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Meet Mr Poo - India's anti-public defecation mascot from Unicef

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You sure its only the Biharis? I always hear people blame everything on them....why are they so different as compared to the rest of you? What ticks in that mind of theirs? :unsure:

You cant imagine the situation in there.Those idotic politicians except Nitish dstroyed that states
,not only Biharis ,there is around 7 to 8 states in North India that house half of our gigantic population
 
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Biharis in the army on the other hand are fanatically disciplined :D I am sure it will be the same case in your army as well. In civilian life they are so different. :) Again, of course there are exceptions, but unfortunately this has become a trend now.
You cant imagine the situation in there.Those idotic politicians except Nitish dstroyed that states
,not only Biharis ,there is around 7 to 8 states in North India that house half of our gigantic population
I am no expert on India so whatever you guys say I will buy it as truth.....
 
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And those states house and BIMARU house more than half of the 125 crore people that is why you got 600 million math.
Actually the UNICEF's method is slightly unfair for places like ours. If you impose a Western standard on village folks, results will be skewed. After all a village in rural Birmingham is not the same as Gorakhpur.

They count even occasional emergency poo as a point. For example, toilet is in use and a child needs to go to school and needs to pee. There goes the family into the list of violaters in the UN books. The lists come every 4 years - seen them. The families tick happily - in the hope of getting AID from the UN! They themselves inflate the number.

The real numbers are also huge but nowhere as large as mentioned by the UN.
 
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I am no expert on India so whatever you guys say I will buy it as truth.....
Biharis have been spoilt by their leaders. From the beginning of our independence the Bihari and UP leaders have been incompetent or/and casteist/mullah/etc idiots. They need a generation of good leadership to get back in the mainstream. The standards have itself fallen.

And this Bihar was once the house of Nalanda University - the premier Buddhist education center in ancient times. The name Bihar itself comes from Vihara (place of education/enlightenment).
 
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Actually the UNICEF's method is slightly unfair for places like ours. If you impose a Western standard on village folks, results will be skewed. After all a village in rural Birmingham is not the same as Gorakhpur.

They count even occasional emergency poo as a point. For example, toilet is in use and a child needs to go to school and needs to pee. There goes the family into the list of violaters in the UN books. The lists come every 4 years - seen them. The families tick happily - in the hope of getting AID from the UN! They themselves inflate the number.

The real numbers are also huge but nowhere as large as mentioned by the UN.

Sometimes these people just dont even carry out the investigations/ examine the facts properly, if you recall the thread on ease of doing business report, and look at the terrible shoddy way in which the report on India was compiled.
 
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:blink: what aid can pooping outside get you?! :blink::
None. :omghaha:

But for the half literate simple folk(literacy is improving rapidly in Bihar) they believe they will get something. Lalu (their ex CM even gave notes to voters in the election booth (!) and was apprehended. The attitude of the people has been damaged considerably.

Sometimes these people just dont even carry out the investigations/ examine the facts properly, if you recall the thread on ease of doing business report, and look at the terrible shoddy way in which the report on India was compiled.
Not surprised. Even the World Bank report was flawed and is being challenged by India. The UN report has no legal/business implications and hence will remain ignored. :(
 
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People defecate in the open because they are POOR and do not have money to build toilets.

Its not enough to have four walls with a commode, you also need RUNNING WATER and a SEWAGE pipeline to carry the sewage away, A treatment plant to treat the sewage so that its not dumped into the river.

Buying a Mobile costs only 1000 bucks.

It is pathetic to see Indians make fun of poverty. You grow up without toilets for 20 years it becomes difficult to adjust with a toilet.

UN would have done wonders if it had used the money to build a network of water pipeline and underground sewage lines to the houses of poor people.

But, NO, they choose to shame these people for being poor and for being denied basic human rights like running water. They want to spend that money in making a video and songs about their poverty inspired condition :sick:
 
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dancing pile of poo is the smelly mascot of a UNICEF campaign highlighting a major sanitation challenge in India: half of the country doesn’t use toilets.

“Take poo to the loo,” is the catchy refrain of a graphic animated music video in which oversized piles of anthropomorphized poo terrorize a town and dance to a techno beat before being successfully flushed away. The pulsing song, which incorporates sounds of farts and toilets flushing, was composed and sung by Shri Sriram, a British-Indian musician who has written music for high-profile projects like Ang Lee’s Oscar-winning film Life of Pi.

The blunt public service announcement is tackling a social taboo head-on.

More than 620 million people in India don’t use toilets, according to UNICEF India. On a daily basis, people who defecate in the open leave 65 million kilograms of poo that isn’t disposed of by a sewage system.

“It’s a really major problem that is one of those things that people don’t want to talk about,” said David Morley, the president and CEO of UNICEF Canada.

“You’re either going to feel squeamish about it or not going to talk about it — or don’t even want to say the word poo,” he said.

All of that exposed human feces creates a major public health hazard. It contaminates drinking water in community wells, which causes diarrhea and worm infections in children. That in turn makes them more vulnerable to malnutrition, which plagues almost half of all children in India, according to UNICEF India.

The Poo2Loo campaign aims to change social norms toward outdoor defecation and encourage Indians to speak out against the lack of sanitation facilities in rural parts of the country. Since the effort started last November, more than 100,000 people have signed a pledge for a “poo-free nation.”

“The cheekiness of the campaign is catching people’s interest,” Morley said.

The problem is twofold. For the poorest 20 per cent of Indians, toilets simply aren’t available. Access is particularly scarce in rural India, where almost 70 per cent of the population has no access to toilets, according to UNICEF India.

Across the country, almost 28 million students do not have toilet facilities in their schools, which reduces school attendance and performance.

Adolescent girls are particularly likely to drop out because their school may not have adequate sanitation facilities. UNICEF India says the country is making progress: in 2012, 72 per cent of schools in India had separate toilets for girls, up from only 37 per cent in 2006.

But the issue goes beyond a lack of infrastructure. Because of cultural norms, people don’t always use latrines even when they are available, Morley said.

“We have to do behaviour change as well,” Morley said. “It seems obvious to us, but it’s sort of like (not) smoking or seatbelts seem obvious to us as well — there were behaviour campaigns that had to happen.”

The Poo2Loo campaign also includes an interactive online map for Indians to report spots where they’ve seen human excrement.

At the current rate of progress, India will not meet the sanitation target of the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals until 2054, according to UNICEF India. Morley said campaigns like Poo2Loo aim to speed up that progress.

Watch the video of the “Poo Song” if you dare, full of gross animations, sound effects and colourful descriptions of poo:
Will a dancing pile of poo flush out India’s sanitation problem? | Toronto Star



Actually I dont know your intentiions .But I can say some facts.
We have lose our respects to this UN and its auxillaries.They cant do even a jack when some first world nation invade some sovereign nations in Asia.
We acknowledge that it is problem in here and mostly confine in North India .But others dont need to concern about it because this cant create any so called secutity problem for so called first world nations like ISIS or AlQeada .Or we meant that it is not their fucking business.We can find a lot of problems in West nations also.

But we dont interested in that because good people only care about their own nation not some other nations.


I posted this for not trolling.
But cultures are different in different parts of the world.So one should take cate on themselves not others.
 
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If one looks at the condition of these govt built toilets in public places, no one would use them. One would be shitting and vomiting together. Building them is one thing but maintaining them is totally different.
So people prefer going outside rather than using these cr@p buckets.
 
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Another funny fact in this regard is this - many of the families claiming to poop outside actually don't.

Why?

Because when you claim you don't have proper facilities, there is a chance the auditor may not check your house(logistical constraint). In that case you come under the Central schemes - you will benefit. What many do is this - they will ask the Govt to build a toilet about 100 meters from their home (!) in the middle of the agricultural field. After a month, they will replace the toilet with a pump and get a permanent enclosure. :D

Some people sell the toilets themselves - brand new stuff and get some little money. :hitwall:

Even Central Govt funded housing schemes for slum dwellers are misused. Many slum dwellers rent the very houses they get from the Government and go back to their slums. Additional income plus advantage of being close to the place of work.

Of course the Govt also needs to get some blame. They build without considering the requirements. Apartments are contructed about 20 kms from their place of work for example. So they just build a new slum close to their workplace and rent the apartment(!)
 
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If one looks at the condition of these govt built toilets in public places, no one would use them. One would be shitting and vomiting together. Building them is one thing and maintaining them is totally different.

Exactly. I shudder to use public rest rooms in India. The paid one's are marginally better, but the very thought of using one everyday for the rest of my life makes me suicidal.

They rarely have running water.
 
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If one looks at the condition of these govt built toilets in public places, no one would use them. One would be shitting and vomiting together. Building them is one thing but maintaining them is totally different.
So people prefer going outside rather than using these cr@p buckets.
This is actually one of the major reasons for the failure of the Bihar sanitation project.

Toilets are there. But for that running water is needed. For water to come to the taps and the flush to work you need pumps. For pumps to work you need good electricity. And that's where Bihar fails.

Without proper and steady supply of electricity a hundreds toilets is as good as nothing.
 
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Another funny fact in this regard is this - many of the families claiming to poop outside actually don't.

Why?

Because when you claim you don't have proper facilities, there is a chance the auditor may not check your house(logistical constraint). In that case you come under the Central schemes - you will benefit. What many do is this - they will ask the Govt to build a toilet about 100 meters from their home (!) in the middle of the agricultural field. After a month, they will replace the toilet with a pump and get a permanent enclosure. :D

Some people sell the toilets themselves - brand new stuff and get some little money. :hitwall:

Even Central Govt funded housing schemes for slum dwellers are misused. Many slum dwellers rent the very houses they get from the Government and go back to their slums. Additional income plus advantage of being close to the place of work.

Of course the Govt also needs to get some blame. They build without considering the requirements. Apartments are contructed about 20 kms from their place of work for example. So they just build a new slum close to their workplace and rent the apartment(!)

Nonsense. Such cases are RARE.

Nowadays no one wants to live in a slum. Their children go to schools and colleges and are ashamed to live in a slum with no running water and open sewage.

If given a chance everyone would want to live in a pucca house with a toilet in it and running water.
 
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Exactly. I shudder to use public rest rooms in India. The paid one's are marginally better, but the very thought of using one everyday for the rest of my life makes me suicidal.

They rarely have running water.
They should stop using those desi phyenile and acid to clean up them. Every govt office stinks of that.
 
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