A man
entered a gutter to clean it and fainted in the bad air. His comrade
waiting outside realized this and entered the gutter to save him. He too
fainted. They both died of asphyxiation. This happened a mere two days
after Supreme Court outlawed manual scavenging again, and ordering, not
'directing', the states to strictly enforce the Prohibition of
Employment as Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation Act, 2013
passed by the parliament last year.
The two men were not supposed to enter
the drainage area without written approval of the chief officer and an
insurance cover of Rs 10 lakh by the employer under both the provisions
of act and the Supreme Court order. The act, in fact, bars anyone from
entering such a drainage unless in an extreme emergency and only with
full protective gears. These men were bare bodied, armed only with the
most rudimentary tools- , namely a broom and a stick to manually break
the blockage.
This happened in Gujarat, whose chief
minister Narendra Modi never tires of boasting over Gujarat model of
development. Being the official Prime Ministerial candidate of Bhartiya
Janata Party, the main opposition party in India, singing the praises of
developed Gujarat has become his main weapon not merely to canvass for
his party's victory, but also to get rid of the blot of 2002 pogrom of
Muslims that happened in his supervision. Expectedly, Mr. Modi did not
open his mouth regarding these two deaths. Likewise, he remained silent
when a third death occurred just a day later.
Interestingly, Indian National Congress,
the leading partner of United Progressive Alliance currently in power,
did not make it a political issue to address despite being pushed into a
corner on other issues ranging from corruption to selling out. Why did
it decide to lay low instead of pushing for a resolution after getting
such clear evidence of the hollowness of the development claims of Mr.
Modi? It could have been the proverbial last nail in BJP's coffin in the
polls. The reason behind this is simple. Congress ruled states have
performed no better than Mr. Modi on the issue.
The failure is so comprehensive that
manual scavenging continues in Delhi, the national capital, as a survey
by the Department of Social Work of Delhi University identified 1,085
scavengers still working in Delhi in 2009. Similar is the situation of
Karnataka which reported the death of a manual scavenger as recently as
March 4 this year. Tamilnadu, another affluent state, fares much worse
with 30 manual scavengers having lost their lives since February 2012.
With the richer states' performing this dismally, one can easily guess
at the state of affairs in poorer ones.
The lack of political will is further
confirmed by the fact that while there was no dearth of lip service on
the issue there was very little action on the ground. An example of
this: Employment of Manual Scavengers and Construction of Dry Latrines
(Prohibition) Act, 1993 that was replaced by the new one was not
published in the gazette of India until 1997 and no state had
promulgated it until 2000. If there remained any doubts over failure of
the 1993 Act, they were all put to rest by the 2011 Census report that
counted 7,94,390 operational dry latrines in the country.
As all these states are governed by
political parties and alliances pitted against one another, and thus
making manual scavenging a poll issue will harm them all, it seems to be
both parties have an interest in this "don't ask, don't tell" attitude
over the issue. But for the relentless struggle of Safai Karmachari
Andolan and other civil society groups, they have almost successfully
swept the issue under the carpet. Rest assured, neither Mr. Modi, nor
his opponents, will kick this hornet's nest for the fear of the stings
they will receive. They have always showed a great amity when it
involves not raising the issues that would shame them all.
This is why BJP never grilled Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh over his inaction despite describing the
practice as "one of the darkest blots on India's development process".
He, likewise, has a habit of identifying national shames, blots, and
humiliations and then sleeping on them. Remember that he called
malnutrition a national shame and then set up a Prime Minister's
National Council on Nutrition way back in 2008, but the council never
convened except once in 2010 and not a single decision taken in that
meeting was ever implemented.
The question, however, is what sort of a
democracy can force a section of its citizens into a gutter without any
protective gear? What sort of a democracy can watch them dying of
asphyxiation, one after another, as each enters the same gutter to save
the previous one? What sort of a democracy can then look away with
impunity, without doing as much as paying compensation for the deaths?
The sort of democracy that can is India,
as evidenced by its actions and more so by its inactions. For the
uninitiated, 300,000 manual scavengers (mostly women) form a miniscule
part of the very populous India and are therefore disposable for
electoral battles. Further, being situated at the lowest rung of the
system of graded inequality, in Dr. B R. Ambedkar's words, their issues
are rarely picked up by media or even by parties fighting for dalit
rights.
The fact that the state is is equipped,
both economically and technically, to radically restructure sanitation
system and eradicate manual scavenging is the only thing worse than the
denial mode it goes into. Just think of the crassness of the system that
is planning to send a manned mission to moon while forcing its people
down the drains, literally. Think about a democracy that invests a huge
part of its budget for buying bombers but does nothing to improve the
sanitation systems that caters to a mere 33 percent of population
leaving the rest to fend for themselves be it by defecating in open or
throw everything in rivers. How does it get away with that? It gets away
because it knows that it has a community held to ransom by the
repulsive caste system to do the job. It gets away that this caste
system that forms the base on which façade of modern democracy is
superimposed in India will deflect the blame away from them.
Supreme Court's March 27 order will
hopefully make a dent in the system that produces and perpetuates this
illegal practice with impunity. That would, however, depend upon the
will of the people to stand up and be counted for their struggles as
manual scavengers. Compensations, (which often remains unpaid) is a
positive step, but definitely not a solution to the problem. The only
concrete way is fixing command responsibility and making the officer in
charge of the municipality, division, or any other department illegally
employing manual scavengers responsible for any accidents including
death, and punishing him/her proportionately in such circumstances.
Until this happens, the authorities will
keep using compensation as a weapon to silence the manual scavengers as
they did in Pune. Indian Express, a reputed daily, had created uproar by
reporting the death of 227 sanitation workers,(conservancy staff as the
municipality called them) over just 30 months.
The Maharashtra Government deflected the criticism by announcing free
houses and free medical facilities to all sanitation workers. While the move was a brilliant political one, as it led
to the rage dying down slowly while the practice continued, one would
definitely not want a repeat of that; therefore, linking compensation
with fixing command responsibility of the officers responsible for such
deaths is a must.
Until this happens and scavenging is
really eradicated, all the tall claims of the country will remain hollow
words devoid of any meaning. Until this happens, the self-designated
largest democracy of the world will keep betraying what it really is- a
deficient one at best and a delinquent one at worst.
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