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Posts Tagged India

STINKY INDIA

India faces stinking reality on Toilet Day

 
 

About half of households are without functioning toilets, leaving women and girls most vulnerable.

 
 

One-third of village households have toilets, while cities suffer poor sanitation and disposal mechanisms [AFP]

New Delhi, India – Nobody liked the smell of truth, more so since it concerned the tetchy aspect of toilets in India.

India’s Federal Minister of Rural Development Jairam Ramesh was accused last year of hurting Hindu religious sentiments by the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party for saying the country needed “more toilets than temples”.

Cleanliness may be next to godliness, but India – with 1.2 billion people – is far from achieving it. As World Toilet Day is marked on November 19, India’s sanitation and toilet statistics continue to raise a stink

Less than one-in-three households in Indian villages have toilets. Urban areas have more toilets but nevertheless suffer from poor sanitation and disposal mechanisms.

The lack of public toilets for the urban poor and in rural areas leads to alarming rates of water-borne disease and affects women and children most, campaigners say.

India also carries the shame of having manual labourers, mostly marginalised people who belong to a community formerly called “untouchables” or Dalits, to clean human excreta from open lavatories, even today in the 21st century.

You can find public urinals for men, but women suffer most as Indian cities and villages do not make space for women’s basic needs. Gender gets the worse off in this shitty business.

– Inder Salim, Delhi-based artist

 

 

 

While a 1961 census by the government said there were more than 3.5 million “faeces scavengers”, recent reports have said the number is down to 64,000. This is contested by NGOs saying these workers still suffer the ignominy of cleaning human excreta, suffer illnesses and social ostracisation.

 

 

 

A few years ago, “Shit of the Other” – a show by Delhi-based artist Inder Salim – displayed human faeces in a bottle. Some contended it was not scatological but a telling artistic statement of the state of the poor and disadvantaged, who are compelled to defecate in public in Indian cities.

“Toilets are not just confined to sanitation in India,” Salim says. “They contain layers of oppressed people, Dalits, our inability to deal with this basic human need.”

Mahatma Gandhi, India’s “Father of the Nation”, had in the early part of the 20th century branded the practice of engaging manual scavangers to clean latrines as a social evil. Gandhi preferred to clean his own toilet to set an example – something that shocked many.

Gandhi’s call to make sanitation a hygienic issue 65-years ago seems to have gone down the drain.

Consider these facts:

– Only 46.9 percent of India’s 24.66 million households have toilets, 49.8 percent defecate in the open, and 3.2 percent use public toilets, according to 2011 census figures.

– The economic impact of inadequate sanitation is about 2.4 trillion rupees ($38.4 million), or 6.4 percent of India’s gross domestic product, according to the Water and Sanitation Programme.

– The states of Jharkhand and Odisha rated lowest with 78 percent of  households lacking toilet facilities.

– More people in India have mobile phones than toilets.

Right to dignity

“We need to view services – such as the availability of functional toilets – as a part of the right to live a life of dignity and equality,” says Subhadra Menon, director of Health Communication at the Public Health Foundation of India.

But she adds: “Having said that, the provision of toilets to 1.2 billion people is far more complex than making mobile phones available, so in a sense, it isn’t right to compare apples and oranges.

Infographic: World Toilet Day

Al Jazeera assesses the worldwide progress in boosting access to improved sanitation

 

“But yes, the kind of social and other marketing that can be utilised to influence choices and behaviours is not being done optimally in the case of the use of toilets.”

Sulabh International is an NGO promoting sanitation across the country. Its founder, Bindeshwar Pathak, bemoans that “India lacks a culture of sanitation.”

The royal rajas – erstwhile rulers – might have had slaves to evacuate their “thunder boxes”, but much of India has had a late start to “toilet training”, Pathak says.

“Even the rural rich in the 1950s did not have toilet facilities in their mansions. Women went to the open for their ablutions as did the men.”

While he says India has made progress from a no-toilet scenario to providing nearly half of its population with latrines, “implementation of rural sanitation must be made priority and speeded up”, says Pathak.

Sulabh is seeking ways to accelerate the installation of toilet facilities. These programmes include training youth in both rural and urban areas on health and sanitation; pressing the government for fund allocation, and encouraging alternative livelihoods for caste groups that manually scavenge toilets.

‘No toilets, no marriage’

It’s easier for modern Indian women in the metros to walk into a shopping mall and find a loo. But it is not so for their underprivileged sisters who are poor or live in villages with no toilet facilities.

Women and girls often defecate in public, harming their health and also inviting molestation and unwanted attention from men in both rural and urban areas.

Priyanka Bharti returned to her husband’s home only when a proper toilet was built [AFP]

Police in the state of Bihar have admitted violence against women could be contained if more public toilets were provided.

As Salim points out, “You can find public urinals for men, but women suffer most as Indian cities and villages do not make space for women’s basic needs. Gender gets the worse off in this shitty business.”

Ramesh, who has campaigned zealously for the need for toilets, last year invoked a “no toilet, no bride” campaign. He exhorted women to not marry men whose family homes did not come equipped with toilets.

Some instances have occurred where brides have left the home of the groom after finding the household did not have a proper toilet. It has forced some men to pose in photos beside toilets in their home before seeking a bride in their villages.

A “right to pee” campaign was also launched in April 2012 by a group of non-profit organisations in Mumbai. They fought for the use of free toilets for women who were until then charged a fee to use toilets, while men could use them for free.

India’s Supreme Court ruled in 2011 that every government school must provide toilets, especially for girls. Inability to do so would mean closing the schools down.

“Once political support – across party lines – builds up for an issue, chances are it gets addressed satisfactorily,” says Menon. “Therefore, it is more about how all our politicians and elected representatives can take up the issue of toilets being provided.

“The critical issue is this – each and every day, young, adolescent girls and young adult women [and men actually] need to expose themselves to multiple vulnerabilities,” Menon says. “This makes even more serious the ignominy that these girls and women face – including not having a clean and functional toilet that they can use with a guarantee of privacy.”

 
Source:
Al Jazeera
Prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi causes a stir with ‘toilet first, temple later’ comments. ( 03-Oct-2013 )

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How India got its funk

How India got its funk

 

India’s economy is in its tightest spot since 1991. Now, as then, the answer is to be bold


The Economist, Aug 24th 2013
 

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IN MAY America’s Federal Reserve hinted that it would soon start to reduce its vast purchases of Treasury bonds. As global investors adjusted to a world without ultra-cheap money, there has been a great sucking of funds from emerging markets. Currencies and shares have tumbled, from Brazil to Indonesia, but one country has been particularly badly hit.

Not so long ago India was celebrated as an economic miracle. In 2008 Manmohan Singh, the prime minister, said growth of 8-9% was India’s new cruising speed. He even predicted the end of the “chronic poverty, ignorance and disease, which has been the fate of millions of our countrymen for centuries”. Today he admits the outlook is difficult. The rupee has tumbled by 13% in three months. The stockmarket is down by a quarter in dollar terms. Borrowing rates are at levels last seen after Lehman Brothers’ demise. Bank shares have sunk.

On August 14th jumpy officials tightened capital controls in an attempt to stop locals taking money out of the country (see article

 

). That scared foreign investors, who worry that India may freeze their funds too. The risk now is of a credit crunch and a self-fulfilling panic that pushes the rupee down much further, fuelling inflation. Policymakers recognise that the country is in its tightest spot since the balance-of-payments crisis of 1991.


How to lose friends and alienate people

India’s troubles are caused partly by global forces beyond its control. But they are also the consequence of a deadly complacency that has led the country to miss a great opportunity.

  

During the 2003-08 boom, when reforms would have been relatively easy to introduce, the government failed to liberalise markets for labour, energy and land. Infrastructure was not improved enough. Graft and red tape got worse.

  

Private companies have slashed investment. Growth has slowed to 4-5%, half the rate during the boom. Inflation, at 10%, is worse than in any other big economy. Tycoons who used to cheer India’s rise as a superpower now warn of civil unrest.


As well as undermining 1.2 billion people’s hopes of prosperity, failure to reform dragged down the rupee. Restrictive labour laws and weak infrastructure make it hard for Indian firms to export. Inflation has led people to import gold to protect their savings. Both factors have swollen the current-account deficit, which must be financed by foreign capital. Add in the foreign debt that must be rolled over, and India needs to attract $250 billion in the next year, more than any other vulnerable emerging economy.

A year ago the new finance minister, Palaniappan Chidambaram, tried to kick-start the economy. He has attempted to push key reforms, clear bottlenecks and help foreign investors. But he has lukewarm support within his own party and faces obstructionist opposition. Obstacles to growth, such as fuel shortages for power plants, remain. Foreign firms find nothing has changed. Meanwhile, bad debts have risen at state-run banks: 10-12% of their loans are dud. With an election due by May 2014, some fear that the Congress-led government will now take a more populist tack. A costly plan to subsidise food hints at this.

Stopping the rot

To prevent a slide into crisis, the government needs first to stop making things worse. Those capital controls backfired, yet the urge to tinker runs deep: on August 19th officials slapped duties on televisions lugged in through airports. The authorities must accept that 2013 is not 1991. Then the state nearly bankrupted itself trying to defend a pegged exchange rate. Now the rupee floats, and the state has no foreign debt to speak of. A weaker currency will break some firms with foreign loans, but poses no direct threat to the government’s solvency.

And so the Reserve Bank of India must let the rupee find its own level. The currency has not yet wildly overshot estimates of fundamental value. Raghuram Rajan, the central bank’s incoming head, should aim to control inflation, not micromanage one of the world’s most traded currencies.

Second, the government must get its finances in order. The budget deficit has been as high as 10% of GDP in recent years. This year the government must hold down its deficit (including those of individual states) to 7% of GDP. It is already cutting fuel subsidies, and—notwithstanding the pressures in the run-up to an election—should do so faster.

This is not enough to fix the government’s finances, though. Only 3% of Indians pay income tax, so the government’s tax take is puny. A proposed tax on goods and services, known as GST, would drag more of the economy into the net. It is stuck in endless cross-party talks. If the government can rally itself before the election to push for one long-term reform, this is the one it should go for.

Last, the government, with the central bank, should force the zombie public-sector banks to recapitalise. In 2009 America did “stress tests” to repair its banks. India should follow. Injecting funds into banks would widen the deficit, but the surge in confidence would be worth it.

  

There are glimmers of hope: exports picked up in July, narrowing the trade gap. But India faces a difficult year, with jittery global markets and an election to boot. Even if it scrapes past the election without a full-blown financial crisis, the next government must do much, much more to change India. 

 
Over the coming decade tens of millions of young people will have to find jobs where none currently exists. Generating the growth to create them will mean radical deregulation of protected sectors (of which retail is only the most obvious); breaking up state monopolies, from coal to railways; reforming restrictive labour laws; and overhauling India’s infrastructure of roads, ports and power.

The calamity of 1991 led to liberalising reforms that ended decades of stagnation and allowed a spurt of fast growth. This latest brush with disaster could produce a positive legacy, too, but only if it persuades voters and the next government of the importance of a new round of reforms that deal with the economy’s flaws and unleash its mighty potential.

 
Courtesy: Maqsood Kayani

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Pakistan Express: Indian influence in Pakistani media escapes Supreme Court’s attention

16JUL

SC

 

The proverbial cat is out of bag and Pakistan’s populistSupreme Court has announced its decision on the Report of Media Commission. As expected, the court in its ruling made public on its website has chosen not to touch the sensitive parts of the Report. The most sensitive is dubious interest of foreigners in Pakistan’s electronic media.

There are two most sensitive issues mentioned in the Report:

a)      Pakistan Broadcasters’ Association alleged that entertainment channel Urdu 1 was owned by Rupert Murdoch and two Afghan brothers (Mohsini brothers) who were based in Dubai. This channel (Urdu 1) was granted landing right much before it went on air anywhere in the world. The trail of dubious grant of license can be traced to Musa Gilani, son of former Prime Minister and Faryal Talpur, sister of the sitting President.

a)      Media watchdog, PEMRA informed the Commission a couple of media houses are reported to have received large grants in the form of advertising contracts from overseas sources. It is said that one such grant is 20 million British pounds. Any attempt by PEMRA to probe such matters immediately leads to claims that there is an attempt to curb freedom of the media and there is always the recourse to obtaining a stay order if an inquiry is held. Most of the funds are channeled through the cover of a Norwegian NGO named Friends without Borders but it was found the footprints of this funding lead to Indian sponsors including the Indian state television, the Doordarshan.

Who is Keith Rupert Murdoch and why the Indians send their money to one Pakistani channel? If the influence of Murdoch and Indians was not checked in Pakistan, then PEMRA was in breach of trust and an accomplice in the crime of allowing foreigners making inroads into Pakistani airwaves through their money.

Keith Rupert Murdoch is an Australian American media mogul. In July 2011, he faced allegations that his companies, including the News of the World, owned by News Corporation, had been regularly hacking the phones of celebrities, royalty and public citizens. He faces police and government investigations into bribery and corruption by the British government and FBI investigations in the US. On 21 July 2012, Murdoch resigned as a director of News International.

The allegation of PEMRA that one channel (GeoTV) received huge amounts in the name of sponsorship is most disturbing. That the amounts were actually sent by Indians should have rung alarm bells in the court room and media watchdog taken to task but the Supreme Court did not utter a single word in its order. The Supreme Court could do was to order an investigation. But this very serious breach of trust on the part of PEMRA escaped the attention of the court which strengthens the perception that the said channel is enjoying strong influence in the court room.

What are the services that Geo is delivering for India? Numerous. From showing excessive Indian contents to bashing Pakistan’s ISI and armed forces for anything happening anywhere in the world. This was the first channel which blamed in unison with Indian media that Mumbai Attacks of November, 2008 were perpetrated by ISI. Not only that, it helped Indian establishment’s line that Pakistanis were involved in the attacks when it prepared a package and informed the world that Ajmal Kassab belonged to a Pakistani town Faridkot. Now when this line of propaganda has been questioned in India with Indian security officials blaming their own government, the cover of this channel has been blown off.

Why this channel bashes ISI and armed forces? Because ISI and armed forces must be weakened at the point in time when they are fighting India’s proxies in FATA, Balochistan and even in Karachi. This is something enemy does to pressurize the security establishment of the rivals and break their resolve to fight. The Pakistani channel is doing exactly the same and earning millions of dollars of Indian money it has received. The security establishment should realize that even this channel is an Indian proxy and needs to be fought. The Supreme Court owes its popularity to this channel and may not take any action or utter any word to displease it.

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Lavon Affair a la Pakistan: Israeli & Indian Hand in Gilgit & MQM in Black OPS Masquerading as Taliban

The Gilgit attack on Foreign tourists reminds us of the Lavon affair when Israeli minister masterminded the killing of Western tourists in Cairo. The blame was put on Akhwans but luckily one of the culprits was accidentally arrested and the entire story unearthed. The culprits; all Jews were sentenced to death. Israel instead of being ashamed of its terrorism built a monument in Israel in remembrance of her terrorism. We can see Indian and Israeli hands in Karachi, Quetta, Gilgit and Peshawar etc. 


 
 MQM activist or a Taliban?

 
 
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PRO-INDIA KARZAI BACKSTABBING BOTH PAKISTAN & US: India Training Afghan Army Officers: Backstabbing Pakistan Goes On

Karzai, the Cook from Baltimore,MD is backstabbing both Pakistan and US simultaneously. Both the nations should be wary of Hamid Karzai, the crookedest dictator of Afghanistan.

India Decides to Train Afghanistan’s Army and Signs Other Bilateral Agreements with Afghanistan

 
 
 

India has openly offered support to Afghanistan by formalizing strategic partnerships even as it risks attracting hostility from Pakistan. During a two day visit by Afghan President Hamid Karzai to India, an agreement has been reached by the two nations to increase training of Afghan army and other security personnel. Besides finalizing the details of a strategic partnership, the two nations signed a total of three bilateral agreements.
 
During the visit, President Hamid Karzai has indicated that regional powers such as India are helping Afghanistan steer towards peace. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said that India will support Afghanistan to assume the responsibility of governance and security after the withdrawal of international forces. India has also urged other neighboring countries to help Afghanistan achieve stability. Afghanistan’s future and progress will be complimented largely by the role of its neighboring countries and India intends to extend its cooperation openly.
 
As for the Indo-Afghan partnership agreement, India has pledged to train, equip and build capacity for Afghanistan’s Army and Police and expand on the limited training it conducted for their army in India four years ago. During the current two-day visit by Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Afghanistan has requested for 150 Afghan Army officers to receive training at Indian defense and military academies which India has agreed upon. India also is expected to soon begin hosting training sessions for Afghan police officers.
 
India trained Afghan Army in 2007 when two platoon-sized infantry units took sessions in India. However, India has never sent army units to Afghanistan since it would upset Pakistan. India has also poured more than $1 billion in aid money into Afghanistan in the past decade for various projects which had perturbed Pakistan due to the presence of Indian paramilitary forces in Afghanistan to oversee projects. However, this time around, India will be steadfast in its support to Afghanistan due to compelling national security reasons. 
 
The Indian foreign ministry said that Mr. Karzai’s visit to New Delhi, his second this year, was also an opportunity for both countries to fully re-establish their strategic partnership and discuss bilateral, regional and global issues. Until now, India had maintained that its support for Afghanistan is civilian in nature and it has helped Afghanistan initiate small-scale development projects. However, India has now reiterated that it will support Afghanistan with greater interest by deepening its economic and military support. India and Afghanistan on Tuesday also agreed to strengthen trade and economic ties, announcing two agreements to cooperate in mining and hydrocarbons.

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