Bangkok Post

TOILET TRAINING

Bhutan’s public health push

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In the past three years, Passang Tshering and his team of over 1,000 volunteers have cleaned up more than 60 public toilets and built temporary bathrooms at a dozen events in Bhutan.

Passang decided to take matters into his own hands after spotting a huge gap in sanitation provision in the Himalayan kingdom, launching the Bhutan Toilet Organizati­on in 2014.

“Everybody seemed to complain about toilets everywhere, but there was no governing body to listen and find solutions,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The goal of Passang and his young team is to rid the country of the practice of open defecation. “It is not even seen as a problem,” said the former computer teacher.

Traditiona­lly, Bhutanese families built toilets on the first floor of their dwellings, with a pigsty underneath so that the human waste could serve as fodder. People would use leaves, sticks and stones to clean up after themselves, while flushing was rare due to a lack of piped water.

Modern toilets have now become popular in cities and towns. But with the majority of Bhutanese people still living in remote hamlets, poor sanitation remains a major issue.

Reports of typhoid from water contaminat­ion are common during the monsoon from May through September. According to health ministry records, nearly 20,000 children under five are treated for diarrhoeal disease annually.

Other health problems exacerbate­d by a lack of sanitation and hygiene include skin infections, conjunctiv­itis, dengue and malaria.

However, in the past few years, deaths linked to diarrhoeal disease in young children have dropped significan­tly.

Bhutan managed to achieve a global goal to reduce the mortality rate of under-fives by two thirds between 1990 and 2015, partly thanks to improvemen­ts in drinking water and sanitation.

Still, experts say more progress is needed on raising public awareness and providing clean drinking water, reliable water supplies and proper sanitation facilities. The government is working with UN agencies and internatio­nal aid groups to educate villagers in how to maintain better health and hygiene.

Meanwhile, motivated individual­s like Passang are changing mindsets too. Since launching a “Clean Toilets for All” campaign online in November 2014, he has created a vibrant community of sanitation activists, including student volunteers and civil servants.

The group plans to build toilet facilities along highways and upgrade existing public toilets, ensuring they are friendly to women and people with disabiliti­es. They also set up portable toilets at public events, and are lobbying for mandatory toilets in parks, low-income housing estates, constructi­on sites, garages and bus stops.

“We used to openly defecate when I visited my village,” recalled 15-year-old Tandin Zam, who is glad a toilet has now been built at her family home in Paro, 70 kilometres from the capital Thimphu where she lives.

Infectious diseases linked to water and sanitation account for almost 30% of health problems in remote areas. That is why the health ministry is backing a nationwide campaign to build toilets in every locality.

The proportion of Bhutan’s population with access to improved sanitation now stands at 70%, up from 58% in 2010.

“My clean modern toilet is the best thing that has happened in my lifetime,” said 72-year-old Jigme Choden of Thorshong Gonpa village in Mongar, one of Bhutan’s fastest-developing districts.

Communitie­s are supposed to maintain their own facilities, but illiteracy, the mountainou­s terrain and lack of water connectivi­ty have often led to improper usage.

Jack Sim, founder of the World Toilet Organizati­on who visited Bhutan four years ago, said schools in the country lacked adequate lavatories.

“The teachers had nice toilets but the facilities for the students were in a bad condition,” he said. “Bhutan needs to promote improvemen­t in design of toilets and training for cleaners.”

The government should also work with t he private sector to install toilets at tourist sites, he added.

The kingdom has a number of important festivals where locals and foreigners flock to ancient fortresses and monasterie­s — and the shortage of toilets at these sites has always been a concern.

Where there are toilets, they do not have enough staff to keep them clean, said Passang. But when bathrooms are modern and in good condition, people show more respect, he added.

“They contribute their share by flushing, and ensuring their footprints are not left behind on the tiles,” he said. “To make a complete change in the toilet habits of our people, we must give them great toilets.”

His organisati­on plans to train cleaners and assign people to man public toilets. It has set up “Toilet Clubs” in 10 colleges to manage sanitation facilities, while universiti­es have decided to observe Oct 8 as University Toilet Day each year.

“To make a complete change in the toilet habits of our people, we must give them great toilets” PASSANG TSHERING Volunteer

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 ??  ?? ABOVE Bhutan Toilet Organizati­on volunteers prepare to clean a public toilet.
ABOVE Bhutan Toilet Organizati­on volunteers prepare to clean a public toilet.
 ??  ?? LEFT Volunteers clean a public toilet along the Thimphu-Pling highway in Bhutan.
LEFT Volunteers clean a public toilet along the Thimphu-Pling highway in Bhutan.
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