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    Water Cut-off in U.S. City Violates Human Rights, Say Activists

    mudra
    mudra


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    Water Cut-off in U.S. City Violates Human Rights, Say Activists Empty Water Cut-off in U.S. City Violates Human Rights, Say Activists

    Post  mudra Mon Jun 30, 2014 9:58 am

    Water Cut-off in U.S. City Violates Human Rights, Say Activists

    Over the last decade, Detroit residents have seen water rates rise by 119 percent. Credit: Bigstock/IPS

    UNITED NATIONS, Jun 19 2014 (IPS) - When the United Nations reaches out to resolve a water or sanitation crisis, it is largely across urban slums and remote villages in Asia, Africa or Latin America and the Caribbean.

    But a severe water crisis in the financially bankrupt city of Detroit in the U.S. state of Michigan has prompted several non-governmental organisations and activists to appeal for U.N. intervention in one of the world’s richest countries.

    “This is unprecedented,” said Maude Barlow, founder of the Blue Planet Project, a group that advocates water as a human right.

    “I visited the city and worked with the Detroit People’s Water Board several weeks ago and came away terribly upset,” she told IPS.

    "Water bills are regressive, so low-income households pay a disproportionate amount of their income for water service." -- Mary Grant, researcher at Food & Water Watch
    She pointed out that hundreds of thousands of people, mostly African Americans, are having their water ruthlessly turned off.

    Families with children, the elderly and the sick, cannot bathe, flush their toilets or cook in their own homes, she added.

    “This is the worst violation of the human right to water I have ever seen outside of the worst slums in the poorest countries in failed states of the global South,” said Barlow, a one-time senior advisor on water to a former President of the U.N. General Assembly.

    Last March, the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) announced plans to shut off water service for 1,500 to 3,000 customers every week if their water bills were not paid. And on Tuesday, the City Council approved an 8.7-percent water rate increase.

    According to a DWSD document, more than 80,000 residential households – in a city of 680,000 people – are in arrears, with thousands of families without water, and thousands more expected to lose access at any moment.

    A group of NGOs has submitted a report to Catarina de Albuquerque, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the Human Right to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation, urging the United Nations to weigh in on the crisis and help restore water services and stop further cut-offs.

    In a joint report released Wednesday, the Detroit People’s Water Board, the Blue Planet Project, the Michigan Welfare Rights Organisation and Food and Water Watch made several recommendations, including an appeal to the state of Michigan and the U.S. government to respect the human right to water and sanitation.

    The report also calls on the city of Detroit to abandon its plans for further cut-offs and restore services to households that have suffered water cuts.

    Mary Grant, researcher at Food & Water Watch, an advocacy group based in Washington DC, told IPS people often think the United States has fully met the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and provides universal access to safe drinking water and sanitation.

    But as the crisis in Detroit shows, the situation is more complex and certain communities lack these essential services, she added.

    When the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the Right to Water visited the United States last year, Food & Water Watch wrote a report delineating violations of the human right to water and sanitation across the country, primarily in rural, Latino and immigrant, Native American and homeless communities.

    Grant said water shutoffs for non-payment are one way these violations are occurring.

    In Detroit and other cities, she pointed out, households can lose access to drinking water and wastewater service when they cannot afford to pay their water bills.

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