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FEATURE STORY

Ending Open Defecation and Achieving a Clean and Healthy Rural India

March 30, 2016


STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • India faces an enormous challenge in improving sanitation.
  • A new $1.5 billion World Bank project will now support the rural component of India¡¯s Swachh Bharat - or Clean India - Mission, the country¡¯s largest-ever drive to improve sanitation.
  • The project will promote behavior change among rural communities and help accelerate results in India¡¯s states by giving them performance-based incentives.

30 March 2016:  A new $1.5 billion World Bank program will support the Government of India in implementing the rural component of the , or the Clean India Mission.

The Mission is the country¡¯s largest-ever drive to improve sanitation. It was launched by the Government of India in 2014 with the aim of ending open defecation by 2 Oct, 2019, Mahatma Gandhi¡¯s 150th birth anniversary.

The program also seeks to ensure that communities sustain their open defecation free status, and improve the management of liquid and solid wastes. World Bank support will help accelerate results in India¡¯s states by giving them performance-based incentives.

Improving sanitation in the villages has proved to be one of India's greatest development challenges. Three out of five people in rural India suffer the indignity of defecating in the open. Girls and women have to venture out before dawn or after dark, leaving them vulnerable to harassment.

One in every ten deaths in India is linked to poor sanitation. And nearly 44 million children under five remain stunted, robbed of the chance to achieve their full potential. All told, the country loses the equivalent of 6 percent of GDP due to inadequate sanitation.

Past efforts to address this problem have had little success.  Although toilets were built, without adequate motivation to use them, village people often continued to adhere to centuries-old practices, and abandoned the new toilets or put them to alternative uses.

Building on lessons learnt from past experience, the new Mission will use trained facilitators to motivate people to use toilets by addressing the cultural and behavioral patterns that have prevented them from doing so. Once the desire to use toilets is established, villages will be placed in charge of drawing up their own plans to end open defecation.  The facilitators will help villagers choose where to build the new toilets and masons will be trained to construct the kind of toilets that are best suited to the local terrain.

While budgetary resources and technical assistance are being made available from the central government, states will have the flexibility to adopt the messages and methods that resonate most with the social and cultural sensibilities of their people.

Implementation on the ground will be monitored. A national sample-survey of rural sanitation will be conducted every year by independent third-party agencies. Sanitation improvements will be measured in terms of the number of rural people who have stopped open defecation, whether villages have sustained their open defecation-free status, and the improvements they have made in solid and liquid waste management.

Based on survey findings, the World Bank will release funds every year to the Government of India.  The central government will in turn pass on these funds to the states, where the grant money will flow through district and block levels to successful villages.

These incentives will be in addition to the budgetary support provided by the central government to the states for funding program investments; they will therefore be additional grants based on states¡¯ performance.

By promoting and sustaining changed behaviors, the program will help accelerate progress towards an Open Defecation Free (ODF) India as well as the achievement of other goals under the Clean India Mission.

ľ¹ÏÓ°Ôº will also help strengthen the institutional capacities of the national , as well as of selected states, particularly those which face the greatest challenges in sanitation.




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