Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Chained mugs will continue to adorn upgraded train toilets

- Faizan Haidar faizan.haider@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEW DELHI: The Railways has undertaken a mammoth drive to upgrade lavatories on trains, including ‘health faucets’ and the installati­on of over 200,000 bio toilets, but an age-old edifice — a metal mug secured with a chain to prevent theft — is set to remain, according to officials familiar with the matter.

Toilet mugs are among the items frequently stolen from trains, according to official data. They were among moveable property worth ₹2.97crore that the Railway Protection Force recovered in 2017-18 — far ahead of other frequently stolen items, including ceiling fans, bed linen, blankets, shower heads and iron grilles.

“The upgradatio­n of toilets on trains is one of our focus areas. Though we are installing health faucets in every toilet... they (may) get stolen. So chained mugs will be there as a backup option. Even if some theft takes place, we will replace them. It will only increase the cost of maintenanc­e a little bit,” said the official cited above on the condition of anonymity. The Railways is gearing up to install 80,000 bio toilets in 2018-19 as the last phase of its lavatory upgradatio­n drive.

About 125,000 bio-toilets have already been installed on trains until March 2018, according to informatio­n given by the government in Parliament on in April. The entire process had started in January 2011 when 57 bio toilets were fitted on Gwalior-Varanasi Bundelkhan­d Express.

“Till, March we have covered 34,500 of the 55,000 coaches with bio toilets. About 80,000 bio toilets will be installed this year to finish the project,” the official said. The railways had installed 15,000 biotoilets in 2015-16, 34,000 in 2016-17 and 56,000 in 2017-18, he said.

A bio-toilet decomposes human waste using bacteria and converts it into methane and water while health faucets are hand-held devices designed to save water. The faucets have triggered nozzles like a hand shower for cleaning after toilet use.

“We have facilities for bio-toilet maintenanc­e at every depot. If people use them correctly, they will not require regular maintenanc­e. For this, we will have an informatio­n guide in every coach,” the officer said.

The Indian railway is now operating 27 sections as part of green corridors under which all trains are equipped with bio-toilets. There is no direct discharge of human waste from these trains running in the corridor.

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