* Scavenging dignity
*The Hindu
29/6/08*
*

 BY HARSH MANDER

  Employing manual scavengers to clear human excreta is punishable under the
law. Yet, many institutions, private and public, continue to do so with
impunity.

 They remain trapped in a vicious cycle of intense stigma, segregation, poor
health and education, destructive coping strategies like alcohol and
drugs...

 *
*

  The majesty of the law, and the might of the State, appears powerless to
snuff out the tragic, shameful legacy of millennia, a practice which we call
"manual scavenging". It involves entrapping women, men and even children
only because of the accident of their birth into a hated and humiliating
vocation, of gathering human excreta from individual or community dry
toilets with bare hands, brooms or metal scrapers into wicker baskets or
buckets. This the scavengers then carry on their heads, shoulders or against
their hips into dumping sites or water bodies. Others are similarly employed
to clear, carry and dispose excreta from sewers, septic tanks, drains into
which excreta flows and railway lines.

In 1976, almost three decades after India secured freedom, Section 7A was
introduced into the Protection of Civil Rights Act, 1955, to make an offence
punishable by imprisonment, compelling any person on grounds of
untouchability to scavenge. It took another 17 years, in 1993, for
Parliament to pass the Employment of Manual Scavengers and Construction of
Dry Latrines (Prohibition) Act, which rendered even voluntary employment of
manual scavengers for removing excreta an offence, and another four years
for the act to be notified.
* Civic initiative *

 In 2003, a remarkable national coalition for the elimination of manual
scavenging, called the Safai Karmchari Andolan, led by S.R. Sankaran and
Bejwada Wilson, filed a writ petition in the Supreme Court. It described the
persistence of dry latrines in various parts of the country in violation of
human dignity, the law and articles 14, 17, 21 and 23 of the Constitution.
It demanded that the Court issues instructions to governments for time-bound
eradication of manual scavenging and for effective rehabilitation of those
freed from this despised vocation.

The petition quotes the statutory National Commission for Safai Karamcharis
to estimate that there are around 96 lakh dry latrines in the country.
Successive reports of the Commission note with regret that manual scavengers
are being employed not just by private employers but also by numerous urban
local bodies, and most unconscionably, by the military engineering services
and army, public sector undertakings and the Indian Railways. More than 95
per cent of the persons employed as manual scavengers are dalits. The
Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment estimates the numbers of manual
scavengers to be over six lakhs, whereas the Andolan fears that the numbers
are three or four times even this. The problems with enumeration is that
official agencies tend to deny the persistence of this outlawed practice,
and in most places manual scavengers themselves do not speak out because of
shame and fear of losing even this frequently insecure source of livelihood.


Instead they remain trapped in a vicious cycle of intense stigma,
segregation, poor health and education, destructive coping strategies like
alcohol and drugs, all of which shut even more firmly options of other
dignified vocations, which in any case are barred by their birth in the most
disadvantaged of all castes.

Most governments failed even to respond to the petition of the Safai
Karmchari Andolan for almost three years, and when they did, it was after
the petitioners persisted and the highest Court admonished the governments.
The official responses are instructive, as most expend reams of paper and
time to deny the very existence of manual scavenging. The Ministry of
Railways told the court that until they install washable aprons at stations
and totally sealed toilet systems, "manual scavenging cannot be totally
eradicated", but offered no time frame. Many defence establishments flatly
denied any dry latrines. Municipalities possibly threatened municipal
employees to retract from their earlier affidavits and claim that were
employed for other tasks.

These official falsehoods have been nailed by moving, detailed affidavits,
often with stomach-churning photographs, by countrywide activists of the
Andolan. Many of these should be compulsory reading. From Ahra, Bihar,
unlettered Dinesh Ram, now 15 years old, has been doing this work since he
was nine. He tells the Court, "I hate this work. I do not feel like doing
it. But my problem is that I do not know any other work". Ramrakhi, who has
worked since she was 10, says, "The gas emitted by the shit has spoilt my
eyes, and my hands and feet also swell. It sticks to my hands and makes me
nauseous". Chinta Devi, like many others, says she hates this work, but has
to pursue it to raise her children.

Kokilaben, a sanitation worker in Kadi municipality in Mehsana, Gujarat,
testifies in an affidavit to the Court, "The human excreta discharged by
people on the road is collected by me in a large bowl with the help of a
broom and tin plate and stored in a trolley. When the trolley is full, I
drag (this with the help of) my daughter and my husband… I carry the human
excreta stored in plastic bucket on my head and while doing so the dirt
falls on my body…I fall sick frequently… If I refuse to remove waste, I get
suspended from duty by the Nagarpalika".
* Ineffective strategies *

 Schemes for rehabilitation of manual scavengers have failed for reasons
illuminated by an extremely insightful report of the Comptroller and Auditor
General. He found the scheme "a prisoner of its own statistics", since
although government claims that it rehabilitated 2.68 lakh scavengers, the
numbers of scavengers officially recognised did not go down, but instead
rose further to 7.87 lakhs! The problem is that those scavengers it claimed
to liberate were not those who were "rehabilitated". The scheme instead gave
loans to persons often not really manual scavengers, for low skill, low wage
alternatives, ignoring factors of "habitation, cluster, aptitude, gender and
motivation". The gravest lapse was that the scheme never used the law that
outlawed the occupation. "The law could have been invoked to ensure that the
condition and circumstance of occupational entrapment were not created". In
15 years, hardly a single person has been prosecuted for employing manual
scavengers. State agencies themselves persist in violating this law.
* The law and the court *

 In the public sector unit, the Kolar Gold Mines, not far from Bangalore,
the Andolan established that it indeed had 245 community dry latrines, with
2,900 toilet seats, yet no public officials were punished. It even reported
two dry latrines in the court of a civil judge in Nizamabad, employing one
part time manual scavenger. The Andolan petitioned the court for its
demolition, since it was outlawed. The learned District Judge refused to
order the demolition of the dry latrines, and instead chose to give notice
for "severe action" against the manual scavenger for his "highly
objectionable… misconduct" in joining the volunteers of the petitioner
organisation.

Vinod Dom has scavenged from the age of 10. He tells the Supreme Court, "I
do not like this work, and people also hate me. I cannot do this work
without consuming alcohol. Shopkeepers do not give us water and tea in
glasses and even serve us food on leaves. They wash the money we give them".
He is determined not to bring his child into this profession.

Despite an uncaring State and disused law, activists of the Andalon are
determined to realise their dream one day — of securing the promise of the
Constitution, of equal human dignity, regardless of their birth, for all
citizens of this land, which continues to be denied to more than a million
dalits.

*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ *

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