A hand pump with a cracked base in Dhenkenal, Odisha. Poorly maintained pumps are vulnerable to contamination from above ground as well as from nearby leach pits. |
Chaibi Swain, 52, lives here with her husband, a rice
farmer. Her home is little different to the rest of Aaruha’s low-rise
dwellings, but it has a toilet, which puts her among a small minority in rural
Odisha.
Eight out of nine people in Odisha’s villages do not use toilets,
instead defecating in the open, leaving them vulnerable to diseases. The
Swains, with their tiny toilet, which empties into a leach pit – a hole in the
ground used to compost faeces when there is no sewage system – are the face of
progress.
There is a problem, however. The leach pit is next to the
household’s drinking-water source, a tube well. Water so close to a leach pit
is vulnerable to contamination from faecal germs, since bacteria, viruses and
protozoa can travel through soil.
This toilet with a leach pit in Puri has been built next to a hand pump, making contamination likely |
Worse, when the monsoon comes and the
Mahanadi overruns its banks, the groundwater levels in Aaruha rise, making the
contamination worse. The Swains’ toilet could actually be a health risk.
They aren’t the only ones whose backyard toilet is a threat
to the water supply. As the Swachch Bharat Mission (SBM) – India’s ambitious
campaign to stop open defecation by 2019 – gains pace, about 1.3m leach-pit
toilets have been built in Odisha alone.
In districts such as Ganjam, Balasore and Puri, these pits
are often built without safeguards against contamination, say the NGOs working
with the government. “It is quite alarming, because if this problem is not
addressed at this time, we are building sites of contamination all around,”
says Devdeep Saha, a research associate at the sanitation NGO Friend in Need
Trust.
The safeguards in coastal districts such as Puri, which have
high groundwater tables and are prone to flooding, include keeping a 10-metre
distance between water sources and leach pits, raising the top of pits above
the ground so that flood water does not enter, and sealing the bottom of pits
to prevent pathogens escaping. But villagers who build their own toilets in
return for funds from the mission often ignore these safeguards.
The reasons are many. First, many households in congested
villages do not have the space to build toilets and tube wells far apart.
Harendranath Pradhan, a government sanitation engineer in Odisha’s Balasore
district, says this is the main reason for guidance being ignored.
“Even though his job is to ensure toilets are properly
built, Pradhan says this isn’t always possible. “We tell the beneficiary to
maintain a distance from the water source. But they say they don’t have the
land. So we build the toilet, because we have to meet targets,” he says.
India is not yet meeting its mission goals. Only about 19m
toilets have been built across rural India, meaning another 92m are needed over
the next three years to meet the 2019 target. Vivek Sabnis, who previously
worked for the Bangalore-based sanitation NGO Arghyam, says: “Unfortunately,
everybody is pushing for quantity over quality.”
Odisha isn’t the only state that faces a threat to its water
supplies from new toilets. Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand also have badly built
toilets, according to Saha. This means that, as coverage grows, contamination
may worsen.
A study in the journal Environmental Science and Technology
in April found that certain diarrhoea-causing protozoa can travel 150 metres or
more in the high groundwater of Puri to contaminate even deep tube wells, which
are thought safer than shallow tube wells and open ponds. The study says full
latrine coverage in high water table areas would reduce contamination in open
ponds, but increase it in tube wells.
Marion Jenkins, lead author of the study and an
environmental health researcher at the University of California in Davis, says
recommended safeguards may reduce contamination a little, but won’t eliminate
it. “Drinking-water aquifers are already seriously polluted with faecal
protozoal pathogens from the existing stock of latrines in rural Puri,” she
says.
This means that unless the existing latrines are pulled
down, and new ones built differently, pollution will remain.
Another study, published in January, found tube wells in
Bihar to be contaminated by faecal pathogens about 18% of the time, when they
weren’t far enough from pit toilets. This study was done in summer, and the
authors predict contamination would increase during monsoon.
None of this means India should panic and abandon pit
toilets, says Sandy Cairncross, an environmental health researcher at the
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Improved toilet coverage is
likely to benefit people much more than it hurts them, he points out, adding
that it would be better to provide piped water to villages, instead of relying
on tube wells and ponds.
Another solution is to train villagers to monitor the
quality of their toilets, instead of relying on government officials to do so,
says Sujoy Mojumdar, a former SBM director who is now with Unicef India.
The
system of a government official inspecting toilets before disbursing money
doesn’t work because toilet users do not feel ownership, he argues. Village
teams already exist in some states, he says, “but it is still a rare example
and not widespread”.
SOURCE THE GUARDIAN UK
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