Indian city to pay residents to use public toilets
A city
council in western India is planning to pay residents to use public toilets in
a desperate attempt to stop legions of people urinating and defecating in public.
The
Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation has decided to give residents one rupee a visit
in a bid to draw them into its 300 public toilets and away from open areas and
public walls, which often reek of urine.
AMC health
officer Bhavikk Joshi said the offer would be trialed at 67 public facilities
across Ahmedabad, the main city in western Gujarat state, where officers will
give a coin to each user.
“Once
successful the project will be implemented in all the 300 public toilets in
Ahmedabad,” Joshi told AFP on Monday.
The move is
the latest effort to motivate people to use toilets after India’s government
announced a cleanliness drive last year championed by Prime Minister Narendra
Modi.
Many people
in India consider toilets unhygienic and prefer to squat in the open, believing
it more sanitary to defecate far from home.
AMC standing
committee chairman Pravin Patel said repeat offenders would be “identified and
encouraged” to use the coin-paying toilets.
“The idea
behind this project is to prevent open defecation in parts of the city where
people, despite having public toilets, defecate in the open,” Patel told AFP.
India’s
government last year announced a scheme to check whether people who were given
toilets as part of its cleanliness drive were actually using them, by getting
sanitary inspectors to go door-to-door.
UNICEF
estimates that almost 594 million people — or nearly half of India’s population
— defecate in the open, with the situation worst in dirt-poor rural areas.
Lack of
toilets and other sanitation problems cause huge health problems in India by
causing illnesses such as diarrhea.
SOURCE: Nairobi News
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