Toilets generate income for a community in Tanzania
Having toilets and water is a basic necessity in library/schools; however it is not available in many rural schools in Tanzania. Due to this, children are irregular to school and eventually drop out.
The Tanzania Integrated Water Sanitation and Hygiene Program (iWASH) was a USAID-supported initiative implemented by the Global Water for Sustainability (GLOWS)
The program is funded by several countries including Australia, Austria, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Ireland, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, and United States, as well as by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
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This project will provide sanitary toilet facilities for 600 students, improving their general health, as well as their school attendance.
Mara Paap..! Making Tanzanians excited about poo.
It is also estimated that about 5 million Tanzanians do not use a latrine at all, and practice open defecation.
Water Sanitation and Hygiene in Tanzania.
Water sanitation and hygiene in Tanzania (WASH) is an ongoing crisis impacting citizens in rural areas. Learn more about the health risks and solutions.
majisafigroup.org
Water sanitation and hygiene in Tanzania (WASH) is an ongoing crisis for citizens of this diverse country. Eighty percent of rural Tanzanians rely on unimproved sanitation facilities, pit latrines without, water, platforms or slabs, or in the worst-case, open defecation.