ndia Real Time RSS Feed ECONOMY & BUSINESS INDIA 12:06 - TopicsExpress



          

ndia Real Time RSS Feed ECONOMY & BUSINESS INDIA 12:06 pm IST Sep 30, 2014 EDUCATION COMMENTS (1) India Plans to Clean Up for Gandhi’s Birthday GANDHI JAYANTI GIRLS EDUCATION MAHATMA GANDHI By SHANOOR SEERVAI A statue of Mahatma Gandhi in Geneva in 2013. —Agence France-Presse/Getty Images On Sunday, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi told a crowd at Madison Square Garden that cleaning up India was his priority. “Mahatma Gandhi never compromised on cleanliness. He gave us freedom. We should give him a clean India,” said Mr. Modi. To honor Gandhi on the anniversary of his birth on Oct. 2, Mr. Modi earlier this month announced the launch of the Swachh Bharat, or Clean India, Mission. “I myself will set out with a broom and contribute towards this pious task” on Thursday, said Mr. Modi in an official statement. Previously called the Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan, the program will be restructured into two separate programs for urban and rural India. Sanitation is one of the most pressing challenges India faces: almost 600 million people defecate in the open in the country. The movement aims to “create a Clean India” by 2019 to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Gandhi’s birth. It’s an ambitious initiative, but viewed as critical to sustainable development in a country that has long ignored the most basic needs of many of its people. As Oct. 2 draws nearer, millions of people across the country are joining daily the cleanliness drives organized by government departments, nonprofits and local community centers. But the federal government will carry out the lion’s share of the work. Here’s what it has pledged: The urban component is expected to cost 620 billion rupees (around $10.1 billion) over 5 years, and includes plans to eliminate open defecation, convert insanitary toilets into pour-flush ones and eradicate manual scavenging. Manual scavenging — the practice of scraping feces out of primitive dry latrines or collecting waste from fields where villagers relieve themselves — has been illegal for decades but still persists in Indian regions lacking indoor plumbing. In urban areas, 10 million households will be provided with around half a million public and community toilets and waste management facilities. In rural India, 1,340 billion rupees (around $21.7 billion) has been pledged to construct around 110 million toilets across the country, said India’s rural development minister in a statement. That’s a lot of new toilets, which if built could help prevent water-borne diseases like diarrhea, which kills almost 100,000 Indian children each year. More toilets could also make women in India safer — in June, two teenage girls were assaulted in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh when, lacking toilets, they had gone outside to relieve themselves in the privacy of the darkness. Mr. Modi has also directed state governments to ensure that all schools have separate toilets for boys and girls by Aug. 2015, according to a government of India press release. Many girls in India quit school when they reach puberty because of a lack of functioning toilets on the premises.
Posted on: Thu, 02 Oct 2014 05:32:45 +0000

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