Since 2006, we have reached
1 million people with clean water.
1 million people with clean water.
2 million people with decent toilets.
2 million people with decent toilets.
1.9 million people with good hygiene education.
1.9 million people with good hygiene education.
Together with our partners, we have reached millions of people directly with clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene in communities, schools and healthcare centres.
We have also reached millions more indirectly by influencing and strengthening policies and practices of governments, business and civil society organisation so that we can spark a lasting change at scale.
Behind these numbers lie countless stories of transformation in some of the country’s poorest communities in Sindh, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. As a key figure behind the pioneering community-led total sanitation (CLTS) approach, now practised in 60 countries globally, we have a deep-rooted history of working with local partners and communities to galvanise progress at scale.
Our focus on equity, inclusion and rights has led to context-specific projects in hard-to-reach areas, working with highly marginalised populations – including working with slum residents to ensure legal sanitation connections in slums or reaching the vulnerable communities in remote areas such as Tharparkar with access to safe water, improved sanitation and good hygiene.
Our emphasis on innovation and growth continues to generate new ideas and break new ground in the WASH sector, and projects with parliamentarians, academia and media are at the forefront of sectoral progress.
We have worked in various areas of Pakistan
including districts of Thatta, Badin and Tharparkar in Sindh, Muzaffargarh and Rajanpur in Punjab and Swat in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.