Last November 19 marked the day that a group of concerned private citizens of the world under the aegis of World Toilet Organization (WTO) decided to draw global attention to the dire consequences of neglecting man's toilet needs.
Dedicated to drumming up awareness and providing supportive action plans on the vital need to provide majority of humanity today access to a holistic and sustainable sanitation regimen, WTO works on the premise that the lack of functional toilets among the 2.5 billion of the world's poor, contributes to about 40 per cent of the diseases that kill them yearly.
On the other hand, WTO maintains, the elimination of the contagion associated with poor hygiene and social sanitary habits, which lack of toilets exacerbates will reduce deaths and personal and national economic costs by the same margin of 40 per cent.
In most of the developing areas like Africa, many people and their governments pay more attention to eating than they do to the disposal of the inevitable wastes they generate from their food intakes.
This inexplicable disregard for the laws of polarity in nature is even noticeable among the affluent in Nigeria. But the more blame goes to physical planners, our urban and town planners and the architects who formulate policies and design our cities and towns. It is the height of existential myopia to design any living place without a thought given to the disposal of human and other domestic wastes. This has nothing to do with the level of development because even animals - dogs and cats, make elaborate efforts to dispose and conceal their waste products.
Here in Nigeria, for example, it is common sight and practice to see citizens defecating right in the open fields, into public water ways or simply utilizing the ubiquitous plastic bag to relieve themselves - which they haul anywhere it is convenient to do so.
Facts on the ground seem to support the WTO's claims: Of the 2.5 billion global poor with no state comprehensive sanitation system (including the management of human fecal matters), 1.8 million, mostly children, die yearly due to diseases related to unsafe disposal of fecal matters.
Even in developed, affluent societies, sewage disposal sometimes ends up destroying the water sources.
Associated with this water pollution, and direct contamination, are diseases like diarrhea which kills 5000 children daily, more than five times the number that die of HIV/AIDS daily.
Lack of efficient disposal of human wastes and the taboo placed on openly discussing the issue was one of the reasons why one Mr. Jack Sim started the World Toilet Organization in 2001.
We generally applaud the initiative of Mr. Sim in forcing the issues of global toilet insufficiency, which has only ended up costing the world more than it could reasonably bear, to public notice.
What is needed today, as much as potable water, is a government-ordered provision of functional toilets in all private and public places. Perhaps this policy will energize government's efforts to provide potable water for citizens which will cut national and global health bills by as much as 40 per cent.
Because of the comprehensive lack of clean, portable water, one of the major sources of diseases that cause more deaths than other sub-headings combined, is the lack of efficient toilet facilities to dispose of human wastes for a majority of peoples of the world.
It appears short-sighted to think only of eating and not of how the natural by-products would be eliminated and disposed of.
Government should, indeed, see this initiative as a call to action not only to build and maintain more public toilets but to ensure that all houses, private and public have functional toilets.

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This extremely important effort can be done in a fuel producing manner. Human and agricultural wastes can be digested into biogas using readily available technology. You can download plans from the internet, or order complete units, off the shelf, from China. Sewage treatment is a local problem everywhere, and locally is the best way to solve it. The technology is "old hat", the materials needed are everywhere, the labor needed is local, and looking for work. Don't wait for a musclebound national government to do it for you. Those who do it first will be the first to benefit.