Las Vegas Review-Journal

India’s goal: become flush with toilets

Government campaign designed to bring answering nature’s call indoors, but many reject idea

- By RAMA LAKSHMI The WashingTon PosT

MUKHRAI, India — Rameshwar Natholi received an unexpected gift from the government recently when workers descended on his modest home in this rural village in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh and built a brand new toilet in his front yard.

Natholi, a farmworker, said he never wanted one. Most people in his village have been relieving themselves in the open fields for years.

But as part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “Clean India” campaign to provide new sanitary toilets to more than 60 million homes by 2019, Mukhrai has been in the midst of a toilet-building boom since April.

More than 53 percent of all Indian homes — about 70 percent in the villages — lack a toilet. Poor sanitation and infected water cause 80 percent of morbidity afflicting rural India, and diarrhea is a leading killer of children younger than 5, Unicef says.

Modi says this is a shame for a country that has global aspiration­s and that it is demeaning to women.

But constructi­ng toilets is the easy part. Getting people to use them is the real challenge, officials say.

“We never asked for a toilet. Now we are stuck with it,” said Natholi, 22, as he opened the newly built squat toilet to show that it has not been used. His 62-year-old father peered and shook his head. “Having a toilet so close to the house is not a good idea. The pit is too small; it will fill up quickly. I don’t want the bother of cleaning it up frequently. Going out to the open field is healthier. The open breeze outside is better than sitting inside this tiny room.”

Modi has made toilet-building and sanitation a rallying cry since October. He has enlisted large companies to help. In the past year, his government has built more than 5.8 million toilets — up from 4.9 million the previous year. But reports show that many of them are unused, or they are being used to store grain, clothes or to tether goats, thwarting Modi’s toilet revolution.

“Even as we accelerate toilet constructi­on now, much more needs to be done to persuade people to use them,” said Chaudhary Birender Singh, India’s minister for rural developmen­t, sanitation and drinking water. “For long, we assumed that if the toilets are built, people will automatica­lly use it. But we have to diligently monitor the use over a period of time and reward them with cash incentives to the village councils at every stage. Only then will it become a daily habit.”

The government budget for raising awareness largely remained unspent for years. Thousands of villages were declared to have ended open defecation since 2006, but many have since returned to the practice.

Critics also say that the government’s great toilet race has turned into a vortex of corruption in which villagers and middlemen siphon money by creating fake ledger entries about toilet constructi­on.

After years of promoting toilet use by advocating the health benefits, many re- gions of India began using women as toilet ambassador­s. Brides were urged to shun grooms whose villages did not have toilets. Now the campaign has begun to promote toilets as key to women’s security.

Numerous television ads and signs on village walls ask families to forbid their daughters and daughters-in-law from defecating in the open.

But an unintended consequenc­e of this campaign has been the perception that toilets are just for women. “Men can go out to the open fields, but for women who wear veils all day a toilet in the home is a good idea,” said Sarvesh Sharma, 28, speaking with her face covered in Mukhrai, in front of her half-built toilet.

In the southern state of Karnataka, a film about responsibl­e fathers of adolescent daughters was used to get men to construct toilets in their villages.

“Whether you like it or not, it’s the men who make the decisions. And sanitation is just not a priority for the men. So we had to convey a message about toilets that enhances their manliness,” said Jayamala Subramania­m, chief executive of Arghyam, a group in Bangalore that works on sanitation and water projects.

 ?? RAMA LAKSHMI/ The WashingTon PosT ?? Despite an initiative to provide toilets to more than 60 million homes in India, farmer Rameshwar Natholi, center, doesn’t want one.
RAMA LAKSHMI/ The WashingTon PosT Despite an initiative to provide toilets to more than 60 million homes in India, farmer Rameshwar Natholi, center, doesn’t want one.

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