Manual Scavenging: Is It Really Banned?: Initiatives
Manual Scavenging: Is It Really Banned?: Initiatives
INITIATIVES
The Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment will amend the law for
making machine cleaning mandatory, whereas the Ministry of Housing and
Urban Affairs has launched the Safaimitra Suraksha Challenge.
Amending the Law: Introduction of ‘The Prohibition of Employment as
Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation (Amendment) Bill,
2020’ as a part of Social Justice and Empowerment Ministry’s National
Action Plan.
The Bill makes following important changes:
Way Forward
Proper Identification: States need to accurately enumerate the workers
engaged in cleaning toxic sludge.
Empowering Local Administration: With Swachh Bharat
Mission identified as a top priority area by the 15th Finance Commission,
and funds available for smart cities and urban development providing for a
strong case to address the problem of manual scavenging.
Social Sentisitation: To address the social sanction behind manual
scavenging, it is required first to acknowledge and then understand how and
why manual scavenging continues to be embedded in the caste system.
Need For a Stringent Law: If a law creates a statutory obligation to provide
sanitation services on the part of state agencies, it will create a situation in
which the rights of these workers will not hang in the air.
MAYANK KHAITAN