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Five years ago, Shetty Gondana Halli in Karnataka’s Tumakuru district had just eight toilets for 1,243 houses. But since then the number of toilets has increased to 400, thanks to the efforts of one woman.
A native of Bantwal town in Dakshina Kannada district, 30-year-old Bhavya Rani first came to the village in 2009 to attend a wedding.
By next year, she had moved to the tiny village. Before she knew it, she had spent one and half years explaining to people the importance of having a toilet.
Bhavya claims that lack of an ambassador for Swachha Bharat for Karnataka has also affected the awareness levels among people. In the last decade in Karnataka, the state government has been different from the ruling party at the centre. When the Congress-led UPA was at the centre, the ruling BJP in the state did little to promote the Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan, which was perceived as associated with the Congress. Now, too, same attitude prevails with the Swachch Bharat Abhiyan, she says.
But she too learned to listen to what the villagers had to say. Extended conversations with villagers has taught her that it wasn’t only the women who find it dangerous to defecate outside in the fields.
Bhavya claims that has spent around Rs 3 lakh from her own money to help villagers pay for the expenses of constructing a toilet. Up to 2012, the cost of building one toilet was about Rs 6,000, but the government funds that reach after much hassle, was only Rs 4,000, she said.
Bhavya, is currently setting up her own NGO called Shine India, which would work on rural development with a special focus on water and sanitation in Karnataka.
(This article has been published in collaboration with The News Minute.)
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