As a traveller, you often judge a
country by its public toilets. India fails this toilet test miserably.
For even as our country appears poised to become an economic giant at
some future date, one of the many appalling statistics that brings us
down to earth is our toilet story, or rather the lack of toilets story.
A recent joint monitoring report prepared by the World Health
Organisation and Unicef found that out of the 1.2 billion people around
the world who are forced to defecate in the open, half live in India.
An estimated 665 million Indians, one in every two, lack access to a
toilet. That is not a pleasant statistic. Yet, few Indians would
challenge it, as the embarrassing evidence is before our eyes
everywhere we look.
While public facilities like bus stations, railway stations and
airports have distressingly inadequate toilets, even institutions like
hospitals, schools and offices, both government and private, often fail
the toilet test. Ask women who work in these places. Even highly
placed professional women in India will have at least one toilet story
about an office where they have worked.
The problem, of course, is not something to joke about. We know that
the absence of sanitation has a devastating impact on health. It
affects women and girls more directly as they have to wait sometimes an
entire day until dark to relieve themselves. But this unmet need also
has another fall out. It is negating efforts to increase female
literacy.
The city of Mumbai, which has a high overall literacy rate, provides us
with a vivid example of this. According to a report in this
newspaper, six out of ten municipal schools do not have adequate or any
toilets for girls. As a result, the dropout rate of girl students after
Std V is 50 per cent.
The story is worse in rural schools. Little wonder then that India’s
female literacy rate is not advancing at the rate at which girls are
being enrolled in schools. The answer is simple: give them toilets that
are clean and can be used and they will attend school.
The sanitation story is not just about toilets. It is about investment
in sewerage systems.
This can only be done by the State. So why, if water supply is given a
priority, is sewerage neglected? Is the government not too
concerned because while people riot when there is no water, you don’t
see demonstrations demanding toilets? In the water-sanitation duet, the
latter is forgotten or overlooked.
What will it take to get the State to act? Before the days of
modern medicine, the absence of sanitation would mean the spread of
diseases that could afflict everyone, rich and poor. As a result,
sanitation could not be neglected. Today, those who can afford
medicine, and also have clean water and sanitation, can generally avoid
some of these diseases. As these very people also make policies, the
problem seems less urgent as it does not impact their lives.
Susan E Chaplin, who did her doctoral thesis on “Cities, services and
the State: The Politics of Sanitation in India” from La Trobe
University, Australia, draws an interesting comparison between
sanitation in the post-Industrial Revolution England and Indian cities.
In an essay in the journal Environment and Urbanisation (April, 1999),
Chaplin points out that sanitary reform in Britain took off only in the
19th century when the spectre of disease haunted the entire population,
the rich and the poor.
Between 1880 and 1891, urban authorities in many cities in Britain
provided sewerage and clean water supply under the Sanitation Act of
1866. This step benefited all citizens, and not just the rich. In
contrast, in India, the middle class has monopolised those areas where
the British built sewers while the poor living in slums occupy
low-lying, unserviced areas. As a result, the class that could have
taken the initiative to press for sanitary reform remains indifferent
to it.
Additionally, in India sanitation also has a caste dimension. As long
as there are people available to clean up the dirt, we can pretend it
does not exist. In many smaller towns, even a rudimentary underground
sewer system does not exist and the disgusting practice of manual
scavenging continues. This is something that should shame all Indians.
The toilet story exposes the hollowness of the “India prospering,
shining India” imagery. More than the real numbers of India’s
poor, this illustrates the daily deprivation and lack of dignity that
marks the lives of millions of people in this country. We need to
urgently think of a Sanitation Act that makes it incumbent on local
authorities to address the issue of sanitation and restore dignity to
people’s lives.
The writer is an independent journalist and columnist based in Mumbai.
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