Introduction: Health Begins with a Glass of Clean Water
In Pakistan’s rural and flood-affected areas, safe drinking water, toilets, and hygiene awareness are still out of reach for millions of children. The result? Chronic illness, school dropouts, and preventable deaths from diseases like diarrhea, typhoid, and cholera.
For decades, UNICEF has worked across Pakistan to ensure that children grow up with access to clean water, proper toilets, and the knowledge to protect themselves — because no child should have to choose between health and poverty.
🚱 The Water Crisis in Numbers
- Over 70% of households in rural Pakistan rely on unsafe drinking water
- Nearly 25 million Pakistanis still practice open defecation
- School dropout rates rise in girls where toilets are unavailable
- Poor hygiene and waterborne diseases are among the leading causes of child mortality
Clean water and sanitation are not just public services — they are human rights.
💧 What Is WASH?
WASH stands for:
- Water: Safe, sustainable access to drinking and household water
- Sanitation: Toilets and waste systems that protect health and dignity
- Hygiene: Handwashing, menstrual health, and awareness campaigns to stop disease spread
UNICEF’s WASH programs are deeply integrated into schools, health centers, and communities.
🛠️ UNICEF’s WASH Work in Action
1. 🚰 Providing Safe Drinking Water in Rural Areas
UNICEF works with local governments and partners to:
- Install solar-powered water pumps and filtration systems
- Rehabilitate and maintain non-functional water schemes
- Monitor water quality and provide chlorination supplies
- Train communities to manage water infrastructure sustainably
In areas like Tharparkar, Dera Ghazi Khan, and Kech, these projects have been life-changing.
2. 🚽 Building Toilets and Ending Open Defecation
Poor sanitation leads to disease and social shame — especially for women and girls.
UNICEF’s interventions include:
- Construction of gender-separated toilets in schools and public spaces
- Promotion of Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) to end open defecation
- Awareness drives to break cultural taboos around sanitation
- Use of WASH-friendly school standards to ensure toilets, water, and hygiene materials are always available
“A school without a toilet is not a school for a girl.”
— UNICEF WASH Specialist, South Punjab
3. 🧼 Hygiene Education and Behavior Change
Infrastructure means little without awareness.
UNICEF runs nationwide campaigns focused on:
- Handwashing with soap before eating and after using the toilet
- Safe menstrual hygiene practices for adolescent girls
- Disease prevention training in schools and during emergencies
- Integration of WASH messaging into COVID-19, dengue, and flood responses
Materials are delivered in local languages, using radio, TV, theatre, and youth ambassadors.
4. 🏫 WASH in Schools: Learning in Dignity
Schools without water and toilets are major dropout zones — especially for girls.
UNICEF has supported:
- WASH programs in over 10,000 schools across Pakistan
- Provision of menstrual hygiene kits and awareness sessions for girls
- Training of teachers to deliver health and hygiene education
- Inclusive WASH services for children with disabilities
5. 🆘 Emergency WASH in Disaster Zones
In floods, water becomes both a threat and a necessity.
During the 2022 floods, UNICEF:
- Provided safe water to 1.5 million people
- Distributed hygiene kits (soap, buckets, menstrual pads) to displaced families
- Installed mobile water purification units in emergency camps
- Supported cholera and diarrhea prevention campaigns in flood-hit districts
📍 Focus Areas of Impact
UNICEF has major WASH programs in:
- Sindh: Dadu, Badin, Umerkot
- Balochistan: Kech, Sibi, Pishin
- South Punjab: Rajanpur, Muzaffargarh, Rahim Yar Khan
- KP: Tank, DI Khan, Lower Dir
- Plus dozens of disaster-prone rural districts nationwide
📊 Impact Snapshot (2010–2024)
- Over 8 million people reached with improved WASH services
- More than 1 million children educated through school-based hygiene programs
- Thousands of villages declared open defecation free (ODF)
- Safe water restored in 600+ flood-affected communities
🧾 Final Thoughts: Water Is Life, But Only If It’s Safe
A child who drinks clean water is more likely to live, learn, and thrive. A girl who has a toilet at school is more likely to stay and graduate. That’s the power of WASH.
Through its patient, practical work across Pakistan, UNICEF is transforming public health — not with slogans, but with soap, taps, toilets, and trust.
“We’re not just building toilets. We’re building dignity.”
— UNICEF Pakistan