By Joyce Remi-Babayeju
FCT Minister of State, Dr. Ramatu Tijjani Aliyu, today at Pyakasa community along the Airport road launched a solar – powered water scheme for indigenes.
Aliyu who was represented by the Mandate Secretary , Area Council Services Secretariat. Ibrahim Abubakar Dantsoho. also expressed the commitment of the FCT Administration towards providing potable water, sanitation and hygiene, WASH, services, while strengthening community-led approaches to total sanitation.
The minister, who gave this commitment at the commemoration of the 2023 World Water Day, also encouraged stakeholders to join hands with the Administration to accelerate change in improving access to safe drinking water in the Territory.
Aliyu revealed that the FCT Administration has constructed 188 hand pump borehole water supply schemes, 6 motorized solar-powered borehole water schemes and rehabilitated 30 rural water supply schemes, for improve access to safe drinking water for about 50,000 citizens.
According to her, the World Water Day is about taking action to tackle the global water crisis of about 2.2 billion people living without access to safe drinking water, noting that the 2023 World Water Day is about accelerating change to solve the water and sanitation crisis.
While appreciating the partnership with the Federal Ministry of Water Resources, development partners such as UNICEF, USAID, WaterAid Nigeria, DFID, Japan International Cooperation Agency, she however pledged the readiness of the Administration in supporting and encouraging collaboration and partnership in the provision of safe drinking water in rural communities.
According to her, “sustainability of both the private and public water sources is key in the service delivery sector of the FCT.
“In this respect, I urge the good people of Abuja to embrace the clarion call for behavioural change to safely manage and conserve the available water resources for the current and future generations.”
However, the minister lamented that millions of people and countless schools, businesses, healthcare centers, farms, and industries are being held back because their human rights to water and sanitation still need to be fulfilled, as she called for an urgent need to accelerate change— to go beyond “business as usual.”
“The recent data (WASH-NORM) shows that governments must work on average of five times faster to meet the SDG 6 on time, but this is not a situation that any single actor or group can solve. Water affects everyone, so, we need everyone to “be the change” and take action,” she added.
Also speaking, the FCTA Permanent Secretary, Mr. Olusade Adesola, who was represented by the Director of Administration and Finance, Mr. Abdulrasaq Leramoh, advocated for positive impacts in accessibility to safe drinking water in rural communities.
He called on the benefiting communities to take ownership of these facilities and ensure their smooth operation, management, and sustainability.
Executive Director FCT Rural Water Supply, and Sanitation Agency, Dr. Mohammed Ali Dan-Hassan, identified water as an essential component of life that is critical to the family unit, the community, local government, state and federal levels.
He expressed the confidence that the Agency has reached about 60 percent of coverage of rural communities, adding that in the next one or two years, the Agency would hit 90 to 95 percent coverage of water supply in the Capital city.
“We are exploiting the groundwater resource because the pipe bone network has not reached those areas yet,” he stressed.