
Audio By Carbonatix
World Vision Ghana (WVG), a Christian non-profit organization, on Sunday called on government to prioritise and increase investments in water supply across the country to promote good sanitation and healthy living.
The call came on the back of the World Water Day commemoration, the 2021 World Water Day, to be observed on Monday, March 22, is on the theme: “Valuing Water”, which celebrates water and raises awareness of the global water crisis.
WVG said it was committed to partnering government, the private sector, NGOs/CSOs and other stakeholders towards increased access to safe water and asked government to prioritise the sector to promote good sanitation.
In a statement copied to the Ghana News Agency, the Christian relief, development and advocacy group, focused on the wellbeing of all people, especially children, lamented that despite the strides made in water accessibility, some six million children and their families still lacked access to safe water.
“Sadly, millions around the world, including Ghana, do not have access to this vital need. It is not uncommon to find women and children travelling long distances in search of safe water but only ending up fetching water from rivers, streams, unprotected ponds and other contaminated water sources.
“In several rural and small towns, community members still share drinking water sources with cattle and other animals. Forty-nine percent of public basic schools lack access to safe water on their premises (EMIS 2018),” the statement said.
WVG, therefore, urged the Government to address water quality challenges, both at the source and in households, including those identified in the 2017/18 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey Report.
It also urged government to pay attention to the delivery of safe water in schools and healthcare facilities and create the enabling environment for an effective implementation of policies that would ensure the sustainable management of water supply systems.
Close to 80 percent of Ghana’s population have access to safe drinking water, according to a Ghana Multiple Indicator Survey conducted in 2017/18.
Latest Stories
-
AMA Mayor equips health workers to strengthen post-flood community health services
8 minutes -
What Is Wrong with Us? Why is it always somebody else’s fault?
9 minutes -
British Columbia College marks 10 years of quality education with colourful graduation ceremony in Accra
16 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Monday, July 6, 2026
21 minutes -
Why can’t Ghanaians be on time in Ghana?
27 minutes -
James Gyakye Quayson to serve as Special Guest of Honour at Ghana–Australia Trade and Investment Forum 2026
41 minutes -
Flood reporting must go beyond disasters to demand accountability – Jacqueline Ansomah Yeboah
43 minutes -
Woman found dead, mother unconscious with 12-year-old girl in critical condition at Effiduase
44 minutes -
Poor maintenance, not poor engineering alone, is driving Accra’s flooding – Engineer
51 minutes -
BoG calls for industry-wide system to fight fraud across banks, fintechs and mobile money platforms
53 minutes -
Flood-damaged Aflao Market road prompts temporary intervention as calls grow for permanent fix
1 hour -
Recurring floods expose growing humanitarian crisis in Agbozume as hundreds receive emergency relief
1 hour -
Margins delivers first GAM ID – President Barrow is inaugural recipient
1 hour -
Drug Abuse and Ghana’s Human Security Crisis: The silent destruction of a generation’s potential
2 hours -
Floods ravaged Ghana could generate GH¢556 in economic benefits for every GH¢1 invested in sanitation
2 hours