Down The Drain - How the Swachh Bharat Mission is heading for failure : by SAGAR
ON 2 OCTOBER
2014, just months into
his job as prime minister, Narendra Modi launched the Swachh Bharat Mission,
the most ambitious cleanliness campaign in Indian history. Not by coincidence,
this was the very date of the birth anniversary of Mohandas Gandhi. Modi, in
dramatic style, appeared before a battery of cameras to sweep the courtyard of
a police station in a Dalit residential colony in central Delhi. “A clean India
would be the best tribute India could pay to Mahatma Gandhi on his
one-hundred-and-fiftieth birth anniversary in 2019,” he said, promising to
transform sanitation and waste-management in the country by that day.
Since the launch, Modi
has put enormous effort into making the Swachh Bharat Mission a flagship
programme of his rule. He spoke of it in his annual Independence Day speeches,
televised live from the ramparts of Delhi’s Red Fort, and at campaign rallies
in election-bound states. He roped in every layer of India’s vast
government - from the cabinet, through the ministries and state and district
administrations, down all the way to individual urban authorities and village
panchayats. He also imposed a cess of 0.5 percent on all taxable services to
help raise money for the campaign. Late last year, after Modi demonetised the
country’s entire supply of high-value currency notes, the replacement notes,
which millions were desperately queuing for, appeared carrying the Swachh
Bharat Mission logo—Gandhi’s signature round glasses. It was a move indicative
of the government’s incredible zeal for drawing attention to the campaign.
On the second
anniversary of the Swachh Bharat Mission came the proclamation of one of its
most touted successes. To mark Gandhi’s birth and the campaign’s founding in
2016, some of the top leaders of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party gathered at
Porbandar - Gandhi’s birthplace on the Gujarat coast. There, they declared that
Gujarat, Modi’s home state, had eradicated open defecation in all urban areas.
The minister for urban development, M Venkaiah Naidu, beamed in via live video
to hail this “interim gift” to Gandhi, which was to set the stage for the
“final gift” in 2019.
One afternoon this
January, I took a 40-minute bus ride south-east from the centre of Ahmedabad to
Maninagar, an area that thrice elected Modi as its MLA over his tenure as
Gujarat’s chief minister…
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http://www.caravanmagazine.in/reportage/swachh-bharat-mission-heading-failure