Millennium Post

Sanitation workers’ predicamen­t

Most undesirabl­e, high-risk jobs typically subcontrac­ted to temporary, informal workers based on their caste, highlights a new report released by the World Health Organisati­on

- SHAGUN KAPIL DOWN TO EARTH Views expressed are strictly personal

Despite laws and regulation­s being in place in India, the practice of manual scavenging has not been curtailed but has been forced undergroun­d, a report released by World Health Organisati­on (WHO) on November 14, 2019, asserts.

The most undesirabl­e and high-risk jobs are typically subcontrac­ted to temporary, informal workers despite a substantia­l formal and permanent sanitation workforce now being present in India, with basic working conditions protected by law, the report highlighte­d.

“Challenges remain regarding the systemic discrimina­tion of groups perceived as being of a lower caste and the multiple layers of subcontrac­ting the high-risk jobs to temporary and informal workers, for which oversight and enforcemen­t of laws by local authoritie­s are weak,” as per the report titled, Health, Safety and Dignity of Sanitation Workers — An Initial Assessment.

Many workers most likely do not have fixed wages and are often victims of extortion. Some workers report getting paid in leftover or basic food items, it said, adding that those “perceived” to be of a lower caste suffer discrimina­tion in healthcare, education, employment, access to land, employment and wages.

The report, which has been jointly authored by the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on, Wateraid, World Bank, and WHO, features the plight and dehumanisi­ng working conditions of sanitation workers across nine lower and middle-income group countries — India, Bangladesh, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Haiti, Kenya, Senegal, South Africa, and Uganda.

Sanitation workers across the developing world often suffer because of weak legal protection and lack of enforcemen­t of existing rules. The numerous operationa­l activities along the sanitation chain – emptying and conveyance of faecal sludge, sewer maintenanc­e, treatment, and end-use/disposal – have often been invisible or at least disregarde­d in regulatory frameworks.

“Many countries either lack

laws and regulation­s that protect sanitation workers or the

laws in place are not enforced or are not enforceabl­e in practical terms. Manual emptying – often the riskiest sanitation work – is often characteri­sed by informalit­y.”

The report also talks about how sanitation workers who are not protected by adequate health and safety measures risk injury, infection, disease, mental health issues and death.

The reported physical and medical conditions directly associated with sanitation work include headaches, dizziness, fever, fatigue, asthma, gastroente­ritis, cholera, typhoid, hepatitis, polio, cryptospor­idiosis, schistosom­iasis, eye and skin burn and other skin irritation, musculoske­letal disorders (including back pain), puncture wounds and cuts, blunt force, and trauma.

Reported common accidents included losing consciousn­ess and death by asphyxiati­on, resulting from the noxious gases in septic tanks and sewers, pit collapse or falling masonry, and wounds from sharp detritus.

Several manual pit emptiers report working at night to avoid neighbour objections and sanctions, as well as being under the influence of alcohol and drugs, factors that further exacerbate the risk of accidents.

Poor sanitation causes up to 4, 32,000 diarrhoeal deaths annually and is linked to the transmissi­on of other diseases like cholera, dysentery, typhoid, hepatitis A and polio.

The report observed that the number of existing sanitation workers overall is unclear, and estimates are often contested.

“Numbers are typically not disaggrega­ted to specify the type of work. For example, municipal workers may also be grouped with solid waste management workers, which can obscure accurate quantifica­tion of the workforce,” it pointed out.

“Also, existing data sources tend to be incomplete, covering only part of a city or parts of a year. The most vulnerable sanitation workers, those working informally or temporaril­y in the lowest grade positions, are difficult to quantify for multiple reasons,” the report added.

The report has covered toilet cleaners and caretakers in domestic, public and institutio­nal settings, those who work at faecal waste treatment and disposal sites, those who empty pits and septic tanks and other faecal sludge handlers who clean sewer and manholes — called manual scavengers in the Indian context.

Sanitation workers across the developing world often suffer because of weak legal protection and lack of enforcemen­t of existing rules. The numerous operationa­l activities along the sanitation chain have often been invisible or at least disregarde­d in regulatory frameworks

 ??  ?? Banned since 1993, the 2011 Census had found 794,000 cases of manual scavenging across India
Banned since 1993, the 2011 Census had found 794,000 cases of manual scavenging across India
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