Johannesburg

Wednesday

Sunny. Pleasantly warm.

12°C
28°C

7 day forecasts

Toilet technology 'saves' women

2008-07-02 19:12

Betwa Sharma

New York - Usha Chaumar was seven-years-old when she began collecting human excrement with her mother in the northern Indian state of Rajasthan.

By the age of 10 she had married and, with her mother-in-law, continued going from house to house performing this demeaning task.

"They used to call me 'Bhangi' (part of the lowest of Indian castes) and treat us badly," Chaumar, now 33, told AFP in an interview here.

She was one of the country's estimated 700 000 so-called human scavengers on the lowest rung of India's social hierarchy, who for centuries have had the wretched task of cleaning toilets and collecting human excrement.

Many Indians today still treat the waste-collectors as "untouchables" and don't let them approach their villages, schools or temples or come into contact with their food and drinking water.

"If I was thirsty, they would give me water, but would avoid touching me," Chaumar said.

Eco-friendly toilet

Five years ago, her scavenging days ended when she joined the Sulabh International Social Service Organisation, a non-profit group working to improve sanitation in India and the conditions for this marginalised segment of society.

This week, with 2008 declared the International Year of Sanitation by the United Nations, the UN is honouring people like Chaumar - and groups such as Sulabh - to draw attention to the plight of her caste, and to explore ways to vastly improve sanitation conditions in thousands of communities around the developing world.

Sulabh set up a project called Nai Disha, which means "new direction", in Chaumar's hometown of Alwar. It pulled women out of scavenging by providing vocational training and teaching them to operate bank accounts.

By 2006 Sulabh had rescued about 60 000 scavengers, according to the UN Development Programme (UNDP).

Bindeshwar Pathak, who founded the organisation in 1970, developed the well-known Sulabh Sauchalya, an affordable and eco-friendly two-pit toilet.

Natural fertiliser

Pathak said his invention helps slow global warming, saves water and converts human waste into natural fertiliser.

"Today 2.6 billion people (in Asia, Africa, Latin America) do not have access to safe and hygienic toilets," he told a news conference.

Sulabh has already sold his toilet technology to Afghanistan and 15 African countries. It has installed 1.4 million household toilets and 6 500 public toilets in India alone.

Sulabh has also developed 26 toilet designs for varying budgets and locations, and trained 19 000 masons to build low-cost twin-pit toilets using locally available materials.

On Wednesday Sulabh holds a special sanitation event at UN headquarters to raise awareness and speed up progress towards achieving one of the UN's Millennium Development Goals - to cut by half the number of people lacking access to basic sanitation by 2015.

- AFP

inside news24

Latest comment in Sci-Tech

Nic says... I remember back in the seventies that clouds were seeded in the Lowveld (Around Nelspruit) to reduce the chances of hail, and we all stood in amazement how the clouds would dissipate into nothing as soon as the Learjet had passed by. Scientist ofcourse disagreed that they were responsible, ofcourse they would because us normal people cannot argue with formulas but only with what we logically see. Read the article...

Cpt: 15-18°C Rain showers. Morning clouds. Mild. Pta: 16-31°C More sun than clouds. Pleasantly warm.
Jhb: 12-28°C Sunny. Pleasantly warm. Bloem: 12-29°C High level clouds. Pleasantly warm.
Dbn: 18-30°C Sprinkles early. More sun than clouds. Warm. PE: 14-23°C Drizzle. Morning clouds. Mild.
7 day forecasts...
Western Cape Eastern Cape Kwazulu Natal Gauteng

Midrand - 13:59:55 PM Stationary vehicle just before the New Road exit More traffic reports...

Here are the winning Lotto numbers from the Saturday, November 7 draw.

18, 24, 25, 31, 35, 42 Bonus 38

Lotto plus: 4, 14, 17, 20, 21, 34 Bonus 3

SMS the word Lotto to 31222 to get lotto numbers sent directly to your phone. The service costs just R10 per month. 
More lotto numbers...

Jobs - Find your dream job

Manager: Financial Services

Gauteng - Pretoria
Kanimambo

Financial Manager

Gauteng - Johannesburg
Network Finance Menlyn
R460,000-500,000 Per Annum Cost To Company

Project Manager Finance

Gauteng - Johannesburg
Network Recruitment CA- Centurion
R300,000-380,000 Per Annum Cost To Company

Cars - Search 1000's of new and used cars

AUDI

2008 A4 1.8T Multitronics from R 269 000

AUDI

A4 1.8T FSi Attraction MY09
2009
R 382,082.00

AUDI

Q7 4.2 FSi Quattro Tiptronic
2006
R 419,000.00

BMW

320d (E46)FL 6SP
2003
R 99,000.00

Property - Find a new home

RIVONIA

Single Residential R2,300,000

MOOIKLOOF

Single Residential R7,000,000

WATERKLOOF

Single Residential R4,500,000

Travel - Look, Book, Go!

Free Games - TOO MUCH NEWS? TAKE A BREAK!