Uganda \
News \
Total Sanitation becomes a reality in Asinge
Total sanitation becomes reality in Asinge
 |
| A widow in Asinge village putting up a drying
rack. |
| Credit: WaterAid Uganda / Pade
Ophori |
In May 2006 the village of Asinge had no safe water source and
only 17 percent of households had their own latrines. Less than
a year later, the village boasts a safe water source and has
become the first village in the entire north eastern region to
achieve 100 percent sanitation coverage.
In early 2006, the nearest water source
was a lake five kilometres away while the
nearest safe source was a seven kilometre walk to a
neighboring community.
Thanks to WaterAid's partner organisation WEDA, the community
built itself a 64m-metre-deep bore hole and each household now
has a latrine, a hand washing facility, a bath shelter, rubbish pit
and a drying rack.
The successful sanitation coverage is partly due to the
environment surrounding Asinge. The village is very small and
the surrounding landscape is sandy with few shrubs and bushes
which means there is no privacy for people to go to the
toilet in the open. This made it easy for villagers to see
the benefits of sanitation and keen to achieve good coverage.
The new facilities have improved living standards in
Asinge with villagers seeing a reduction
in water-related diseases. There have been social and economic
changes too. Women are now able to engage in other productive
activities like farming, brick-making and fetching water for their
livestock because it takes less time to walk to the water
source. Members of the community have also spoken of
how there are now fewer conflicts in the home.
The villagers of Asinge have realised the value of
uniting to work together as a group so that they
can sustain clean water and improved sanitation. The
positive impact hasn't stopped in Asinge,
the success has spread to neighbouring
communities. Apuuton, a nearby village, has taken up
the challenge and built an extra 18 latrines. Now it has
22 latrines, up from just 4 in June 2006.
In honour of Asinge, committees involved in water and
sanitation joined together to celebrate the end of
sanitation week on 22 March 2007.