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How India is public shaming people into using toilets

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A woman brushes the ground near new toilet in Katra village in Badaun, Uttar Pradesh. Photo: EPA
The Washington Post

The patrols started at dawn and the villagers scattered, abandoning their pails of water to avoid humiliation and fines.

Every morning in this district in rural India, teams of government employees and volunteer “motivators” roam villages to publicly shame those who relieve themselves in the open. The “good-morning squads” are part of what one official called “the largest behavioural-change programme anywhere in the world”.

This is Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s flagship Clean India initiative in mission mode.

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Indian schoolchildren talk in front of a poster with a quote from Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Photo: AFP
Indian schoolchildren talk in front of a poster with a quote from Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Photo: AFP

By October 2019, Modi has vowed, every Indian will have access to a toilet, and the country will be free of the scourge of open defecation. Since Modi came to power, more than 52 million toilets have been installed. But the trick, sanitation experts say, is getting people to use them.

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To win favour with the ruling party’s top brass, government officials have set to work, trying to outpace one another with toilet-building races and eye-catching information campaigns. Many are resorting to controversial public shaming tactics.

“This is harassment,” said one villager, Ranjit Gonjare. “The person becomes the laughingstock of the village.”

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