Living in the Now | Mrinal Chatterjee |21.7.23
Tale of the Toilet
India presently has over 1.2
billion mobile phone users and 600 million smart phone users. It also has the largest number of
people defecating in the open in the world. As per a Unicef report, close to 594 million which
is 48 percent of population in India practices open defecation. Meaning
every second person in the country defecates in the open, and there are three
mobile phones for every four Indians. That precisely means there are hundreds
of thousands of people who own a mobile phone but defecate in the open. With 44
per cent mothers disposing their children’s faeces in the open, there is a very
high risk of microbial contamination of water, which causes diarrhoea in
children.
Although
access to sanitation in rural India is improving, thanks to growing awareness
and different Govt. schemes, the increase is not equitable. Open defecation is
still almost universal among the poorest 20 per cent of the population.
Now
it is not only the question of money. Look at the use of mobile phones, or even
television sets. It is actually the question of perceived utility. One thinks
it is important and useful for him/her to own a mobile handset and use it
rather than have a toilet and use it. This ‘use’ part warrants more attention.
Often
toilets are there but they are not used. For various reasons. It teaches us a lesson: it is not enough to
create the facility; care has to be taken to ensure that the facility is
actually used for the purpose for which it has been created. There is no point
in pouring in subsidy to build toilets which are used as store rooms or even an
extra living room.
Using
toilet is a habit. It also requires peer and societal pressure. The sooner we
help put that pressure- the better.
Sanitation
is not just about having toilets. It is an issue that also concerns drinking
water and health. Consider this: everyday people defecating in the open leave
behind 1 lakh tones of excreta. This pollutes water sources leading to
diseases. Unfortunately sanitation
campaign has been reduced to a toilet construction drive, which ultimately
fails to serve its main purpose.
Nobody
forced people to use mobile phones. It happened because people found it to be
useful. Peer pressure was also a factor. Let us hope by aggressively
highlighting the positive and utilitarian aspect of having and using toilet
does the same.
***
This weekly column is published every Friday in Odisha.Plus.
https://www.odisha.plus/2023/07/tale-of-the-toilet/
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