Nairobi February 14, 2018… Amref Health Africa signed a partnership agreement with Netherlands-based waste and sanitation NGO, WASTE. The partnership aims to improve community health and sanitation in Africa.
The partnership is to scale up the public private partnership model called Financial Inclusion Improves Sanitation and Health in Kenya (FINISH INK), which has contributed to remarkable sanitation market development in Busia and Kilifi counties since 2013.
“Access to a safe toilet is among the envisaged Sustainable Development Goals that contemplates universal access to water and sanitation to all by the year 2030,” Amref’s Director of the Institute of Capacity Development Dr George Kimathi said during the signing of the agreement.
Universal strategies for scaling up sanitation recognise that individual households must directly invest in sanitation, hence the effectiveness of the model due to the financial inclusion of communities in the provision of sanitation solutions.
Diarrhoea, a disease which is directly associated with inadequate sanitation, is the leading cause of child death in Sub-Saharan Africa. Universal access to water and proper sanitation to all will ensure reduction of disease and improve lives in communities. Partnerships between organisations will ensure that this is achieved.
Mr. Frans Makken, Netherlands Ambassador to Kenya emphasised the need for public private partnerships as a way to realizing the Sustainable Development Goals and the global economic agenda.” As we sign this agreement, I acknowledge the contributions of all our partners and donors, such as WASTE, which have enabled the success of the FINISH model in areas where it has been executed,” added Dr Kimathi.
He emphasised the need for more public and private investment to increase sustainable access to sanitation, especially for the rural poor. “An enabling environment is needed to attract private sector financing in the form of loans, bonds or equity, and innovative financing instruments,” he said.
The FINISH model has been greatly successful in Kilifi and Busia counties, as well as in India, and will now be scaled up to national level as well as cover more countries in Africa including, Tanzania, Uganda and Ethiopia.
Partners include: Ministry of Health, Amref, WASTE, RVO/DGIS and financial partners Sidian Bank, Family Bank, Imarika SACCO, ACTIAM, Goodwell Investments, Take a Stake Fund, UNU-MERIT and FINISH Society.
By Lusayo Banda, Communications Manager-Amref Health Africa Malawi For over a decade, Paul Chakamba has…
Authors: Desta Lakew, Group Director, Partnerships and External Affairs, Amref Health Africa; and Alvin Tofler Munyasia,…
On the sidelines of the 2024 UN Climate Conference (COP29), Amref Health Africa and the…
Global warming is no longer just an issue for the environment but a crisis of…
What is COP 29 and why is it important? COP (Conference of the Parties) is…
Co-Chairs publish draft text for the New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG), described as workable basis…