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Francis Mtitu
  • Male
  • Dar Es Salaam
  • Tanzania, United Republic Of
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Francis Mtitu's Friends

  • bwanahenk
  • Ed Bourque
  • diana patricia robson
 

Francis Mtitu's Page

Latest Activity

Ed Bourque and Francis Mtitu are now friends
Jul 15, 2010
Francis Mtitu and diana patricia robson are now friends
Jul 15, 2010
WASH Manager left a comment for Francis Mtitu
"Hi Francis, Much better :-) Now I see a face. Thanks. Perhaps http://www.pubcd.watsan.net/ will help you in your work. It contains all free IRC publications. Best, Jaap"
Jul 12, 2010
Francis Mtitu updated their profile photo
Jul 12, 2010
WASH Manager left a comment for Francis Mtitu
"Hi Francis, Welcome. A request: change your profile picture and add the pictures of toilets just as pictures :-) Best, Jaap"
Jul 12, 2010
Francis Mtitu is now a member of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene
Jul 12, 2010

Profile Information

Your prefered language?
English
Your regional interests?
Africa, East Africa, West Afrika, Southern Africa, East Asia & Pacific
Your thematic interests?
Rural WASH, Sanitation, Sanitation - Hygiene promotion, Sanitation - On-site sanitation, Sanitation - School sanitation, Sanitation - Sewerage, Sanitation - Solid waste management, Sanitation - Storm drainage, Sanitation - Wastewater treatment, Scaling Up, Technology, Urban WASH, Water and livelihoods, Water quality, Water resources management, Water supply, Water supply - Water collection, Water supply - Water lifting devices, Water supply - Water treatment, Water-related diseases
How to reach you? (Address, e-mail signature, Facebook, Hyve, LinkedIn etc)
fmtitu@yahoo.com

Comment Wall (2 comments)

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At 9:49 on July 12, 2010, WASH Manager said…
Hi Francis,
Much better :-) Now I see a face. Thanks.
Perhaps http://www.pubcd.watsan.net/ will help you in your work.
It contains all free IRC publications.
Best, Jaap
At 8:07 on July 12, 2010, WASH Manager said…
Hi Francis,
Welcome. A request: change your profile picture and add the pictures of toilets just as pictures :-)
Best, Jaap
 
 
 

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RSS update from Source by IRC

WSA signs up with Malaysian company for technical support on sanitation

Water and Sanitation for Africa (WSA) has signed a memorandum of understanding with Indah Water for technical know-how and consultancy services in sewerage management in African countries. WSA selected the Malaysian company “to be in a technical committee formed by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to propose immediate, medium- and long-term solutions for sanitation services in WSA member countries”.

Kiribati’s North Tarawa declared first open defecation free island in the Pacific

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North Tarawa in Kiribati is the first island in the Pacific to be declared open defecation free, thanks to the “Kiriwatsan I Project”. The Ministry of Public Works is implementing this project with technical support from UNICEF and funding from the European Union. In March 2013, North Tarawa adopted the Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) approach following a training of trainers course conducted by Dr Kamal Kar.

Megan Richie is SNV's new WASH Director

In March 2013, SNV appointed Megan Richie as Managing Director for Water, Sanitation & Hygiene (WASH). She leads SNV's global initiatives in the WASH sector. Prior to her appointment as Managing Director, Ms Richie served as Country Director for SNV in Lao PDR.

Brian Arbogast new WASH Director at Gates Foundation

Brian Arbogast is the new director of the Water, Sanitation & Hygiene program at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. He started work at the foundation on 13 May 2013. He takes over from Dr. Frank Rijsberman who acted as director until May 2012.

A central role for government in monitoring sustainable WASH services

Governments are not only investing more in national monitoring systems, but their leadership in country monitoring is also now generally accepted. With this acceptance, however, come expectations about good governance and transparency. Monitoring is politics: agendas and power influence what is monitored and how the results are used. National systems, too, go beyond WASH sector monitoring and should include data from donors and NGOs as well.

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