Improving sanitation in drought-hit Angola

Sanitation workshop with local administration authorities in Cunene, Angola. Photo: LWF/B. Mangika

Workshops for local administration authorities in Cunene province

LUANDA, Angola/GENEVA, 23 December 2015 (LWI) – In a training workshop on water and hygiene, The Lutheran World Federation (LWF) program in Angola has trained local administration authorities on improving sanitation for local communities in Cunene province at the end of November.

Cunene province is ranked first on the health sector list as an area prone to waterborne diseases such as cholera. The reason is a high prevalence of open defecation. There are no latrines in the villages; consequently, people go into the bush in open air. “People fetch their water for drinking and other domestic use from man-made dams called ‘Chimpaka’,” an LWF staff member describes. “The problem is, this is also where livestock go to drink. With open air defecation, all rubbish accumulates in these dams contaminating the water”.

The situation in Cunene and neighboring Huila province had worsened in previous years, when extreme weather and long dry spells made water supplies extremely scarce. The effects of these droughts are still visible. LWF has been assisting in Angola during the drought period with food aid and sanitation, and continues its hygiene and sanitation programs until today.

Despite the Total Sanitation Led by Community/schools (TSLC) program in Angola which started in 2008 in Huila province and was also introduced in Cunene in 2010, real sanitation is yet to be achieved in Southern Cunene. Although there is funding and commitment on government level, different structures on regional and provincial level make it difficult or even impossible to identify the person responsible to advocate for better sanitation with the communities.

In consequence, LWF Angola is training the local administration authorities to carry on with community-led sanitation and hygiene activities to ensure sustainability even after external partners exit. Currently, LWF Angola continues to assist the rural communities in two municipalities of Cunene province.

“The knowledge and commitment to be acquired here is to achieve sustainability in our work,” Vice Provincial governor said upon the opening of the workshop.  “We must now promote and introduce the work for total sanitation in all local structures and beyond”.

Through these trainings at municipal and communal levels, the project aims to improve the knowledge of the local administration authorities on community-led sanitation, and to incorporate sanitation into the provincial and municipal development plans.

“We never thought the TSLC program can be included in the municipal development budget,” one of the participants said. “Communities should be prepared to fight against poor sanitation in their own respective areas,” another added.

LWF Angola in partnership with UNICEF and in collaboration with Peoples In Need – PIN are engaged to build the capacity of the local administration authorities. “Our aim is no more open air defecation in Cunene”, the Vice governor said.

Contribution by Abrao Mushivi, LWF Angola program Interim Country Representative