Lack of water supply makes sanitation workers manually scavenge Indian toilets, says Toilet woman of India

Written by Sabha Zaidi and Neha Kumar

Interview with Pragya Akhilesh in Ahmedabad, Gujarat while she is on a country Union Tour to assess the toilets in semi-urban and rural areas in India. 

In 2018, Trade Unionist, Pragya Akhilesh, Toilet woman of India recorded more than 10 thousand abandoned toilets in the rural areas of India where women have been forced to be manual scavengers in both the banned dry and the recently built sanitary latrines under Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, Indian government’s much-applauded policy. In the last decade, through the Shramic Fund and Safai Karmachari Mitra, Akhilesh has built a model of alternative micro-credit facility for the rehabilitation of the sanitation workers in the country.

‘Immediately need to take back the Open Defecation free status of these places. ODF tags act as a burden for sanitation workers in this country.’

Sanitation infrastructure versus sanitation workers

Pragya Akhilesh points out that while much emphasis has been given to the construction of toilets it is noteworthy that both the sanitation workers and manual scavengers in India suffer immensely because there are no safeguards to protect them. In 2021 if we are to ask every sanitation worker who has ever cleaned the toilets, they would say that they have manually scavenged these toilets mostly in rural areas because of no maintenance and lack of water supply. In most of these toilets, you will also find that either the tap is not working or the drains or clogged so the numbers on the paper of how many toilets have been made only look good on the paper as they become a liability for the sanitation workers after a year or two of working properly. The institution is so deep that both the caste and socio-economic reality do not give any exit from this work and therefore an integrated approach for rehabilitation from scavenging becomes a difficulty.

‘Who will the centre give machines to or rehabilitate if they don’t even know who the manual scavengers are?’

Recognition of sanitation workers as the most valuable primary resource 

Akhilesh has contributed numerous articles in Indian Express, Hindustan Times, Outlook and nearly all the important Indian news networks appealing to first recognise who the sanitation workers are and to involve them in the policy process regarding them. She says that in India the government’s actual expenditure through the SRMS Schemes (rehabilitation scheme for manual scavengers) is far less than the total Scheme budget. Since the government does not have an accurate database of sanitation workers, provision of financial assistance or pension services do not take place in the grassroots because they do not know where to find these accounts. Secondly, she continues that the non-availability of any other micro-credit facility makes the entire process complex since the NSKFDC Schemes (undertaking to provide aid to the scavenging community) are difficult to comprehend. Taking loans from different institutions binds them further within the system so assistance took to get away from this work re-perpetuates entry back in the same work. The only difference is that the working categories change sometimes.

‘Sewer deaths are murders by the government because they trap the sanitation workers, especially the manual scavengers, within a complex and obsolete sanitation system.’

Different challenges for both men and women

Due to double discrimination, She says that for women it becomes twice as hard to leave this work and rehabilitate themselves because they find themselves between both the intricacies of caste and gender oppression. Around 75 per cent of all the women involved in this work are women. It may seem that the dry latrines are not a reality but again ask people like Bezwada Wilson and the organisations like the Safai Karmachari Andolan who have given their lives to this issue especially for the demolition of dry latrines within the country.

While women have no exit we have lost numerous men in this country to septic tanks in this country. The challenges also become different within different categories of sanitation work.

In 2013 three more categories, septic tank cleaners, railways and drain cleaners were added in the definition of manual scavengers. Need to add more categories in 2021 like those sanitation workers who scavenge bones of dead animals, those who work with hospitals and biohazard waste in landfills perform both scrapping and scavenging.’

Recognition of different categories of sanitation needs to follow afterwards 

There are five million sanitation workers in this country out of whom one-third of sanitation workers have been employed as manual scavengers by contractors in some time or the other during their lifetime. RRI, India had categorised 11 types of sanitation workers and found out that each of these categories has worked as manual scavengers one time in 2019. Most of these sanitation workers do not even reach the age of retirement. The rehabilitation part becomes the most valuable in this regard and hence the need to form a Self Help Group or a Trade Union so the sanitation workers can depend on each other and act as a pressure group to find against the government. They not only assert their need for an increase in their wages but also organise public hearings on each sewer death.

‘These schemes are very complex for people who do not even have a bank account. Women often first start with an alternative credit system and a Self Help Group.’

Rehabilitation follows both restoration and filing for compensation 

After each death, Akhilesh says, families are left to fight for themselves. In this way, every single meal becomes a problem. At this time the workers need a process of hand-holding. Therefore the communities themselves ask for intervention. The process begins after filing for compensation. They are not only in need of seed funds to open a small enterprise but also assistance in small areas like journal entry or registration. In most cases, such is the condition in India that workers fear police harassment in case of filing a complaint. Here, even psychological assistance and a need for evaluative rehabilitation play a great role in re-engagement after the loss of their immediate family member. Sometimes, a protest song or a play goes a long way in this realisation as when the family sees the reenactment of what has happened through an act, it convinces them to file a complaint. This was seen in our 2012 Campaign, Khamosh! Bhim Jaari Hai (Silence! Ambedkar is in Order) inspired from Vijay Tendulkar’s work. Both cultural rehabilitation and Self Help Group become important systems of emotional nourishment.

‘Do not care about the title, every sewer death needs to be taken seriously.’ Rehabilitation should be qualitative more than quantitative.’

Long road for actual change in India 

Akhilesh says that even in 2021 sewer deaths are a reality and the women continue to work in both dry latrines and sanitary toilets abandoned to become dry latrines. Until this ends both rehabilitation and the need for alternative micro-credit assistance will go hand in hand. Authentic sanitation systems cannot be secured without a mechanism of long term and regular water supply. Sanitation cannot be addressed by burdening the sanitation workers.

Neha Kumar is the head of the working committee & Sabha Zaidi is the Delhi coordinator of Bahujan Doctor’s Association, Delhi 


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