prasad1
Active member
This month last year, on the 145th anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi's birth, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi decided to launch a revolution.In five short years, he declared, the country would achieve what it has failed to in the 58 years since its independence: It would be clean.
By 2019, the Clean India Campaign aims to revolutionize solid waste management, eliminate open defecation and end manual scavenging, the practice of emptying out pits of raw human waste with the most basic of equipment.
“If Indians can reach Mars, can Indians not clean their streets?” asked Modi at the launch of the campaign.
Unfortunately, it just isn’t as simple as that.
More than half of India’s population do not have toilets in their homes, according to census data, leaving around 600 million people defecating in the open. Between 700,000 to 1.2 million people clean out pits of excreta manually across the country, often forced to take up the unsavory task because of their caste.
Sewage isn't the only problem. Delhi alone creates 9,000 metric tons of waste every day. Littering and spitting tobacco are common habits.
The Clean India project is expected to cost a whopping $40 billion, sourced from the central and state governments, relevant ministries and the private sector. The government has proposed to spend $20 billion on the construction of toilets alone, the funds for which will be released annually to each of the states. So far, 8 million toilets have been built.
Part of this expenditure is also aimed at changing behavior. Television advertisements and celebrity endorsements plug the project's message, from encouraging people to take civic pride in their surroundings to convincing them that open defecation is detrimental to health and hygiene.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/...ilets-later-india-isnt-much-cleaner/73436616/
By 2019, the Clean India Campaign aims to revolutionize solid waste management, eliminate open defecation and end manual scavenging, the practice of emptying out pits of raw human waste with the most basic of equipment.
“If Indians can reach Mars, can Indians not clean their streets?” asked Modi at the launch of the campaign.
Unfortunately, it just isn’t as simple as that.
More than half of India’s population do not have toilets in their homes, according to census data, leaving around 600 million people defecating in the open. Between 700,000 to 1.2 million people clean out pits of excreta manually across the country, often forced to take up the unsavory task because of their caste.
Sewage isn't the only problem. Delhi alone creates 9,000 metric tons of waste every day. Littering and spitting tobacco are common habits.
The Clean India project is expected to cost a whopping $40 billion, sourced from the central and state governments, relevant ministries and the private sector. The government has proposed to spend $20 billion on the construction of toilets alone, the funds for which will be released annually to each of the states. So far, 8 million toilets have been built.
Part of this expenditure is also aimed at changing behavior. Television advertisements and celebrity endorsements plug the project's message, from encouraging people to take civic pride in their surroundings to convincing them that open defecation is detrimental to health and hygiene.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/...ilets-later-india-isnt-much-cleaner/73436616/