JAKARTA, Indonesia, April 27, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- More than 100 million people live without access to safe water in Southeast Asia as a result of pollution, overuse, climate change-induced droughts, degradation of aquatic ecosystem, dams and contamination. A recent report, The Right to Safe Water in Southeast Asia - published by The Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (RWI), China Dialogue and a researcher from the Ibnu Khaldun University, Bogor, Indonesia - shows that countries respecting, fulfilling, and protecting the right to safe water are in a better position to tackle water supply issues, and ensure the full enjoyment of all human rights.
"The Right to Safe Water report highlights that ASEAN countries, to their credit, have taken crucial steps in recognizing the right to safe drinking water as indivisible form and the foundation for achieving many other international human rights", said RWI Program Officer specialized in human rights and the environment, Victor Bernard.
Recognising the right to safe drinking water as a standalone right or as a part of the right to a healthy environment.
ASEAN recognizes the rights to "safe drinking water and sanitation" and to a "safe, clean and sustainable environment" as pre-requisites to realising the right to an adequate standard of living in its 2012 ASEAN Human Rights Declaration. Yet, ASEAN does not have a dedicated treaty or legal instrument to support this right.
The authors of The Right to Safe Water propose that ASEAN countries could:
Download "The Right to Safe Water in Southeast Asia" HERE
Contact:
Yudha Pratama
yudha.pratama@rwi.lu.se
+6227092823
Victor Bernard
victor.bernard@rwi.lu.se
+6227092823
Website:
http://www.rwi.or.id/