Thank you Peter for your contribution. Yes, I have also witnessed projects that claim principle of needs still argue "needs of 1000 people is greater than 100 people". At end of the day, the 100 people will miss it all. How can we ensure WASH projects are designed based on needs to eliminate inequity? In Uganda, the WASH sector preach principle of "some for all, but not all some", but we still experience similar inequity problems.

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Thank you Peter for your contribution. Yes, I have also witnessed projects that claim principle of needs still argue "needs of 1000 people is greater than 100 people". At end of the day, the 100 people will miss it all. How can we ensure WASH projects are designed based on needs to eliminate inequity? In Uganda, the WASH sector preach principle of "some for all, but not all some", but we still experience similar inequity problems.