Senin 10 Sep 2012 21:21 WIB

Minister: Seven percent of Indonesians have no access to good sanitation

People wash clothes at the river in Karawang, West Java.
Foto: Antara/M Agung Rajasa
People wash clothes at the river in Karawang, West Java.

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, NUSA DUA- About seven percent of Indonesians had no access to adequate sanitation, Health Minister Nafsiah Mboi said on Monday. "Seven percent of Indonesia`s total 300 million people means there are 21 million Indonesians not having access to good sanitation," said the minister, when opening the 3rd East Asia Ministerial Conference on Sanitation and Hygiene on Monday.

Earlier, public Works Minister Djoko Kirmanto said Indonesia placed third in ASEAN in terms of sanitation quality. He said the government, through the Ministry of Public Works, had put in place several steps to improve Indonesians access to good sanitation by building facilities for waste management and drainage.

"During the past years the government has invested Rp3 trillion per year to build sanitation facilities," said the minister, adding that people`s active participation in maintaining infrastructure is also needed.

Meanwhile, National Development Planning Agency`s Deputy Minister for Infrastructure, Dedy S Priatna, stated that the country needed 56 trillion IDR to accelerate the development of good sanitation facilities until 2020.

 

 

 

 

sumber : Antara
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