BY EDMUND SMITH-ASANTE
Some of the participants at the training |
More than
50 officials belonging to organisations and agencies in the water, sanitation
and hygiene (WASH) sector in Ghana, have received a three-day training on how
to manage those essential services during crisis or emergencies.
This is
intended to enable them prevent further escalation of conditions during
emergencies and disasters such as floods, bushfires, droughts, earthquakes,
famine and disease outbreaks such as cholera, among many others.
The
training, which commenced on Wednesday, February 6, 2013 and ends today,
Friday, February 8, 2013, is being organised jointly by the ministries of Water
Resources, Works and Housing and Local Government and Rural Development, with
the support of United Nations agency, UNICEF.
Being
held under the WASH in Emergencies (WinE) programme, the training is the third
in a series of capacity building programmes held since the inception of the
programme in 2011 which was informed by the annual rampant bouts of cholera
outbreaks in the country around that period.
The first
two training programmes were for national level officers in December 2012, and
officials in the Upper West, Upper East, Northern and Brong Ahafo regions
making the Northern Zone, in January 2013.
The
ongoing training, is thus for the Southern Zone, which comprises the Ashanti,
Western, Eastern, Central, Volta and Greater Accra regions of Ghana.
Topics
discussed during the training include Disaster Management and Preparedness, The
rationale of WASH in Emergencies, Control of Communicable Diseases in
Emergencies, Sanitation in Emergencies, WASH Response to Urban Floods, Hygiene
Promotion in Emergencies, Understanding Gender Perspective in Early Recovery
and Children With Disability in Emergency among a host of others.
Explaining
in an interview what informed the inception of the WinE programme and the
training, Mr. Enoch Ofosu, Water Resources Specialist, Water Directorate,
Ministry of Water Resources, Works and Housing, said “there is the need to
build capacity for the area called WASH in emergency.”
He said
hitherto, things were done in fragments and that “Whenever there were disasters
people were called upon to do things, but we have to be proactive, we have to
put ourselves together – the lack of coordination can result in a lot of
negative things like wastage and the lack of WASH services in emergencies can
lead to deaths.”
“The best
thing is to be prepared and in the sector have capacity built, so that you know
what to do in advance before the emergency happens,” he added.
Enoch
Ofosu stated that although the National Disaster Management Organisation
(NADMO), has been coordinating and bringing onboard other agencies to assist
during emergencies, it has an overarching structure “and within that broad
plan, other sectors must plan into it; like water, sanitation and hygiene,
housing,” “so that when any emergency strikes you know that there is a plan.”
Officials
receiving the training, are from NADMO which is a co-chair of the WinE
Technical Working Group, the Community Water and Sanitation Agency (CWSA),
Environmental Health and Sanitation Directorate (EHSD), Water Directorate,
civil society organisations (CSOs) and Local Government Authority (LGAs) among
others.
Touching
on whether Ghana is expecting to encounter any disaster, this is what Enoch
Ofosu said: “Disasters are with us and all around us and most importantly we
are developing a structure to fit into the existing structure – talking of
emergencies, we have to make room for it in our existing structure in terms of
policy and other things.”
He
intimated that a newly developed structure, which was validated earlier in the
week, will be communicated to the sector working group and if it is adopted by
stakeholders, it will come into being and it will fit into the existing
framework and become part of it.
He
disclosed further, that the WinE Technical Working Group will report to the
Water and Sanitation Technical Working Group, which will encompass members of
the WinE group and other stakeholders.
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