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Thursday, September 19, 2013

Keep your locality tidy‚ take part in clean up campaign tomorrow

KATHMANDU: The government is launching a ‘Clean Up Nepal’ campaign coinciding with the World Sanitation Day, 2013, on Saturday.
Organising a press conference, the Solid Waste Management Technical Support Centre today urged all the stakeholders to actively participate in the campaign in order to keep the city and locality clean and tidy. 
This year’s World Sanitation Day slogan is: ‘Our place, our planet, our responsibility’. Nepal is organising the campaign with the slogan ‘Together let’s sparkle Nepal’. 
“We appeal to everyone to participate in the sanitation campaign from their locality from seven in the morning to noon on September 21,” said Sumitra Amatya, Director, SWMTSC. “We need helping hands to make our places clean and healthy,” she added. According to SWMTSC, the campaign will begin at 200 places across the country on Saturday. “Some 10,000 volunteers and 300 different organisations are taking part in the programme,” said Amatya.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Urban Development has formulated a policy on urban development which focuses on waste management, drinking water and sewerage management, pollution control, greenery promotion and enhancing the beauty of cities.
The government has plans to provide universal access to basic drinking water and sanitation facilities to all by 2017 as per the Millennium Development Goals. Water and sanitation traps people in a vicious circle of disease, poverty and cost people their lives, said experts at the press meet today. According to the Ministry of Urban development, only 82 per cent of the population have access to drinking water and only 62 per cent have access to sanitation facilities in Nepal.

Though the data indicates that Nepal has met MDG target on water and sanitation, only 50 per cent of water supply schemes are functional and sustainability of the sanitation practices is still questionable. The World Sanitation Day, which began from 1997, is marked on the second week of September by 130 countries across the world. 
About 35 million people around the world participate in the ‘Clean up the World’ campaign every year.

Source: The Himalayan Times

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Suddha Pani shut down for selling contaminated water

A market monitoring team of the Department of Commerce and Supply Management (DoCSM) shut down Suddha Pani situated in the Pepsicola town planning area on Monday. The department took action against the company after it failed to abide by the purity standards set by the government.
According to the DoCSM, the water being supplied by Suddha Pani was found to contain mesophilic and coliform bacteria. The company has been extracting ground water and selling it in the market after purifying it.
A DoCSM statement said that the company had been banned from extracting ground water and supplying it. The operation was carried out in the presence of Sushmita Shrestha, proprietor of Suddha Pani.
“The company has been sealed as it failed the quality test carried out by the Department of Food Technology and Quality Controls,” said Narayan Prasad Bidari, director general at the DoCSM. “We will intensify such operations in the days to come.”    
The Kathmandu valley is heavily dependent on water supplied by the private sector. Against the average daily demand of 370 million l of water in the valley, the Kathmandu Upatyaka Khanepani Limited (KUKL) has been supplying just 140 million l. Private firms claim that they supply 90 million l of water by tanker daily. Likewise, they supply 120,000 units of 20-l water jars on a daily basis.
“As per our findings, there are around 260 water extracting and distributing companies in Kathmandu. And most of them have not acquired operation permits. This has raised a serious question about the health of the general people,” said Prem Lal Maharjan, president of the National Consumers
Forum. He added that the government should intensify such checks on water extraction and distribution as drinking water is among the basic needs of the general people.
Maharjan added that the DoCSM should also look into the price factor of the water being distributed in the capital city. “A one-litre bottle of drinking water is sold for around Rs 25 while the production cost is just around Rs 10. As for the 20-l jar, the production cost is Rs 25-Rs 30,” said Maharjan, adding that the government should realize this and ask private water bottling firms to reduce prices.
Apart from the water plant, the monitoring team checked Family Store in Pepsicola town planning area and seven other stores—New Namaste Mart, Baneshwor; Ganga Khadya Bhandar, Battisputali; Aaman Kirana Pasal, Bhimsengola and Banepali Pasal, Apna Cold Store and Best Buy Shopping Centre in Old Baneshwor.
They were caught for not displaying price lists and signboards, not renewing their business licences and selling date-expired products. The DoCSM said in a statement that all the date-expired products found in the stores were destroyed and the owners were warned not to repeat the offence in the future.
Date : sept 3, 2013