Migration_Delhi

In India, fight against corona is a fight for water, against inequality

In the country, 7 percent of the population are without even a basic water supply close to home.  About 81 percent rural Indians don’t have a tap connection at home.

Indians woke up very late to the threat of corona pandemic, in the first week of March. The first thing that people were advised to do was wash hands with soaps or liquid hand wash agents. Alcohol-based sanitizers that anyway is a luxury for most Indians, vanished from the market within no time. While soaps come at an affordable price, the liquid hand wash remains a dream for majority of Indians.  The need therefore narrows down to that 5-rupee or 10-rupee soaps. 

Most Indians perhaps can buy a soap, that is said to be no less effective than a liquid hand wash in cleaning hands, but there is another thing that determines who can afford a hand wash and who cannot.  That’s water!

The great water divide

Access to quality water at doorsteps divides the nation like nothing else.  And as the summer sets in this divide grows.  With handwashing at the core of our fight against Corona virus, water really determines who is more vulnerable and who is less. 

The segment of population, the relatively privileged class, that are under lockdown in their homes with tap water connection and ability to buy groceries, soaps, hand wash at ease, have so far nothing to worry.  The only worry is they are now using at least twenty to forty times more water in washing their hands than they normally used to do. 

We have been advised, for good of us, to wash our hands each time we touch a surface, a door handle, go out to get groceries, medicines, vegetables; each time we do almost anything.  The expert advice is to wash hands with soap or liquid hand wash for at least 20-30 seconds each time. 

That means we need to use at least 2 litres of water per wash.  With a minimum of 20 washes a day, a person requires at least 40 litres water per day in a country that is striving hard to provide 55 litres per person per day of tap water by 2024.  Even if someone uses water judiciously and does not waste a single drop, the required amount is still too high.

The hand wash is therefore a luxury for most of the villagers and slum dwellers who do not have a water supply at doorstep. Storage is another issue for the common villager and slum dweller.

In the country, 7 percent of the population are without even a basic water supply close to home.  About 81 percent rural Indians don’t have a tap connection at home. They bring water from some source outside, between a few metres to several kilometres away, and store that for the day’s consumption. And what is stored, many often not more than a few buckets, is normally carried by the female members of the families, as a general tradition of India goes. 

Handwashing among these sections of the society, both in rural and urban areas, is therefore practically limited to one or two times.  And most of them are not privileged to have soaps.  Some wash their hands with detergent cakes and powders, soil and ash. The protocol, the warnings, don’t matter to them.  They don’t have the resources.  Government supports have been useful, though not sufficient.  With no income at sight, perhaps for months together, no one wants to invest in soaps.  To some whom I talked, they feel they can survive the crisis if they are at home and have basic food stock.  Many who use public water sources to meet their daily chores are not aware of the restrictions to use public bathing ghats, bore-wells, open wells and other sources.  These sources, no matter how safe they are as defined under Census guidelines, are not safe at these times especially when the water is still, drying up due to summer, and being used by several people at one time. 

At these challenging times, we are reminded with more emphasis, that these are the sources that meet water needs – for daily chores – of majority of rural India.  Even a huge chunk of urban poor depend on these to bathe, wash their hands after and before food, after using a toilet, cleaning utensils, washing clothes, so on and so forth.  

Migrants on road

Then there is the new segment of marginalised people created by COVID19: the migrants.  Millions of migrant workers, who could not get sufficient time to prepare to return back their homes after the lockdown was announced, have very limited access to water. 

One would be moved by the scenes of miseries faced by these people, treated as second grade citizens of the country. They were seen carrying their children on their shoulders, walking down hundreds of kilometres with no food and money to buy anything. 

At some places they have been provided food and water and at another places they have been unwelcomed guests, beaten up and tortured by police. After initial confusions, governments have certainly started to act to help them.  Civil society has also come to their rescue.  However, one thing is sure: they are not washing their hands.  They don’t have access to water.  The Supreme Court has already intervened and has asked states to provide proper shelter, food, clean drinking water and sanitation facilities to migrants who are being debarred to go back to their homes. 

In general, water provisioning on the highways and public places even for rich tourists is so poor. 

Everyone of us who travel on road for work or during vacations has to buy bottled water.  That’s normal times.  During such unprecedented time of crisis, the shops are closed and even if they were open the migrants on the road had no money to buy water.  I saw the interview of a man who had just 3 rupees at hand and had set his foots for a journey of about 400 kilometres with his little kid on his shoulder.  Another person said buying one bottle of water would mean dispensing with 10 percent of the daily wage he earns.  He does not have the earning anymore.  The factory owner gave him 500 rupees, out of his thousands of rupees wage that was due, as an emergency amount to flee. Though not all of them had to go through the inhuman experience of being sprayed chlorinated water, not getting safe water on way or where they are being settled is no less of a crisis. 

Hand wash is parked for some other time.  30 percent of all migrants travelling their homes might be carrying the risk of corona virus, the centre had informed the Supreme Court.  After this states have been asked to shelter migrants and not let them move anymore.  Governments have made many provisions to supply food and water but many complaints from the field remain.

Half of the country now faces water crisis and the situation is getting worse by the year.  If pandemics like this increase in their frequencies and intensities, which may actually happen because we have already damaged our natural defence to an irreparable extent, water, our frontline defence against such crisis may fail us in more deadly way than what we experience now.  And the poor and marginalised will be eliminated first.  Let’s conserve our rivers, our water bodies, our natural forests, our creeks, our mangroves, our lakes so on and so forth. Let’s end the water divides. It’s already late.

Ranjan Panda

Ranjan Panda

Ranjan Panda, popularly known as Water Man of Odisha & Climate Crusader, was awarded with first “Green Hero” in Dec 2010 by NDTV, received it from the President of India.Recently he was also profiled as “Odisha’s Conservation Master” by Hindustan Times. Very recently, recognized as ‘Mahanadi River Waterkeeper’ by the New York based global ‘Waterkeeper Alliance'. Having about two and half decades of experience in leading several environmental conservation and human rights initiatives in the state of Odisha and in India.