water recognized as a "human right", much the same as the right to education.

Ministers are to issue a declaration on the final day the forum on Wednesday, which coincides with World Water Day, a UN observance launched 13 years ago, but it is unlikely to enshrine a right to water.

Argentina's environment minister, Atilio Armando Savino, said the final declaration would not explicitly declare a right to water. For that reason, Bolivia and Venezuela have announced they would not sign it.

The government of Bolivian President Evo Morales, a leftist and indigenous leader, is planning an alternative text.

For the first time, the forum in Mexico -- which follows those in Marrakech, in 1997; The Hague, in 2000; and Kyoto, in 2003 -- reserved a significant place for the role of local communities.

The theme of this year's forum, "Local Actions for a Global Challenge," is to be reaffirmed Wednesday by a final declaration by the United Cities and Local Governments, which has members in 127 countries.

While reaffirming that "the public authority and it alone holds the primary responsibility" of water service, the UCLG insists on "the right of each human to water of sufficient quantity and quality" and calls on governments to "favor decentralization, to increase the financing of local infrastructures and to support international cooperation with local governments."

The mayors and local leaders also are seeking, for "local powers who want to," the possibility of spending a portion of tax revenues from water users on programs for developing countries. Such an approach has already been adopted by several European countries -- including France which has a specific law to this effect -- and Australia, Canada, Japan and the United States.

The World Water Council said that the Turkish city of Istanbul had been shortlisted as the venue of the next World Water Forum, in March 2009.

The council said its final decision would be made after three months of negotiations with the Turkish government. If those negotiations fail, the council will start talks with the runner-up candidate, Qatar.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Forum Calls For Local Government Role In Water Access
Mexico City (AFP) Mar 23, 2006
The Fourth World Water Forum ended here Wednesday with a declaration setting for the first time a key role for local governments to play in providing water to desperately parched communities. Decentralization of water supply management was a central theme of the forum, along with the need for transparency and more money to improve clean water access.







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