Hindustan Times (Delhi)

No deaths of manual scavengers reported in last 5 yrs: Govt in RS

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The government told Parliament that no deaths of manual scavengers were reported across the country in the last five years, adding that authoritie­s had extended support under central schemes for rehabilita­tion of manual scavengers after the practice was banned in 2013.

The statement by Union social justice minister of state Ramdas Athawale came in the Rajya Sabha on Wednesday to a question by Congress MPS Mallikarju­n Kharge and L Hanumantha­iah.

“No such deaths have been reported due to manual scavenging,” said Athawale in a written statement, responding to a question about the number of manual scavengers who died in the last five years.

The government distinguis­hes between manual scavenging – a caste-based practice of people cleaning human excreta by hand – and the practice of cleaning sewers and septic tanks though experts point out that the latter is a mere extension of the now-banned practice.

While responding to a similar question in the Lok Sabha last year, Athawale had drawn a distinctio­n between the two practices.

He had said that no deaths were reported due to manual scavenging but added that 282 deaths of safai karmachari­s were reported between 2016 and 2019.

In February this year, Athawale told the Lok Sabha that 340 people had died while cleaning sewers or septic tanks in the last five years.

In recent years, news reports have pointed to several such deaths of people while cleaning septic tanks and sewers. Most of them were Dalits.

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