British High Commissioner to Bangladesh Robert Chatterton Dickson paid a visit to Kalyanpur slum in the city on Saturday, where British-Dutch multinational FMCG company Unilever has set up a community toilet -- WASH Centre -- for the 8,000-odd residents in collaboration with an NGO, reports UNB.
Residents of Kalyanpur slum, also known as Pora Bosti, not only live below the poverty line, with the median household income being Tk 3,725 per mensem, but also face severe health issues due to limited access to sanitation and clean drinking water.
Before the Covid pandemic hit Bangladesh hard in March, Unilever Bangladesh Ltd. (UBL) and BHUMIJO, the NGO known for running WASH Centres, jointly built the community toilet in the slum.
The facility has a total of six separate toilets for men and women, along with standard hand-washing space, and safe drinking water (Pureit) and laundry facilities.
The aim of the WASH Centre is to improve the overall health and hygiene of the Kalyanpur slum community.
Apart from High Commissioner Dickson, UBL Chairman Asif Saleh and BRAC executive director also visited the facility and listened to the experiences shared by the beneficiaries of the WASH Centre to gauge the effects of the WASH Centre and BRAC's COVID-19 initiatives over the slum dwelling community.
Farhana Rashid, the co-founder and CEO of BHUMIJO, explained the business model to the visiting delegation.
During the visit, the High Commissioner also learned about another critical initiative - HBCC by BRAC in Bangladesh. The Hygiene & Behaviour Change Coalition (HBCC) has been jointly set up by Unilever and UK's Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) to mount a rapid response to contain the spread of Covid-19.
UK envoy gauges impact of community toilets in city’s Kalyanpur slum
FE Team | Published: November 07, 2020 21:38:35
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