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Coalition Of Civil Societies Kicks Against Alleged Moves By African States To Privatise Water Sector In Communities

Coalition Of Civil Societies Kicks Against Alleged Moves By African States To Privatise Water Sector In Communities
October 9, 2023

According to the coalition, access to water is a human right and no human should be deprived of the opportunity to enjoy it. 

A coalition of civil society and labour activists, known as Our Water Our Right Africa Coalition (OWORAC) has rejected the purported move to privatise the water sector in African communities. 

In a press statement dated 9 October 2023, the group urged African leaders across boards to defend the right to water and emphatically reject privatisation schemes. 

According to the coalition, access to water is a human right and no human should be deprived of the opportunity to enjoy it. 

The statement reads: “This week, civil society and labour activists are urging African leaders to be the bulwark against a rising tide of threats to communities access to water, with particular attention to the insidious threats that water privatisation and corporate capture pose to the human right to water.

“The Our WaterOur Right Africa Coalition (OWORAC) - led by civil society and trade unionists from nearly a dozen African countries makes this call as the coalition celebrates its third annual Africa Week of Action Against Water Privatisation through grassroots community sensitisation and stakeholder engagement. 

“The theme for the 2023 commemoration is Holding Hands to Protect Africa's Water From Corporate Capture Which centres on the need for collaboration by government civil society and grassroots communities in confronting privatisation and privatisation threats.

“In the face of growing threats to water the OWORAC is calling on African leaders including those representing the African Union, ECOWAS, SADC, EAC and ECCAS to stand in defence of the right to water and emphatically reject privatisation schemes. 

"Water is not a commodity to be traded bartered or sold to the highest bidder, said Akinbode Oluwafemi, the Executive Director of Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa and member of the OWORAC".

The rich countries of the Global North must stop funding neocolonial commodification practices in Global South countries especially in Africa, disguised as benevolent development aid and interventions. The capitalist pillage of Africa's water masquerading as innovative solutions is a crime against the people and is unacceptable.

“During this week in which community leaders celebrate and work to protect the human right to water those pushing dangerous privatisation schemes will descend upon the continent for the annual meetings of the World Bank & International Monetary Fund in Marrakech, Morocco. 

“The fact that these meetings organised by two of the institutional architects of the rampant corporate capture seen across the Global South - are taking place on the continent for the first time in fifty years and despite the devastating earthquake which occurred in the country just two months prior indicates a sharpened focus on shaping the future of Africa in the image of corporate control.

“Corporate greed has turned Africa's water into blue gold mines, deepening inequalities and leaving communities parched even when surrounded by an abundance that is rightfully theirs." said Sani Baba Mohammed, Public Services International's Regional Secretary for Africa & Arab Countries. This is the shameful failure of market-centric water management approaches.

“Only community-driven solutions rooted in democratic decision-making and control of water resources for public good can guarantee water access equality accountability and security of jobs.

“The failures of private water multinationals such as Veolia and Suez are well-documented around the globe and across the African continent, ranging from unaffordable water tariffs to labour abuses. Commodification of water in Africa will come at a huge price and that price will be paid by communities whose access to water will be severely restricted women who will not be able to afford the huge costs and will have to seek unwholesome alternatives, and also children who will be severely dehydrated from unquenchable thirst," said Everline Akech, the subregional secretary for English-speaking Africa for Public Services International.

“In the face of the challenges of lack of access to water and emerging privatisation threats, the OWORAC stands in solidarity with all impacted communities across Africa. Together with our people we insist that the democratic and inclusive management of Africa's water resources and systems is non-negotiable. We reject the commodification of this essential life source and speak in united voices that the right and access to water for every African is not for sale. Our governments have a crucial role to play in this regard. More than ever before the OWORAC is determined to ensure that water remains a shared heritage public good and a fundamental human right now and for all generations to come.

“Please see below for additional solidarity messages from comrades in the Our WaterOur Right Africa Coalition:

"In Africa as everywhere in the world water is a strategic commodity. It's therefore essential and indispensable for the survival of human beings on earth. Any government that privatises this essential resource endangers the lives of the populations it is supposed to protecting Cameroon, the government which for ten years experimented with the privatisation of public drinking water service has just made the progressive decision to adopt the option of renationalization of the water company (CAMWATER Utilities Corporation),” said Chief Godson Ewoukem, Executive President of SYNATEEC trade-union Cameroon. 

"One voice for water access is a voice for millions of thirsty mouths without a voice," said Geoffrey Kabutey Ocansey, Convener, Water Citizens Network, Ghana. 

Also, Sandra Ndang, African Center for Advocacy Cameroon, said, "The planet is in a state of emergency and privatising water would result in further aggravating the crises we are facing particularly in our continent. Water is a common goods fundamental human right which should never be privatised for profit.”