The Hindu, Op-Ed page, June 7, 2012
In South Mumbai's upscale Malabar Hill, a neighbourhood
of 6,000 people share 52 toilets, 26 for men and 26 for women. That
works out to around 115 people per toilet. Nearby live some of the
oldest and richest families of the city with homes where one person may
have a choice of many toilets.
But this is Simla
Nagar, where 720 households are precariously perched on a not so wealthy
slope of Malabar Hill. The path to the two-storey toilet block in the
slum is like an obstacle race that only the able can undertake.
Depending on which part of the slum you live in, it can take you
anything from five to 20 minutes to reach the toilets. On the way you
climb steep, uneven steps, walk uphill through narrow lanes barely four
feet wide that are slippery with soapy water as scores of women wash
clothes and utensils, then downhill through equally treacherous lanes to
finally reach the destination.
If you get there
before 10 a.m., you are lucky. There is water in the taps; hence the
toilets are reasonably clean. If you wait longer, the water stops; you
carry your own mug of water, just enough for your personal needs but not
enough to flush the toilet. By mid-afternoon, all 52 toilets are
rendered unusable. People wait in resignation till the evening when the
toilets are cleaned. At night, although the toilets are lit, the path
leading to them is not.
Some enterprising people have
built their own toilets inside their tiny homes. But there is no
sewerage. So the waste pipe dumps the human waste in the open drain
outside. If you are the unfortunate neighbour of one of these inventive
souls, you live with the stench and the flies and mosquitoes. No one
complains. You just curse your luck that you do not have the resources,
or the space, to copy your neighbour.
For old people, especially old women, getting to the toilet is virtually impossible unless your jhopdi
is next door. And children? Mothers say they use the open drain. Who
has the time to drop everything and run with the child to the toilet?
So
Bill Gates' idea to launch a global quest to “reinvent the toilet” is
certainly timely. India has been given the singular honour of hosting
the “Reinventing the toilet” summit in 2013. Very appropriate given over
60 per cent of Indians are forced to defecate in the open because they
have no access to toilets. If nothing else, the conference will draw
necessary global attention to a problem that is often relegated to the
bottom of the endless list of challenges poor countries face.
Innovations needed
Technological
innovations are needed as in rural areas, and even in some towns, where
capital-intensive underground sewerage systems might not be feasible.
Also flush toilets waste too much water and are unsustainable given the
growing scarcity of water. But coming up with new ideas for toilets
should not be rocket science. As Union Minister for Rural Development
Jairam Ramesh stated recently, “We can launch missiles like Agni and
satellites but we cannot provide sanitation to our women.”
The
real challenge for India is dealing with the sanitation needs of cities
and towns, particularly the areas where the urban poor live. Having
failed spectacularly all these years to provide affordable housing in
cities — Mumbai is now constantly referred to as “Slumbai” — the least
governments can do is to put the sanitation challenge within slum
settlements top of their list of priorities.
In
cities like Mumbai, the problem is partly compounded by the carrot of
redevelopment that is dangled before many notified or regularised slums
such as Simla Nagar. Because they are designated for redevelopment at
some future date, not much attention is paid to their immediate needs.
As a result, you have toilets that are nowhere near enough for the
colony, yet new toilets will not be built. And you have a water supply
that comes for just four hours every evening thereby making the
hand-flush toilets unusable for a significant part of the day.
Appeals
to augment the supply fall on deaf ears. In the end, not out of choice
but out of compulsion, many residents of such slums are compelled to
defecate in the open at the cost of their own sense of dignity.
There
have been efforts, often half-hearted. Funds are allocated but lie
unused for years because no one really cares. And the majority of toilet
schemes in slums fail for precisely the same reasons: not enough water,
zero maintenance and an unresponsive administration.
Even
if people come up with innovative ideas, there is little encouragement.
Many people from outside government who have tried to intervene in the
sanitation sector end up hitting their heads against a brick wall: the
unwillingness of much of the bureaucracy to be flexible and open to new
ideas, to design adaptations and to the beneficiary community's views.
To meet the toilet challenge, it is this mindset that has to be
reinvented.
(To read the original, click here)
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