NOT
REGULAR: NEMA truck supplying water to IDPs. Image source: naij.com
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Every time she needs to
go to the toilet, Shadima Irima recalls the moment Boko Haram militants stormed
her home in northeast Nigeria and killed her cousin before her eyes.
Access to
clean water is a problem for IDPs
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Watching
dozens of people lining up outside of a couple of latrines in a camp for the
displaced in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, the 38-year-old spoke about
the fear she feels every time she ventures into the bush to relieve herself.
"I
am scared of snakes, bad men and Boko Haram," Irima told the Thomson
Reuters Foundation, explaining how looking after her children, fetching water
and cooking meals means she cannot afford to wait for hours to use the few
toilets in the camp.
"Anything
can happen in the bush, like rape. Even thinking about going to the toilet
there scares me," she said outside her hut in the Muna Garage camp in
Borno, the heart of Boko Haram's seven-year bid to create an Islamic state in
northeast Nigeria.
The
jihadists' insurgency has displaced some 1.8 million people and destroyed
three-quarters of water points and toilets in the region - piling pressure on
the limited facilities in camps and communities, and sparking fears of disease
outbreaks.
A
lack of toilets - there is an average of one latrine for every 100 people
uprooted by Boko Haram - is not only leaving women like Irima prey to sexual
violence, but is also driving people to defecate in the open, according to aid
agencies.
Open
defecation in crowded camps and communities is putting people at risk of
waterborne diseases from cholera and diarrhoea to typhoid, with the danger
exacerbated by limited access to water, a lack of knowledge, and poor hygiene,
experts say.
"Changing
attitudes and behaviour is a challenge as many of the displaced have fled from
rural areas, where they are used to defecating in the bush," said Kannan
Nadar, head of water and sanitation at the U.N. children's agency (UNICEF) in
Nigeria.
"Even
if one percent of the displaced defecate in the open, it affects everyone
around them," Nadar added.
SHAME
AND DESPERATION
More
than a quarter of Nigeria's population - some 46 million people - defecate in
the open, according to the country's latest national health survey from 2013.
For
the more than 400,000 displaced living in camps across northeast Nigeria, the
reality is even worse.
Open
defecation has been recorded in around two-thirds of the 164 sites for those
uprooted by the conflict, and only a dozen of these settlements have a working
drainage system, according to the International Organization for Migration
(IOM).
In
some camps, there is only one toilet per 1,000 people, said staff at the
National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA).
"We
don't want to relieve ourselves in the open, but what choice do we have?"
said 63-year-old Moustapha Abacha, as a group of men nodded shyly in agreement
in the Muna Garage camp. "We are ashamed about it, but life here is
desperate," he added.
Efforts
to improve hygiene and sanitation in humanitarian crises often focus on
infrastructure - such as building toilets - at the expense of changing
attitudes, local aid workers said.
In
one latrine in the Muna Garage camp, the pit was full of plastic bottles into
which people had defecated before throwing them away - thus blocking the toilet
for several days.
To
challenge such practices and inform people about how open defecation can lead
to the spread of deadly diseases, aid agencies are sending health volunteers to
camps and communities.
In
a dusty yard in a quiet Maiduguri neighbourhood, dozens of displaced women and
girls huddled on the ground as they learnt about topics ranging from cholera to
menstrual hygiene.
"Most
people are keen to listen and quick to learn," said volunteer Rukaiya
Mohammed, a teacher in her early twenties.
"We
aren't seeing many children defecate in the open, and that is one of the most
important achievements," she added.
WAITING
ALL DAY
In
camps and communities across Borno state, lines of women and children waiting
next to water points with garish yellow and orange buckets and jerrycans
stretch far into the distance.
While
tackling open defecation and poor hygiene is key, aid agencies are also
striving to improve infrastructure to help some four million people who lack
access to safe water, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA) said.
Solar
and mechanized boreholes and hundreds of water points are being installed in
camps and communities, yet a third of the displaced still receive less than 15
litres of water a day for their cooking, cleaning and washing needs, according
to OCHA.
This
shortage is driving many people to travel long distances to collect water from
polluted streams and older boreholes where the water is more likely to be
contaminated, said Francis Tabu of the International Medical Corps (IMC).
"We
are facing a huge challenge to install latrines and water points in local
communities, due to a lack of space in neighbourhoods where everything and
everyone is packed so tightly together," the emergency program coordinator
said.
The
IMC has also established a cholera task force ahead of the rainy season this
summer, fearful of how the disease could quickly spread through the northeast's
jam-packed camps and communities amid poor sanitation and limited access to
water.
For
most of the displaced, like mother-of-three Hauwa Adam, the threat of disease
pales into comparison with their daily struggle to get by. Living in Muna
Garage, the 30-year-old spends most of her days fetching what little water is
available.
"I
have to trek miles to the water point, and queue all day to collect it,"
said Adam, who takes her children along because there is no school for them,
and no one else to look after them.
"What kind of life is
this?"
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