
In 2000, the Millennium Development Goals were established to
“halve, by 2015, the proportion of people living in extreme
poverty and to halve the proportion of people who suffer from hunger
and are unable to reach or afford safe drinking water.” Yet the
reality of universal access to water continues to be deferred, and the
increasing corporate control of global water resources undermines steps
made toward these goals.
The
People’s Health Movement and other organizations and
individuals working toward health, equitable development and
environmental justice
Commit to acting on
the following principles, beliefs and values:
That water is essential
for human life and all life on earth. Access
to safe water is a basic human right. It is a vital public health need. Therefore, each member of
the human community has the right to accessible, affordable water in
quantity and quality sufficient to life and basic economic activities.
Water has cultural
significance beyond its health and environmental value.
Water is not and should not be a commodity to
be bought
and sold as merchandise in the market place. Rather, the global water
supply is a shared legacy, a public trust and a fundamental human right.
Water is a
natural resource that should be used judiciously and preserved for the
common good of all peoples and ecosystems on this planet. Healthy
ecosystems ensure the human right to water for future generations.
Water is an increasingly
scarce natural resource, and as a result is crucial to the security of
all societies and sovereignty of nations around the world. For this
reason alone, its ownership, control, management and distribution
belong in the public domain.
Citizens have
the right to effectively participate in the shaping of public policies
that fundamentally affect their lives such as the control of water, and
government has a responsibility to ensure this right.
Emphasize the gravity and
urgency of the current situation:
•
1.4 billion people lack access to clean drinking water.
•
By 2025 some 3 billion people will be suffering from water shortage. Over 80 percent of them live in developing
countries, predominantly in rural areas and in areas of marginal
habitation in and around large cities.
• 80
percent of all diseases in developing countries can be traced back to
the use of polluted water.
• The poor spend up to twenty times more than the rich for safe
water.
• Current international trade and investment agreements encourage
commodification and corporate control of water resources, which reduces
access to water and limits government capacities to comply with their
obligations under the right to water.
Lack of water
leads to increased hunger, poverty, misery and disease, as well as
desertification and loss of biodiversity. Without
access to water, people are driven from their homes and forced to
migrate and flee. Social unrest, conflicts
and the danger of war over access to water become intensified. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan put it clearly
at the start of the Year of Water: “No water – no
future.”
Therefore, the
People’s Health Movement and other organizations and individuals
working toward health, equitable development and environmental justice:
Call upon the
United Nations to:
Assert its
leadership role regarding water policy over that of the World Trade
Organization and other private and non-democratic bodies on the basis
that access to water is a fundamental and universal human right.
Create a water
convention binding under international law on par with the Climate
Convention, the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Convention
to Combat Desertification. The objectives
of this convention shall be to:
• re-affirm the human right to water
• strengthen and ensure the implementation of the human right to
water.
• make
the right to water fully enforceable under national and international
law
• ensure
management of water as a public trust and, where water resources lie
completely within the borders of a particular State, as part of that
State’s national patrimony.
• ensure
sustainable consumption of water and that sufficient water is left for
non-human species, to the greatest extent possible.
• help prevent conflicts over water resources at the national
level.
Call upon governments to:
Allocate sufficient resources to provide safe and
affordable water to all at both the local and national levels.
Aggressive public programs aimed at developing systems for sustainable
global water sanitation and increased water-treatment systems must be
established;
Develop participatory decision-making mechanisms at
the local, regional and national level that ensure that citizens have
the opportunity to publicly discuss, debate and vote upon water
management options, especially when governments are addressing
proposals and decisions regarding the privatization of public water
utilities;
Ensure that participatory decision-making mechanisms
are inclusive and recognize that there is a tendency to marginalize
women, people with disabilities, indigenous peoples, children and the
aged from decision-making mechanisms.
Oppose legislation that promotes privatization of
water or wastewater services, undermines local government authority in
water services management, undermines environmental, health or consumer
protection of drinking water, or requires that public funds be made
available to private service corporations;
Provide full information disclosure concerning any
proposed water privatization process, including: names of multinational
corporations bidding on utilities in their domain, information about
the terms and conditions of the privatization, such as the proposed
tariff structure, expansion plans, connection fees, and possible
subsidies;
Oppose the consideration of the General Agreement on
Trade in Services (GATS) and agreements such as the Free Trade Area of
the Americas (FTAA), or any provisions thereof, that would undermine
national, state or local regulations protecting health, the
environment, and labor rights or would promote the privatization of
essential public services such as water, health, and education through
requiring market access or preferential treatment for private
corporations;
Protect the right to water by ensuring that their own
citizens and companies do not violate the right to water of people in
other countries;
Recognize the legitimacy of popular mobilization in
achieving and safeguarding the human right to water.
Call upon the World Bank,
the IMF and other multilateral financial institutions to:
Eliminate
water privatization as a condition for access to World Bank and other
multilateral loans;
Remove
increases in water fees and full cost recovery as a condition for
access to World Bank loans;
End
secret negotiations between governments and IMF and World Bank
officials and provide full public information disclosure and
transparency on loan conditions and agreements;
Ensure
that citizens around the world have the opportunity to participate in
privatization decisions and have the opportunity to debate a wide
variety of water management options.
Ensure that citizens around the world have the
opportunity to participate in privatization decisions and have the
opportunity to debate a wide variety of water management options.
Urge the
international community and world leaders to:
Declare the urgent need
to protect global water resources for the public good;
Provide adequate
technical assistance and sufficient funding to less developed nations
directly through multilateral and bilateral agreements to support the
implementation of water and sanitation programs in the public sector;
Condemn policies that
treat water as a commodity governed by market forces or promote the
privatization of public water utilities. Such policies undermine the
public commitment and responsibility to provide universal access to
clean and affordable water;
Partake in the
International Development Target set by the UN Millennium Assembly to,
"halve, by 2015, the proportion of people living in extreme poverty and
to halve the proportion of people who suffer from hunger and are unable
to reach or afford safe drinking water";
Encourage the development
of policies that treat water as a valuable and finite resource, that
actively manage the water demand and increase the efficiency of water
in all uses by setting appropriate national targets to improve the
equity with which water resources are used;
Adhere to the
activity plans of Agenda 21 that promote schemes for rational water use
through public awareness-raising, educational programs and levying of
water tariffs and other economic instruments for affordability of safe
water so that all people have financial and geographical access to
clean water by the year 2025;
Reform
sanitation, manufacturing and agricultural practices in developed and
less developed countries alike in order to protect and save the limited
amounts of the world’s clean water.
Call on the
peoples of the world to:
Conserve water in the
household, workplace and community;
Document and
act on cases of violations of the right to water;
Document and
raise awareness of cases where the right to water has been successfully
defended or promoted;
Communicate
with local and national groups on possible provision of legal and other
forms of assistance in order to respond to violations;
Assist local
and national groups in efforts to advocate for national legislation on
water and sanitation;
Provide
information to local and national groups about the right to water and
the potential ways in which they can claim their rights.
Oppose the commodification of water
and the privatization of public water utilities as a violation of our
human rights. Demand that our local and national governments recognize
and defend people's right to clean and affordable water or risk their
removal.
Thanks to
Friends of the Right to Water for help developing this statement.
To add your
name or your organization's name to the list of supporter's of the
right to water,
e-mail us at:
phm@hesperian.org
