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Even if you build a toilet, they may not come: water expert By Magda Mis

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prasad1

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Bangladesh and India have long tried to stop people from defecating in outdoor public places – a practice that spreads fatal diseases – but Bangladesh has had much more success than the economic giant next door in getting people to use toilets.


The percentage of Bangladeshis defecating in the open dropped from 19 percent in 2000 to just 3 percent in 2012, while nearly half the India’s 1.2 billion people still resort to streets and fields as their toilet of choice.
So how did Bangladesh do it, and why India is still struggling?
The key, according to World Bank water expert Junaid Ahmad, is shame.


Several years ago, NGOs fanned out across Bangladesh and asked villagers to mark the outdoor public places where they were relieving themselves. They then mapped it out, showing the villagers that they were defecating right next to their homes and mosques – putting their families and neighbors at risk of serious illnesses such as cholera, diarrhea, dysentery, hepatitis A and typhoid. This mapping exercise stirred a collective sense of shame - and a seismic shift in habits.


“What Bangladesh realized very early on was that sanitation is about delivering an infrastructure and about creating behavior change… You have to first recognize that it’s a behavior shift that’s needed before you put in the infrastructure,” Ahmad, the senior director of global water practice at the World Bank, told Thomson Reuters Foundation on the sidelines of a global water conference in Stockholm.


“Health message is not enough to trigger people’s shift. You have to understand the behavior, what triggers that change.”


By contrast in India, toilets were offered for free in a hope that people would simply start using them, but instead, people used the latrines for additional storage, Mr. Ramesh then a minister complained in parliament. “In economics there are not too many goods in which if you put the price at zero the demand still doesn’t move. Sanitation is one of these goods. Even if you build toilets and hand it to people they don’t use it,” he said. In 2013, India’s then-prime minister candidate Narendra Modi vowed to “first have toilets and then temples.” Seven months later, two teenage girls were hanged from a tree when they went to relieve themselves in a field in Uttar Pradesh.
Inadequate sanitation costs India an estimated $54 billion a year.
http://news.yahoo.com/even-build-toilet-may-not-come-water-expert-150350939.html
 
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sometimes well meaning initiatives are not appreciated . in delhi university hostel, one of college converted the toilets to western type commode with fancy fittings for water flow .
students [both boys and girls] aged around 20 plus were very uncomfortable and could not readily bring themselves to use them .

similarly , when I was in the hostel in one of the top colleges in india , some were using bath room walls instead of toilet pots for relieving themselves . all were basic

degree holders

even in delhi , on main roads men using walls is a common sight
 
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