This national capital of over 16 million has 2.5 million disabled
people for whom there are a mere 100 public toilets, supposedly
designed for people with physical disabilities. But most of them are
either non-functional or serve as makeshift storehouses, a survey has
revealed.
http://www.business-standard.com/article/news-ians/who-cares-for-the-disabled-public-toilets-are-nonexistent-or-non-functional-114102600374_1.html
The year-long survey conducted by NGO Samarthyam paints a grim picture
of the access to public toilets by physically disabled people in Delhi
- and that too only in the central part of the capital.

"Never ever have the civic agencies shown concern about the needs of
persons with disabilities. The Swachh Bharat Abhiyan (Clean India
Campaign) cannot be a success till it is inclusive," Samarthyam
executive director Anjlee Agarwal told IANS while sharing the findings
of the survey.

On Oct 2, Delhi saw the launch of the Clean India Campaign by Prime
Minister Narendra Modi. From the ramparts of the Red Fort on Aug 15,
Modi had also laid stress on providing toilets to every family.

Even after 68 years of independence, the county with the world's
second largest population has the highest number of people defecating
in the open. A UN report released in May 2014 said that a staggering
597 million people in India - more than half the population - practise
open defecation.

The NGO, which works for the welfare of the disabled, conducted the
survey to check the facilities as they felt the authorities treat the
disabled as a "marginalized section." The survey was conducted by
eight females, including girls, who were all disabled.

"These 100 toilets were built in the run up to the Commonwealth Games
in 2010. You can well imagine that Delhi had no toilets for
handicapped people before 2010," Agarwal said.

"Toilets for handicapped are themselves handicapped as many are not
built keeping their special needs in the mind. Many of these were
found to be locked down. Some served as storehouses," she added.

The survey revealed that these 100 toilets are only in the central
part of the capital and are maintained by the New Delhi Municipal
Council (NDMC), one of the city's five civic bodies. This means that
other areas in Delhi, under the three municipal corporations, are not
known to have such toilets or are non-functional.

The overall picture is also quite pathetic as the survey has brought
out that there are just 1,200 public toilets in the national capital,
of which only 301 are for women.

"The building bylaws of the urban development ministry say that a
toilet cubicle for a handicapped person should not be less than 2X2.2
metres. Ironically, most of the time this has not been followed,"
Agarwal added.

"How could a wheelchair with a width of three feet enter a toilet
cubicle through a door whose width is two and a half feet," Agarwal
questioned.

"There has to be some manoeuvring space in the cubicle for a person
with special needs," she added.

The survey also found that the disabled, particularly those who were
wheel-chair bound, found it difficult to access the toilets as there
were no ramps leading up to them.

Javed Abidi, director of the National Centre for the Promotion of
Employment for Disabled People in India, wanted to know whether the
Clean India Campaign has any blueprint on the disabled.

"Swachh Bharat is indeed a good initiative, but is Narendra Modiji
alive to the needs of the disabled?" Abidi asked while speaking to
IANS.

"The toilets for disabled are only in central Delhi. Go to east Delhi
and you will know the reality. Toilets are inaccessible for normal
people, let alone the disabled," he added.

(Gaurav Sharma can be contacted at gaura...@ians.in)



-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU

Clean India Campaign: Let us also chip in!



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