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India's shameful load of Sht

On the same day that the Economist magazine's Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) predicted that the Indian economy would overtake that of China by 2018, and on the same day that the Lok Sabha witnessed a furore over Mayawati's Rs 5 crore garland made of 1,000-rupee notes, the TOI reported that of the one billion people all over the world who daily have to defecate in public because of lack of the most basic sanitary facilities, 58 per cent are Indians. Some 638 million of our fellow citizens – who according to the Constitution have the same rights as you and I do, including the right to vote, if they are of age – have no access to even the most rudimentary of lavatories and have no choice but to relieve themselves in full sight of others. Of these 69 per cent live in rural areas while 18 per cent are in cities and towns.

Apart from anything else, the scandalous state of affairs poses an extremely serious health hazard; human excreta is one of the most virulent spreaders of disease. The brutal necessity of having to perform in public what should be a private act can also be psychologically humiliating.



Commuters from Mumbai's suburbs, and in other parts of the country, routinely see hundreds of people squatting besides the train tracks to relieve themselves. Many of them are women, who often cover their heads with their saris, thus making themselves 'invisible' to onlookers through the inverse logic that if I can't see you (because my head and eyes are covered) you can't see me. Such 'invisible' women are India's open and only too visible shame.



The humiliation and degradation does not – and ought not to – attach to those who perforce must do what they have to do without the dignity of privacy. The shame is ours that over 60 years after independence from foreign rule we continue to be a society in which more than half the total population has no recourse but to relieve themselves in the open, like animals.



Instead of spending hundreds of crores on putting up statues of Ambedkar, Kanshi Ram and herself, and instead of accepting Rs 5-crore 'garland' from her worshippers – followers is too mild a word for such fawning adulation – Mayawati would do well to launch a project to provide clean and hygienic communal toilets in villages, towns and cities of UP. This is of particular social relevance in that the BSP's core constituency remain the Dalits, who were the age-old 'night-soil' carriers stigmatised by the upper castes.



Mayawati aside, political parties across the board should take up the challenge that Mother India is spared the daily dishonour of making public her private biological functions.



Indeed, Bindeshwar Pathak, who in 1974 launched the Sulabh Movement to provide inexpensive sulabh shauchalyas across the country would be the right person to spearhead such a project. Pathak pour-flush toilets can be installed for as little as 2,000 rupees. At the last count, more than a million of such toilets for homes and institutions had been installed in India. Millions more need to be made operative, and urgently.



Till we can draw a veil of privacy and dignity across the sight of Bharat Mata squatting to do her business, India will continue to broadcast a literally crap image of itself to the world and to ourselves, despite all the credit we lay claim to for our social and economic progress.


In the end it adds up, precisely, to a load of .

India's shameful load of : India : Jug Suraiya : TOI Blogs

we must ask our goverment to let us have the freedom to sht on the street just like rich world superpower india
 
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India's shameful load of

On the same day that the Economist magazine's Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) predicted that the Indian economy would overtake that of China by 2018, and on the same day that the Lok Sabha witnessed a furore over Mayawati's Rs 5 crore garland made of 1,000-rupee notes, the TOI reported that of the one billion people all over the world who daily have to defecate in public because of lack of the most basic sanitary facilities, 58 per cent are Indians. Some 638 million of our fellow citizens – who according to the Constitution have the same rights as you and I do, including the right to vote, if they are of age – have no access to even the most rudimentary of lavatories and have no choice but to relieve themselves in full sight of others. Of these 69 per cent live in rural areas while 18 per cent are in cities and towns.

Apart from anything else, the scandalous state of affairs poses an extremely serious health hazard; human excreta is one of the most virulent spreaders of disease. The brutal necessity of having to perform in public what should be a private act can also be psychologically humiliating.



Commuters from Mumbai's suburbs, and in other parts of the country, routinely see hundreds of people squatting besides the train tracks to relieve themselves. Many of them are women, who often cover their heads with their saris, thus making themselves 'invisible' to onlookers through the inverse logic that if I can't see you (because my head and eyes are covered) you can't see me. Such 'invisible' women are India's open and only too visible shame.



The humiliation and degradation does not – and ought not to – attach to those who perforce must do what they have to do without the dignity of privacy. The shame is ours that over 60 years after independence from foreign rule we continue to be a society in which more than half the total population has no recourse but to relieve themselves in the open, like animals.



Instead of spending hundreds of crores on putting up statues of Ambedkar, Kanshi Ram and herself, and instead of accepting Rs 5-crore 'garland' from her worshippers – followers is too mild a word for such fawning adulation – Mayawati would do well to launch a project to provide clean and hygienic communal toilets in villages, towns and cities of UP. This is of particular social relevance in that the BSP's core constituency remain the Dalits, who were the age-old 'night-soil' carriers stigmatised by the upper castes.



Mayawati aside, political parties across the board should take up the challenge that Mother India is spared the daily dishonour of making public her private biological functions.



Indeed, Bindeshwar Pathak, who in 1974 launched the Sulabh Movement to provide inexpensive sulabh shauchalyas across the country would be the right person to spearhead such a project. Pathak pour-flush toilets can be installed for as little as 2,000 rupees. At the last count, more than a million of such toilets for homes and institutions had been installed in India. Millions more need to be made operative, and urgently.



Till we can draw a veil of privacy and dignity across the sight of Bharat Mata squatting to do her business, India will continue to broadcast a literally crap image of itself to the world and to ourselves, despite all the credit we lay claim to for our social and economic progress.


In the end it adds up, precisely, to a load of .

India's shameful load of : India : Jug Suraiya : TOI Blogs

we must ask our goverment to let us have the freedom to on the street just like rich world superpower india

Ah, the joys of a free press.
 
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