The main responsibility of the public is to make people aware about various issues including sanitation, health education and water supply.
After nearly four years of fulfilling the goal of creating Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) for safe drinking water around the world, and after announcing the United Nations General Assembly, water is a human right, more than a quarter of a billion people. Poor, yet this is not the basic requirement, UNICEF asked to recognize World Water Day.
Unicef and WHO statistics published in 2013 show that 768 million people lack safe drinking water, so that thousands of children die and die every year. Most people live in poor and remote villages or in urban slums without access.
UNICEF estimates lack of safe drinking water and diarrhea associated with adequate sanitation and hygiene children die every day for 5 days.
Sanjay Wieseskaara, head of UNICEF's global water, sanitation and healthcare program, said, "Every child, rich or poor, has the right to health, rights, future rights, and survival." "Until every man, woman and child gets water and sanitation, people will not have to take a rest that is their right to a human being."
Planning and Implementation: Cabinet Division, A2I, BCC, DoICT and BASIS