
“Like 'Satyagraha' freed the country from colonialism, 'Swachhagraha' would free the country from dirt” – Prime Minister Narendra Modi
With the current National Democratic Alliance (NDA) regime in its third year in office, one of its most ambitious projects, the Swachh Bharat Mission, completes two full years in operation. The mission set the year 2019 as the deadline to completely eliminate open defecation from all parts of the country.
To achieve this lofty goal, building of sanitary latrines was seen as imperative. The government has been systematically encouraging panchayats and municipalities alike to speed up the construction of individual and community toilets through subsidy and targeted behaviour change interventions.
The mission was split into two components, rural and urban, managed by the Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation and the Ministry of Urban Development (MoUD) respectively. The MoUD envisioned the construction of 1.04 crore individual household toilets in urban centres, in addition to over five lakh community and public toilet seats across 4,041 statutory towns in the country.
The annual India Sanitation Conference (INDOSAN) held at the Vigyan Bhavan in Delhi ahead of this Gandhi Jayanti brought together government officials, researchers, non-governmental organisations and academicians working to improve sanitation and hygiene in the country. Organisations, district administrations and schools were felicitated for their exceptional performance in achieving the mission’s targets.
Gujarat’s 900-year old Solanki stepwell,
Sikkim’s capital
The cities of
Solid waste co-operative
Maharashtra’s
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Despite the positive picture painted by the government at high-profile celebrations and prominent jubilees, the overall status of sanitation in India continues to be disquieting. A recently released report on the functioning of the Swachh Bharat Mission by Down to Earth (Hindi) magazine has revealed that the target of ‘a toilet in every house’ may not be a reality by 2019. The analysis indicates that the overall progress has been rather slow. For example, in the prime minister’s constituency of Varanasi, less than 8,000 toilets were constructed in the last two years against the set target of over two lakh units.
Similar shortfalls have been observed in other cities as well. Just 5,332 new toilets were constructed in Lucknow out of the overall target of building 1,86,177 latrines by 2019. At this rate, the analysis records that the dream of a Swachh Bharat can be realised only decades later and nowhere in the immediate future.
Lead image courtesy: Swachh Bharat