Slums in Mumbai .. and Its Relation With City: - Presented By: Nitesh Sasidharan
Slums in Mumbai .. and Its Relation With City: - Presented By: Nitesh Sasidharan
- PRESENTED BY :
NITESH SASIDHARAN
INTRODUCTION:
Definition of slum by UN Habitat:
A slum Is an area that combines to various
extents the following characteristics:-
Inadequate access to safe water.
Overcrowding.
In the later part of the 20th century, slums exploded worldwide, becoming a cause
for serious concern among humanitarian organizations, as an alarmingly high
number of people live in regions which could be considered slums. In Mumbai,
India, for example, an estimated about 55% of the population lives in slums.
HOW DO SLUMS FORM UP?
Slums can form in several ways:
Classically, slums have emerged in existing neighbourhoods which fall upon hard times. A
slum forms as homes are slowly subdivided into cramped tenement apartments, and the
population becomes highly concentrated. At the same time, access to services like healthcare,
fresh food, and basic sanitation may start to become restricted, creating filth and squalor.
A slum can also arise from nowhere, as is the case with many of the shantytowns found in
developing nations. These slums sometimes seem to emerge overnight, compacting humanity
into filthy, densely packed areas with poorly constructed and often dangerous homes. In
campaigns against slums, many cities have forcibly evicted people from these shantytowns,
creating a ripple effect as forcibly displaced people attempt to relocate to new regions.
Most of the people who live in slums are extremely poor, and many are treated as second class
citizens by their society. Health problems tend to be very high, as a result of improper
sanitation and lack of access to basic health care. Malnutrition is another serious problem in
many slums, as is crime, which can make a slum very dangerous for its inhabitants.
GLOBAL SCENARIO OF SLUMS:
Zopadpattis (Slums)
SLUM STATISTICS :
The first official census of slums was
carried out by the State Government
in January 1976 (Government of
Maharashtra, 1995) and 902,015
huts in 2,335 pockets were identified.
More than 50 percent of squatting
was on private lands, followed by
municipal lands. While 73.6 per cent
of employment was concentrated in
the island wards they contained only
21.1 per cent of slum population.
PROFILE OF SLUMS IN 2001:
For the first time, detailed data on slum areas in the country have been
collected in the 2001 Census.
In Greater Mumbai 1,959 slum settlements have been identified with a total
population of 6.25 million, which forms 54 per cent of the total population of the
city (Census of India, 2001).
The Island City houses only 17 per cent of the slum population whereas the
western suburbs have high concentrations of slums specially in the inner western
suburbs, where there are large slums with hazy boundaries forming a continuous
area containing 58 per cent of the slum population.
Out of the total 47 per cent are located on private lands. These are located on
state government, central government, railway and municipal land. 62 per cent
of slums predominantly have dwellings made of permanent materials like brick
walls and reinforced cement roofs. 27 per cent slums have predominantly
semi-permanent structures (brick walls and tin or asbestos cement sheet roof).
ACCESS TO SERVICES:
About 49 per cent of slums have access to water supply
from shared standpipes, while 38.3 per cent have a
supply from more than one source. Remaining slums get
their water from tube wells or community standpipes.
Only 5 per cent of slums have individual taps whereas 17
slums with approximately 0.1 million inhabitants have
no water supply and have to depend on adjoining
settlements.
Sanitation in slums is very poor as 73 per cent of slums
depend on community toilets provided by the
government, 28 per cent defecate in the open, 0.7 per
cent slums have pay to use toilets managed by NGOs
and only 1 per cent of slums have individual toilets.
There is no organised system of solid waste collection
and slum residents generally dump garbage in any open
place, including lanes and railway tracks. Only in 36
slums is there an organised system of collection and
clearance.
SLUM – DWELLERS:
LIFESTYLE:
When People come to Mumbai they get squatted
wherever they could on land owned by the
government, Mumbai municipality, the railways and
on private land.
They are people who stay in two tiny rooms where a
family of about 10-16 sleep in shifts. They have no
electricity, an illegal supply of water and no toilet.
Slumdwellers have not willingly chosen their shanty
structures and unhygienic environment, but have
been driven to this option due to compelling
circumstances as they were thrown out of the
formal housing sector, the latter being unaffordable
and far beyond their income levels.
SLUM - DWELLERS
EDUCATION:
The majority of the older generation over the age of 50 had no formal
education.
The middle aged slum dwellers had completed primary school education and
the majority of slum dwellers’ children attended the nearest Municipal
Corporation school that offered free schooling.
The overall literacy rate as found in base line surveys in slums is 60 per cent
(MMRDA, 2002) which is lower than the city average.
OCCUPATION:
A significant number of formal workers are employed in the surrounding area
as guards, mechanics, labourers, drivers, teachers, clerks and government
employees.
The base-line surveys of 16,000 households for (MMRDA, 2002) Mumbai Urban
Transport Project showed that 33 per cent of the population is working, with an
average of 1.46 workers per household.
HOW THEY FORM PART OF OUR SOCIETY?
Builders have been lukewarm in the absence of any government money; and
the big developers have shown no interest.
Developers are required to find temporary accommodation for slumdwellers.
The Scheme is unacceptable to older slums. A large number contain small
cottage industries. There would be no space for such activities in the new
apartments. Moreover, many residents have built an upper storey, so their
available space already far exceeds what they would be allotted under the
Scheme.
Maintenance costs are high. Most slum-dwellers have few costs. High-rise
buildings, in contrast, require high repair and maintenance bills – anything up
to 1000 - 2000 rupees, compared with a current outlay of only 100 to 300
rupees a month.
The Scheme has caused social conflict. In many slums the required 70-per-cent
consent of the people has proved unattainable, and in some slums there have
been disputes and feuds over who speaks with the majority voice.
SOME SRA PROJECTS COMPLETED: