BY EDMUND SMITH-ASANTE
Woman builds own
latrine against all odds
Noticeably overjoyed at having her own
latrine which her family shares with her, she said, “now I just have to open
the door to the latrine and I can conveniently do it.”
Proud owner of a latrine for the first time in her life |
At Osrogba very close to Dodowa (40km from Accra) in the Shai Osudoku district of Ghana’s Greater Accra Region, one thing
is obvious – no landowner or landlord is ready to release land for the
construction of a latrine, a facility which is taken for granted by many.
This is because it is considered a
taboo, a repulsion and disincentive to sell or lease their land for such
purpose - which situation has largely contributed to open defecation by the
270-member community for many years.
However, the situation has not deterred
55-year-old, Grace Akwete, from building her own 10-feet deep latrine at
absolutely no cost, after using the bushes for years without number.
Hear her when asked where she defecated
before constructing her own latrine: “Please I did it in the bushes,” she
replied bluntly.
She explained that she resolved to build
her own latrine, after she had become convinced it was the right thing to do,
when Pronet-Accra, partners for WaterAid Ghana (both non-governmental
organisations in water and sanitation), visited the community and spoke with
them about observing proper sanitation and hygiene.
“If I was still going to the bushes I
could easily be bitten by a snake, but I just returned from a trip and I have
gone to toilet several times without fear,” she said emphatically, adding “I
like it, now I am free.”
This may not be comely for many a city dweller but it is definitely better than open defecation |
She advised her fellow community members
to follow her example, saying it only took about a week with assistance from
her son, some old roofing sheets, wood and nails to construct.
Taboo mode
activated
Confirming that landlords were reluctant
to release land for the construction of latrines in the community, a
four-member team led by Edwin Osei Kumi, Pronet-Accra, and also comprising
Adwoa Pabby and Yakubu Karim Alhassan, project officer and programmes officer
respectively of WaterAid Ghana, which was on a monitoring visit to the
community, was called in to resolve an issue where a landlord who only gave his
name as Mr. Johnson, had refused to give his blessings to the construction of a
latrine by his tenants.
But when the team together with the
community’s six-member WATSAN committee visited, he alleged he had stopped the
tenants because they had just started constructing a latrine on the land
without first seeking his permission.
“When I came from Nigeria, I realised
that they [tenants] had dug three holes for use as a latrine so I told them ‘I
cannot stop you from going to toilet there but when it becomes full do not dig
any more holes for a latrine’”, he narrated.
The landlord continued that the tenants
did not heed his caution but went ahead to dig another hole for a latrine,
which he stopped, asking, “They have seen a big land so they are just
constructing latrines on it – if I decide to sell this plot of land right now,
will anyone buy it when latrines are constructed on it?”
“As I stand here and you come and see me
for land and I decide to give you that portion and you see toilet will you buy?
So I told them to fill up the hole dug – fortunately they had not started using
it – I have asked surveyors to map out the land and will not allow construction
of a toilet there,” he reiterated.
However, after being persuaded to
release the land to help check open defecation, which he was also guilty of, he
consented and permitted the construction to continue but asked if he would also
be allowed to use the facility once it was completed, which drew laughter from
the team.
“I defecate into a black polythene bag
and dump it into the public latrine because I cannot squat on it – It is not
hygienic,” he said.
Meanwhile, following after Grace’s
example, two more women have started construction of their own latrines and one
of them gave her name as Esther Haduo.
Iron Removal
Plant constructed
But the Osrogba community has not only
benefitted from sanitation and hygiene education from Pronet and WaterAid. An
iron removal plant has also been constructed to treat their unwholesome water
and the project was completed and handed over to the community in October 2012,
according to the WATSAN committee.
Speaking to the visiting team, the
committee said to access the water, each household, 40 in all, pays GH¢1 each
month for the water fetched, regardless
of how many buckets a household fetches during the period.
However non-community members are made
to pay 10Gp for a 36-inch sized bucket each time they fetch, while a school in
the community is made to take the water for free as their contribution to their
ward’s education and welfare of the staff.
Emmanuel Zanu Bukor, Watsan Chairman,
however indicated that it was difficult collecting money from January to March
because it is the lean season, adding that collection picks up from April, when
the community’s major crop – mango, is in season.
Commenting on how the iron removal plant
had been of immense help to the community, Emmanuel Bukor said: “At first, when
one fetches water, he or she will have to leave it for a period so a substance
like mud settles and it becomes clean for use.”
He divulged that the facility is mostly
patronised during the dry season and that many of the community members harvest
rainwater during the wet season, hence the low patronage during that
period.
Sanitation
bye-laws
Zanu Bukor also disclosed that the
watsan committee had come up with some bye-laws on animal rearing, in order to
keep the community clean, whereas they are using endogenous means to keep the
tap area clean – no slippers ought to be worn while fetching water.
The watsan chair however said they were
yet to implement a bye-law against open defecation, which states that whoever
is caught openly defecating will be arrested and prosecuted.
Osrogba’s watsan committee has also
benefitted from a series of training (four in all), after its formation, which
has included an endogenous development training by the Centre for Indigenous
Knowledge and Organisational Development (CIKOD), also a WaterAid partner.
Meanwhile in a related development, the
authorities at the Shai Osudoku District Hospital at Dodowa agreed to provide a
polytank to complete the mechanisation of a borehole for which an iron removal
plant has already been provided by Pronet.
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