Thursday, April 25, 2024 | Shawwal 15, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
27°C / 27°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

West Africa polls find water top priority

957135
957135
minus
plus

DAKAR: Rapid urbanisation has caused so many problems in the Senegalese town of Tivaouane-Peulh that the government and aid providers don’t know where to direct their limited resources.


The population of the formerly rural commune near the capital Dakar has roughly doubled in the last decade to reach 80,000 people.


Only 13 per cent of residents are connected to the power grid and 30 per cent have running water.


People who used to make their living by farming and herding are out of work.


“There are many challenges linked to urbanisation. I think it is representative of the issues facing towns in Senegal,” said Tivaouane-Peulh’s Mayor Momar Sokhna Diop.


So Diop partnered with a lab at the University of Dakar to implement a survey process asking citizens what they need most.


Part of the Resilient Africa Network (RAN), the regional lab is one of four across Africa funded by the US Agency for International Development.


The poll found that people value water access above all else, including transport, waste collection and income-generating activities.


On a 1 to 10 scale, with 10 being “very important”, asking the government for more household water connections was ranked 9.7.


“The problem (of water access) is much more serious than we had thought,” said Mayor Diop at an event in Dakar last week where he was presented with the results.


Politicians tend to implement projects with quick outcomes that can help them get re-elected, but these do not always correspond to the community’s long-term needs, he added.


“This (poll) allows us to see if we are on the right track.”


The polling method, known as “deliberative”, is different from other kinds of surveys because it allows people to discuss the policy proposals the poll contains before they vote, ensuring they are well-informed about all the options.


The technique was developed in the 1980s by Stanford University professor James Fishkin and has been used all over the world, but not until recently in sub-Saharan Africa.


RAN has used it in Uganda and Ghana to assess resilience-building options since 2014.


“People told me it wouldn’t work in developing countries, that the people must be highly educated,” Fishkin told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “But it does work very well here.”


There is an understanding today that development projects need local support and engagement to be successful, and this is one way to obtain it, Fishkin said.


In one part of Uganda where the poll was conducted, the local government had tried to improve education by replacing small local schools with larger, centralised ones, Fishkin said.


But parents stopped sending their daughters because they were afraid for their safety on the trip.


“The district officials hadn’t even thought of this, but they heard from the people and decided to reverse the policy,” he said.


People in Tamale, Ghana, one of the fastest-growing cities in West Africa, prioritised clean water and sanitation in a poll conducted there in 2015 by the same lab.


Tamale residents faced a trade-off. With people suffering from both food insecurity and disease, they had to decide whether to use untreated wastewater for farming to grow more crops, or prohibit it to protect public health. — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon