Of the 1 billion people globally who have no toilet, India accounts for nearly 600 million. Fifty per cent of India’s population defecates in the open. Well-designed communication and awareness campaigns connecting sanitation to health and women’s dignity and outcome-based monitoring are vital. Community-centric programs under
strong leadership can usher in a clean India.
Ensuring basic hygiene for all is a major task for the Indian government. Recent National Sample Survey Office data underlined the abysmal state of sanitation in the country, especially rural India where two thirds of the country lives. Huge discrepancies in data on toilets from different government departments mean that the impact of sanitation programs is difficult to gauge. The net result, however, is unimproved sanitation coverage and compromised health.
What is clear is that the programs had large leakages. Sikkim, Haryana and Kerala, nevertheless, excelled in sanitation programs, with Sikkim topping with 100 per cent sanitation coverage. Gujarat failed badly; the restricted role of beneficiaries, poor technological options that did not cater to their needs, and lack of awareness contributed to this state of affairs. The delivery mechanism was also faulty.
The recent Swachh Bharat Mission claims to be more focused on monitoring and is said to be filling lacunae. Success stories demonstrate that political and administrative will can eradicate open defecation.