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4 reasons why India needs a separate Union sanitation ministry

September 29, 2015 15:09 IST

Sanitation is always clubbed with other departments, which lead to its neglect, says Devanik Saha.

Sanitation in India is a grave issue. Though large scale campaigns have been launched by governments to provide toilets and improve sanitation, but as observed in research reports and analyses, progress has been quite slow.

On October 2, 2014, Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the ambitious ‘Swacch Bharat Mission’, which was a revised version of sanitation campaigns launched by previous governments -- Central Rural Sanitation Programme (1986-1999) and Total Sanitation Campaign (TSC) in 1999 (renamed Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan in 2012).

An investigation done by me on the Swachch Vidyalaya Abhiyan for IndiaSpend revealed that the claim of 100 per cent separate toilets coverage by the government isn’t true. It highlighted several infirmities on the ground -- lack of water facilities, poor maintenance of toilets and faulty designed toilets. The building of toilets in schools was initially handled by the ministry of drinking water and sanitation, but was later transferred to the ministry of human resources development.

But improving sanitation should not be limited to building toilets as it has been done in the past. Research and data reports indicate that apart from constructing toilets, a significant focus should also be on changing behavioural and cultural practices. Some 44 per cent of households with a working latrine have at least one member who defecates in the open, according to a survey done by RICE Institute in north Indian states -- Bihar, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, and Uttar Pradesh. Some 60 per cent toilets in Chhattisgarh built under NBA are defunct, according to a recent report by the Comptroller and Auditor General.

Furthermore, if new toilets are built, usage will increase and the amount of wastewater generation will also increase, which needs to be catered to as well.

While the targets set by Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the Swachch Bharat Abhiyan are quite ambitious, the observations on the ground leave a lot to be desired, which necessitate the call for a separate sanitation ministry. Currently, it is clubbed with drinking water, and has a Cabinet minister (Chaudhary Birender Singh) and a minister of state (Ram Kripal Yadav). Central, state or local government -- sanitation is always clubbed with other departments, which lead to its neglect.

Here are four reasons why sanitation should be allotted a dedicated ministry at the central level:

Image used for representational purposes only. Photograph: Vivek Prakash/Reuters.