Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Search for clean water a major concern

Indian citizens worried about spread of virus

- By Sheikh Saaliq

NEW DELHI — Dharam Singh Rajput can’t afford to buy hand sanitizer, which could help ward off transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s in his community.

The Rajput family could opt for something more basic — soap and water — to achieve hand hygiene. But sometimes there is no clean running water in their neighborho­od, which sits next to open sewage canals and mounds of garbage in the heart of New Delhi, India’s capital. “The kind of water we have access to has the potential to cause more diseases instead of warding off the virus if we use it to wash our hands,” Rajput said.

Experts say keeping hands clean is one of the easiest and best ways to prevent transmissi­on of the new coronaviru­s, in addition to social distancing. But for India’s homeless and urban poor who live in thousands of slums across major cities and towns, maintainin­g good hygiene can be nearly impossible.

About 160 million — more than the population of Russia — of India’s 1.3 billion people don’t have access to clean water.

That could leave impoverish­ed Indians like Rajput and his family at risk during the virus outbreak.

“It could prove disastrous for people who don’t have access to clean water,” said Samrat Basak, the director of the World Resource Institute’s Urban Water Program in India.

With India being the world’s second-most populous country, and having weak health care facilities and growing concerns that there may be an undetected communal spread of the virus, the risks associated with the lack of clean water aren’t being overstated.

UNICEF said last week that almost 20% of urban Indians do not have facilities with water and soap at home. What could make things worse, experts say, is that social distancing is nearly impossible in many Indian cities that are among the world’s most densely populated areas.

While the coronaviru­s can be deadly, particular­ly for the elderly and people with other health problems, for most people it causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. Some feel no symptoms at all and the vast majority of people recover.

India’s government has made fervent appeals to the public to practice social distancing and good hand hygiene. India also was one of the first countries to essentiall­y shut its borders and deny entry to all but a select few foreigners. But in a country as big as India, community transmissi­on is all but inevitable, experts say.

“Clean water is the first line of defense,” said V.K. Madhavan, India chief executive at WaterAid, a global advocacy group for water and sanitation. “If there is no access to clean water, the situation could worsen.”

About 600 million Indians face acute water shortages, according to government think tank NITI Aayog.

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