This Article is From Jul 05, 2019

India Will Be Open Defecation Free This Year: Finance Minister In Budget

Budget 2019: Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman also proposed to expand the Swachh Bharat mission to undertake sustainable solid waste management in every village, harnessing latest technology.

India Will Be Open Defecation Free This Year: Finance Minister In Budget

Union Budget 2019: 9.6 crore toilets have been constructed since October 2, 2014.

New Delhi:

India will be made open-defecation free (ODF) on October 2, 2019, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Friday. "I am happy and satisfied to report that India will be made Open Defecation Free on October 2nd, 2019, per the dream of Prime Minister Narendra Modi," Ms Sitharaman said while presenting Union Budget 2019-20 in Lok Sabha. Ms Sitharaman also proposed to expand the Swachh Bharat Mission to undertake sustainable solid waste management in every village, harnessing latest technology.

"9.6 crore toilets have been constructed since October 2, 2014. More than 5.6 lakh villages have become open defecation free. We have to build on this success. I propose to expand the Swachh Bharat Mission to undertake sustainable solid waste management in every village, harnessing the latest technology," she said amid desk thumping by lawmakers of treasury benches.

The Economic Survey 2018-19 which Ms Sitharaman tabled in Parliament on Thursday outlined the progress made in the mission that was initiated in 2014 to achieve universal sanitation coverage by October 2, 2019.

The Swachh Bharat Mission is one of the largest cleanliness drives in the world and is also an attempt to initiate behavioural change.

"Through Swachh Bharat Mission, 99.2 per cent of rural India has been covered in the last four years. Since October 2014, over 9.5 crore toilets have been built all over the country and 564,658 villages have been declared open-defecation free (ODF)," says the survey.

As on 14 June 2019, 30 States and Union Territories are 100 per cent covered with an individual household latrine (IHHL). The Swachh Bharat Mission has significantly improved health outcomes," the report says.

The mission has also helped reduce diarrhea and malaria among children below five years, stillbirth and low birth weight (newborn with weight less than 2.5 kgs).

"This effect is particularly, pronounced in districts where IIHL coverage was lower is 2015," adds the survey.

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