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Activity:  8 comments  157 views  last activity : 07 22 2011 11:33:19 +0000
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About 2.5 billion people in the world have no access to safe sanitation, and half of South Asia suffers the indignity of open defecation. This lack of hygienic facilities is a fundamental cause of disease leading to 1.5 million children dying every year as per UN figures.

 

You can read, download and share the complete article here:http://shiningconsulting.com/wp/2009/chinks-in-hygiene-and-civic-responsibility/

Can India’s 2020 promise to become a developed country free from poverty be fulfilled without improving our hygiene and civic responsibility?

Hygiene: Landing in Amritsar international airport a month ago I felt really proud that India’s B class towns are becoming so advanced. High rise roof in modern glass and metal architecture; even the new baggage belt looked better than the latest German engineering. This thrill was knocked out by the foul smelling toilet with insects running around.

On a routine market observation visit, a newly built public toilet in Delhi’s Malviya Nagar looked good from the closed car window. But on stepping out, its sharp stink immobilized me. On its left a permanent store was selling fresh flowers. I wonder how people differentiate floral fragrance from the toilet’s ammonia or faeces smell.

Most spectacular is Mumbai’s Rolls Royce showroom, just 500 meters from Worli Gutter, a putrid garbage drain that joins the sea. Just imagine this ambience when buying the world’s most expensive and sophisticated car. New Delhi’s up-market South Extension displays the latest Japanese, Korean electronic products in neon lit splendour, but their toilet on the floor above is ugly, dirty and reeks. The purpose of a high flying lifestyle escapes me when the fundamentals of better living are far from being in place.

Civic responsibility: When people sweep their own premises, it may not occur to them that they are gifting dirt to their neighbours. This aptly reflects our complete lack of civic responsibility as a people.

Incidentally, India has developed an excellent hygienic habit in the jet washer in modern public WCs. This is undoubtedly superior to Western toilet paper that keeps the body unclean all day. Until you see water spots in the toilet seat, you never know if its water from the jet washer or a human body. The question is, how do you educate people?

I remember when I left for Europe in 1973, the toilet cleaning I was accustomed to in my refugee colony was specified people carrying away drums of human excreta on their heads every day. I feel ashamed that this disgraceful profession still exists in India. Later at Kolkata’s art college I learnt of the Indian style sanitary toilet. But it was in the plane to Europe that I first saw an English style commode. In the student’s hostel in Paris we used a common toilet. A Greek friend was one day knocking the bathroom door, but I didn’t reply. So he climbed over the open top and found me with my feet on the toilet seat Indian traditional style. I didn’t even know that I had to put the seat cover down and sit on it as in a chair. It took me nearly 6 months to literally learn and get used to this Western toilet culture.

Men’s habit of relieving themselves anywhere, with no shame that women are walking by, is total disregard of civic responsibility. Women need a bio-break too, but you never see them using the roadside; so men’s being insensate is quite unpardonable. While working for a supply chain logistics company on how frontline staff should be customer sensitive with their packet delivery system, one of our researchers followed a competition delivery van of a globally reputed company with a camera. The van stopped outside a customer’s gate, the man got off, first relieved himself on the customer’s wall, and then went in with the package!

In every urban corner you’ll generally find overflowing, odorous dustbins. Before India joined WTO, our public dustbins mostly had Indian products; now they also have beautifully designed, non-bio-degradable plastic wrappers from famous multinational brands. A few responsible Bangalore citizens took the initiative to collect garbage from homes for bulk disposal in large black plastic bags. The other day I happened to drive through greenery in Mutkur village off Varthur lake, and suddenly saw mounds of black plastic bags dumped alongside the village walkway. Vultures and poor children were rummaging through the garbage, breaking the bags to find some surprise.

But this situation was not always so. The earliest recorded covered sewers are in the Indus Valley Civilization cities. In 2500 BC, the people of Harappa in India had water borne toilets in each house linked with drains covered with burnt clay bricks. They considered sanitation an important public health measure essential for disease prevention.

Today’s lack of hygiene and civic responsibility is damaging the aspirational value of all business. Whether an industry is in manufacturing or service, the real delivery to customer hands is from the shopfloor or frontline people. Did anyone check the difference between the factory workers’ toilet and the corporate office one?

The factor differentiating organised retail from wholesale, mom&pop or commodity markets is housekeeping. But housekeeping is totally alien to those hired to maintain cleanliness, so the retail soon looks dishevelled. Inside an American fast food outlet in Delhi’s Greater Kailash, the dustbin was being cleaned next to people enjoying their chicken. You may mistake the car park behind the market as a garbage storeyard, but it’s a question mark that even globally renowned companies mushrooming in India make no move to clean up the environment. Perhaps as part of 2020 development, the government should create a separate Ministry for hygiene and civic responsibility to take serious action together with MNC and Indian companies.

Hygiene derives from Hygieia, the Greek goddess for good health preservation and disease prevention. Let’s take her blessings to modernise India, teach people basic hygiene as an initiative in civic responsibility which betters everyone’s body and mind for work and enjoyment.

 

 
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8 comments on "Chinks in hygiene and civic responsibility"
  Commented by  SHRIKANT MANOHAR DANKE, Project Manager, Phadnis Infrastructur Ltd    | 07 22 2011 11:33:19 +0000
Very keen observation & deep study, Ms. Chitra. Thanks for sharing it on Toostep.
& Thanks for referral.
  Commented by  Jaygopal Raghavan, Marketing Manager, Landmark Group    | 07 03 2011 17:16:35 +0000
Well said ! Until each one of us realise that hygiene starts with ourselves, our country can never be clean. And until parents teach this frist to their kids at home they will never go on to be responsible citizens.
  Commented by  Venkatraman, Sales Executive/Officer, Magnum Enterprises    | 07 03 2011 08:54:37 +0000
In India, people are happy if they get Re.1/- rice, free color t.v and such other frills.
Like wise, there are ample spaces available to pee and piss free of cost!!!! So how do you expect people to have the basic sense of hygiene and civic responsibility. As a person who has traveled to quite a few foreign destinations, I have often wondered on the priorities the civic corporations attach unlike in India.In fact, I have cursed the ways our governments spend on needless expenditures and the subsequent scams involved in almost everything the civic bodies do.
Unless, there is a deeper civic responsibility by all concerned besides lot tighter laws to implement them, I fear we will near achieve our dream of a clean surrounding in our neighbourhood.
  Commented by  Rathin Deb, Freelance Retail Consultant    | 06 30 2011 06:02:47 +0000
Since this hygiene existed during Harrapa period I think in India it will be possible by 2025.

During my some village trip I found though a latrine has been constructed by the govt. but the user still use fields and they will probably continue to do so but by 2025 not every body will use toilet in India that is for sure. It may still take some another 30 or 40 years before the habit changes. 
  Commented by  Ravindra Sharma, Managing Consultant, CHEF-India    | 06 30 2011 05:39:36 +0000
Chitra, 
The subject you are touching is huge and needs thorough studies on every aspect. India with over 805 of its population living in villages at attaining freedom was required to adopt necessary changes from forced rules and adopted systems. Availability of abundant sunshine meant, we do not need to carry our waste to huge distances and could develop our own models. Thoughtless planning and copy pasting western techniques has led to a situation that leads nowhere and the governance remaining in denial even problem identification is mirage let alone approaching solutions with open mind. Villages getting converted into urban nightmare are a case to point. Lack of reason or missing Why? in education leaves the student clueless even after claiming to have learnt a subject this obviously means utilisation of learning can never happen.
  Commented by  Santosh Kumar Mohanty, Civil Engineer-Municipal, Sambalpur University    | 06 29 2011 14:06:29 +0000
How we left every thing at Harappa and Mahenjadaro.We really need a separate ministry to deal with this.
  Commented by  Munshi Ramchand, Chief Muni/CMD/CEO, Agastya Muni Inc    | 06 29 2011 11:48:09 +0000
Good article. We have plenty of time and money for a hindu vs muslim fight, for Babas to conduct "non sense" asanas etc etc but no time or money to fix the basic sanitation needs of this country....Shame!.
  Commented by  S. Muralidharan, Head, Project Planning/Strategy, Knowledge Foundation    | 06 29 2011 10:15:57 +0000
Thanks Ms. Chitra for sharing this piece written by Mr. Shombit, albeit written in 2009.  Between 2009 and 2011, apparently things have gone from bad to worst! You would be amazed to read this : “Dry latrines exist in four states, Bihar, Jammu and Kashmir, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand,” Minister of Social Justice and Empowerment Mukul Wasnik informed the Lok Sabha. The Employment of Manual Scavengers and Construction of Dry Latrines (Prohibtion) Act, 1993 prohibits manual scavenging. According to law, no person should be engaged in manual scavenging or construct or maintain dry latrines.
So far the act has been adopted by 23 states and all union territories. Manipur and Mizoram have reported they have no dry latrines or are scavenger-free. Himachal Pradesh and Rajasthan have their own acts, and Jammu and Kashmir is yet to adopt the act,” Wasnik said." 
You may also like to know that there was a startling revelation about our apathy by an UN study, that made a very stunning remark: "India has more money to expend on luxuries than on essential requirements of life. A recent UN study has recognized that many people in India, world’s second most populous country, have more access to a mobile telephone than to a toilet. The study showed that, India has nearly 545 million cellphones, which are very much sufficient to serve about 45 percent of the population, whereas only around 366 million people or 31 percent of the population had access to better sanitation in 2008. If current global trends prolong, the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) supposes that there will be a shortage of relatively 1 billion persons from the sanitation goal by the target date of 2015."

Dr Bindeshwar Pathak, founder of Sulabh International, a social service organisation that aims to make affordable toilets available to all, said that it is fact that India which has a population of nearly one billion needs more number of toilets. He also said that main reason behind the problem is Indian’s cultural background. He explained that, traditionally, Indians were told to have toilet distant from the house. According to a study conducted in 2001, 15 percent houses in urban areas had a provision of ‘flush latrine’, while 85 percent did not have general facility. In rural places, only 17.4 percent homes had toilets. According to statistics provided by the rural development ministry in 2008, 60.07% houses in urban areas have toilet facilities, whereas 57% houses in rural areas have toilets."


“Sanitation is a state subject. Enforcement of the act lies with the state governments,” he added. 
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