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If there is a Nobel prize for fillth India will win it: Jairam Ramesh

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pkd

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If there is a Nobel prize for fillth India will win it: Jairam Ramesh

NEW DELHI: Environment and Forest Minister Jairam Ramesh, known for making forthright comments, today said if there was any Nobel Prize for dirt and *****, India would get it.

"Our cities are dirtiest cities of the world. If there is a Nobel prize for dirt and *****, India will win it, no doubt," he said at a function to release a report of TERI.

Ramesh lamented the poor facilities for disposing municipal waste in majority of the cities in the country.

The ministers' comments assume significance as the TERI report on 'Green Indian 2047' says that waste management is not given priority in local bodies.

There is poor compliance with the solid waste management rules.
 
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Yup.

India desperately needs to clean up the municipalities and make them answerable to the ***** in major cities.

But the inherent problem lies with us, Indians, who surprisingly behave very responsibly when in foreign lands, but once back home that stupid "chalta hai" attitude creeps in and lo, behold, we start littering our very own streets!

Us, Indians, need to pull up our own socks!
 
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I think its a common problem of south asia.

Though pakistani cities are slightly better, relatively clean and well managed, but its slightly better then others in the south asia, not good, requires a hell lot more to bring it to the level of satisfaction.
 
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Completely true, I been to many parts of the world and I've never seen cities as ****** as ours. I don't think we'll ever be able to fix it.
 
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I think its a common problem of south asia.

Though pakistani cities are slightly better, relatively clean and well managed, but its slightly better then others in the south asia, not good, requires a hell lot more to bring it to the level of satisfaction.

and sir...how many Indian cities have you visited?
 
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Having lived in New Delhi, I can vouch for Jairam Rahmesh's comments. However, it is less about the typical Indian mentality on dirt, and more about lack of enthusiasm in the government quarters.

Example: When I lived in Dwarka (the most organized sub-city in New Delhi), the state government put up thousands of bins across the streets of Delhi, and expected to empty them once a week. To their shock, the boxes got filled up daily basis, and soon the Municipal Corporation of Delhi lost its zeal. More than anything it is the lack of proper infrastructure in disposing of the dirt/waste that forces us to throw it all where it doesn't belong. That is the reason why the Delhi Metro stations (with no garbage bins) look as clean as any other city from a developed country, while rest of the city looks like an enormous garbage bin. People in India respect the laws, but when the government itself forces them, what can they do?
 
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and sir...how many Indian cities have you visited?

Besides the point, Indian cities are disgusting and something should be done about it. I think we just have way too many people, and way too many of those people lack common civic sense.
 
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send mustafa kamal in mombay he will fail to make it clean city as karachi.i think so.lol. any way i wanna see whole south asia like islamabadNEET AND CLEAN ORGNAIZED CITY.
 
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and sir...how many Indian cities have you visited?

Everythings is shown in Media, movies, & are also available on internet, and about me well, ive seen local pictures i have lots of friends from India.
 
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dude...Chandigarh,Mysore,pune,mohali and many more cities that i have not visited....are way better than any south asian city.
as far as Islamabad is concerned....any city that is planned and then inhabited...will be cleaner and look better...Chandigarh is one such city.
as far as Delhi and Mumbai are concerned...they are atleast a thousand years old...never been planned...and always burdened with an overbearing population...
 
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yup got to agreee with him its just simple and plain there is no running from tat we do clean our houses and keep it clean as much as possible but we garbage our surroundings
 
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Uncomfortable declaration but true. We indians keep our home clan but throw the garbage outside. We also find it demeaning to be seen walking on the road upto the garbage dump to throw our garbage - expecting sweepers to do it for us who throw it at the 1st available location.

Greater NOIDA is an example where things can happen if the authorities are up to the task. Garbage cleaning has been privatized & enforced. Roads are swept at night by trucks and things are in order.
 
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600 million lack toilets in India

MUMBAI: No one would ever call Radha Jagarya fortunate. The 45-year-old widow and her four children live on the pavement in an upmarket south Mumbai suburb, scraping a living by selling flowers to passing motorists.

But in terms of public toilet provision, the family is well-served compared with other areas, with an adequate communal block a five-minute walk away near the US Consulate and another under a busy road in the opposite direction.

In slum areas, where more than half of Mumbai lives, an average 81 people share a single toilet. In some places it rises to an eye-watering 273. Even the lowest average is still 58, according to local municipal authority figures.

Unsurprisingly, it is still common to see people squatting by roads and railway tracks or along the coast, openly defecating in the city that drives India's economy and where some of the world's richest people live.

The UN estimates that 600 million people or 55 percent of Indians still defecate outside, more than 60 years after the scrupulously clean independence leader Mahatma Gandhi first talked of the responsible disposal of human waste.

Jack Sim takes a very keen interest in such matters. As the founder and president of the World Toilet Organization (WTO), he has made it his mission to improve sanitation across the globe.

For him, India has "a lot of work to do" to improve sanitation, not just because of its impact on health and the spread of diseases like diarrhoea, which UNICEF says kills 1,000 Indian children aged under five every day.

It also tarnishes the image of a country that likes to portray itself as an emerging world economic superpower, the Singapore businessman told AFP on a visit to Mumbai, where he was promoting World Toilet Day on November 19.

In particular, Sim questioned whether the authorities in New Delhi were doing enough to provide adequate public toilet facilities for the 2010 Commonwealth Games, which will draw tens of thousands of foreign visitors.

"If you don't have good toilets to welcome tourists, they don't come and won't go to all your beautiful sites," he said.

Public toilet provision in Mumbai -- and other cities -- faces the same problem affecting housing, water and other basic services: supply cannot keep up with demand as India's population explodes.

In March, Mumbai's municipal authorities said there were 77,526 toilets in slum areas and 64,157 more were needed. Work is in progress on only 6,050.

Yet the UN's Mumbai Human Development Report 2009, published earlier this month, points out that even where public toilets exist, most have no running water, drainage or electricity, making them unhygienic and unusable.

Embarrassment means women and girls often wait all day until it is dark to go to the toilet, increasing their chances of infections and exposing them to violence or even snake bites as they seek out remote places.

Poor sanitation and the illnesses it causes cost the Indian economy 12 billion rupees (255 million dollars) a year, according to the health ministry.

Sim, who sees links between public lavatories and social development, wants the issue pushed up the political agenda, urging people to "talk more about toilets."

"People go to the toilet more often than they have sex," he said. "Everybody has to go.

"It needs to be a very nice experience. It needs to be safe, it needs to be hygienic, it must not cause problems to your health and we need to feel emotionally engaged with the toilet."

Private sector involvement could help cut the number of people in India and other developing countries who have no sanitation -- estimated at 2.6 billion -- while more schemes are needed to make open defecation socially unacceptable, he said.

In Haryana state, north India, a successful "No Toilet, No Wife" campaign has been running, urging women to turn down suitors if they cannot provide them a house with a lavatory.

"Every problem is a business," said Sim, adding there would be a benefit for the entire city and the country's economy if every slum-dweller had access to proper sanitation.

"People who are healthy are able to produce more, they get out of poverty, they get into the middle class, they move up and consume more," he said.

"Business is, I think, the fastest and the cheapest way... The private sector will come up with innovations. Let them compete to serve the poor."
 
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