India: Women’s fight for dignity with more toilets

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Bedamati Mirdha of Nildungri village in Sambalpur, Odisha, India, has been at the forefront of encouraging people in the villages nearby to construct a toilet at home instead of going out into the forest to defecate. Two years back, as part of a women’s self-help group (SHG), Mirdha built a retrofitted twin pit toilet which has made a huge difference to her family.

A woman mason helps construct a toilet in Sambalpur, Odisha, India. (Shipra Saxena/WASH UNICEF)
A woman mason helps construct a toilet in Sambalpur, Odisha, India. (Shipra Saxena/WASH UNICEF)

Fighting to end open defecation

“We do not worry about diseases and the many problems people face while defecating in the open. You must understand how important a toilet is in our lives,” Mirdha told DW.

At the far end of the village, Prabhasini Munda, a cancer survivor, has a similar story after having built a toilet last year.

“There was always a fear of snakes and other poisonous insects in the open fields,” Munda told DW. “The problems worsened during the monsoon season and that is why I too decided that a toilet was a necessity.”

“We call it an ‘izzat ghar’ [dignity house] and womenfolk don’t have to fear anymore,” added Munda.

The women went door-to-door to talk to villagers about better hygiene practices and told them about the government schemes that offer help with constructing toilets.

Open defecation has often led to increased vulnerabilities among girls and women including verbal, physical and sexual violence affecting them both physically and psychologically.

Leading by example in Odisha

Across several rural parts of Odisha state, women SHGs are leading by example to ensure that toilets are built in homes without any resistance.

The drive is currently underway in six districts — Angul, Jagatsinghpur, Sambalpur, Deogarh, Koraput and Gajapati — with the aim of adding another 14 districts in the state.

Though the sanitation in rural areas is still poor, Odisha is among the top five performing states where a number of villages have been declared free of open defecation.

“UNICEF and Water.org have partnered with Odisha Livelihoods Mission, a government run project to empower women by generating their livelihoods by various trainings. In this way, the program builds momentum and the community can lead it for long term sustainability,” Surati Bada, an SHG leader told DW.

Constructing a twin pit toilet can cost anywhere between 15,000 and 20,000 Indian rupees ($185-$244, €164-€ 222). Until now, 12,000 loans have been disbursed benefiting about 60,000 people, mostly for sanitation purposes.

“Financing is a great complementary tool to the government’s efforts for sustaining the momentum in bringing access to drinking water and sanitation for the economically active poor,” Abhishek Anand of Water.org told DW.

Stepping up toilet construction

Unitl recently, people were not aware of affordable financing options for building and maintaining water, sanitation and hygiene assets. But the situation has now changed.

The retrofitted twin pit toilet ensures that the human waste is treated naturally without polluting water bodies or the soil. The main feature of the toilet technology is the two pits that are used alternatively, to ensure on-site fecal sludge management, making it a complete on-site sanitation solution for households.

Once a toilet gets constructed, SHGs monitor people to ensure they regularly use the facility and are not defecating in the open.

“Our dream is to provide toilets across the state. We take loans and government officials are cooperative in this regard. Many of the members are able to pay back within a year,” Sakuntala Mirdha, an SHG president told DW.

Toilets are arguably one of the most potent tools of women empowerment in history. Several studies show that an improvement in public sanitation reduces women’s time spent in care work by 10% and also leads to higher female literacy rates.

In several parts of the state, women are seen taking up traditionally unconventional roles, like masons and contractors engaged in toilet construction.

‘We started making concrete rings for the twin pit toilets and sell it to nearby villages as well. We are able to get additional income and this is an incentive for every toilet we help construct,” Soudamini, from Khulia village, told DW.

Empowerment of women is one of the key development initiatives identified by the Odisha government. Mission Shakti, a flagship program of the state, has so far created more than 600,000 SHGs.

The government’s Swachh Bharat Mission or ‘Clean India,’ created in 2014, aimed to give all urban local bodies in the country Open Defecation Free (ODF) status by October 2019.

Now in order to sustain the ODF outcomes, the focus is on functionality and proper maintenance of community and public toilets, and addressing safe management of fecal sludge, ensuring that no untreated sludge is discharged into water bodies.

Sujoy Mojumdar, a water sanitation and hygiene specialist at UNICEF, pointed out that this initiative is contributing to the provision of safely managed sanitation. This includes safe toilets and water services to all, while also promoting the economic empowerment of women through livelihood programs ensuring their family well-being in the long run.

“It also makes long-term sustainable income generation opportunities for the trained women technicians like masons, plumbers and sanitation entrepreneurs,” Mojumdar told DW.

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