Meet Steve Sapienza Water and Sanitation in Bangladesh

Hi I'm steve sapienza I'm a freelance news and documentary producer I'm currently in bangladesh and I'm here on a travel grant from the pulitzer center on crisis reporting. I'm looking at water sanitation and hygiene challenges here in bangladesh and in particular here in dhaka bangladesh is considered one of the more densely populated countries on earth and here in the capital dhaka it is a very crowded city. It's very noisy very exciting very vibrant and it's also growing very quickly at a very fast rate.

Many people are moving into the city some four hundred thousand new residents every year from rural areas moving into the city and a lot of them end up in in slum areas which you can see over my shoulder. Here in the background an there's a lot of pressure put on this city in terms of the social environmental and health concerns and already the city is facing a lot of challenges that that mega cities face in developing countries all over the world really really bad traffic.

They've got problems with infrastructure in terms of you know the roads and power there are a lot of power outages here the sanitation. Situation here is really severe almost two-thirds of the city has no access to the city sewer lines. So that means the sewage is removed from pit latrines from septic tanks and it's actually deposited here and there and left to really seep into the ground or the water that you can see exists all around dhaka and this poses a severe health hazard. Not only that a lot of the water surface water is actually goes back into the water system here in dhaka. It's treated but it has the potential to add more disease and problems to the local water supply.

So this reporting project will look at the water sanitation and hygiene issues here in dhaka and around bangladesh. And to really focus in on a lot of simple safe solutions that are happening here to really change people's lives. These are solutions that can happen at very low cost but have huge impacts on the everyday lives of urban poor and the overall health of the city. In general reporting from bangladesh is a challenge there are many different types of ways that make it difficult to get a story done here. I can't speak directly to problems here in dhaka first of all it's very very crowded this being one of the most densely populated countries on earth.

There are insane traffic jams traffic jams like I've never seen before sometimes just a simple trip across town to take three to four hours and when you're on a tight schedule that e can really really mess up your day. Another issue is noise there's always a lot of noise going on so if you're trying to get you know a good interview or good sound for video or perhaps if you're a radio reporter for radio reporting. There's just an enormous amount of noise all the time everywhere you go another thing that is problematic a lot of times is it has to work the crowds again. Number of people sometimes we will set up a camera and a lot of people will crown around including.

They'll walk right into the shot or they'll just come walk right up and just stare right into the camera and you know it's it's pretty funny what happens. But it slows slows down your progress in what you're trying to get done also. There are lot of power blackouts so you have to make sure you have a good source of energy to power up your light and you're the camera batteries and that's another challenge and I think maybe in one last challenge that happens at this particular time of year. Which is ramadan you often have to work around the different prayer times during the day and also take breaks for the different for the iftar in the evening when they break fast.

So you have to respect the local culture and you have to work within the scheduled time that this country is running on during ramadan. So this is my third trip to bangladesh and my impressions of bangladesh have changed since I first came here. You know of my overall impression is that this is a country facing so many many many difficult challenges. I mean you've got extreme from poverty you have climate change issues that are impacting this country. You have you have disease there's corruption there's a lot of really really heavy problems that are impacting bangladesh but I've been really impressed with how this country and its people take on these challenges.

Unfortunately many many years ago this country was tagged as an international basket case and it's still a very very young growing democratic country and you feel that there are a lot of people here who are very who are trying very hard to make things and succeeding in making strides towards improving their country and that is what I've seen here and I think you know the overall impression i'll have coming away from this story is that there a lot of dedicated hardworking people who are finding very simple safe effective solutions to water and sanitation problems here in bangladesh that are going to help this country move forward and also could be exported to the rest of the world and help other countries with their sanitation and water access issues

Subscribe to receive free email updates:

0 Response to "Meet Steve Sapienza Water and Sanitation in Bangladesh"

Posting Komentar