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We Have Neither Money Nor Education: TN’s Manual Scavengers

In 1993, the government of India banned manual scavenging – the handling of human faeces directly by humans.

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The common refrain among the scheduled castes of Tamil Nadu is that they are forced to take up manual scavenging as, unlike upper caste people, they are neither educated nor have the money to invest in a business.

In 1993, the government banned manual scavenging – the handling of human faeces directly by humans. In 2013, it also banned the handling of human excreta in any form by expanding the definition of the term to include people who descend into manholes to unclog blocked drainage or to clean septic tanks.

However, in Tamil Nadu people of the Chakliyar, Domban, Parayar, Koaravan castes continue to do this work.

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Manual Scavengers Limited by Lack of Other Opportunities



In 1993, the government of India banned manual scavenging – the handling of human faeces directly by humans.
Dalits continue to bear the brunt of socially declared reservation in manual scavenging across the state. (Photo: iStockphoto)

Thirty-nine-year old Koppaiya’s life is a summary of the problem and the contradictions of the system. Belonging to the Chakliyar caste, he works both under private contractors hired by the Chennai Corporation to clean the city’s clogged sewerage system and also cleans septic tanks in private houses.

He says that cleaning of septic tanks is the only work he knows.

Unlike people of the upper caste, we are not educated and do not have money to start our own business. So we are forced to continue to do what our fathers were doing.

Koppaiya, Sanitation Worker

Like other sanitation workers who end up doing manual scavenging, Koppaiya too is exposed to health risks and even a threat to his life.

The gases inside the septic tank are very harmful. Our eyes burn and they cause skin allergies. It can also cause breathing problems.

Koppaiya

For 32-year-old Zechariah, the profession has, in a manner of speaking, passed from father to son.

My father Lazar suffered from tuberculosis for 10 years and died in 1996 because he did this work. At the age of 17, I also started working as a sewage worker and have been doing it for 15 years now.

Zechariah, Sanitation Worker & Resident of Tambaram

Sewage workers earn between Rs 300 and Rs 600 for cleaning one septic tank. In a month they would be called to clean between four and six septic tanks, meaning that their earnings will not exceed Rs 3,000. Many of them also do domestic work and take up clerical jobs in hospitals when they are not hired by contractors for cleaning septic tanks.

In Madurai district’s Usilampatti village, Amutha’s story is slightly different.

Municipal Corporation officials come and threaten us not to go for sewage work but what other work can we go for?

Amutha, Sanitation Worker

Her husband died in a septic tank, but their son, Paalapati continues to do the work in Chennai to feed their family.

To add insult to injury, the children of sewage workers are ridiculed for their parents’ work.

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Pushing For Implementation of Ban

In order to remind the state governments that they are supposed to put an end to this practice and also implement a 2013 Supreme Court order regarding the rehabilitation and compensation of manual scavengers, the Safaikaramchari Andolan has organised a 125-day Bhim Yatra.

The yatra, which began on 10 December last year, will cover 500 districts across the country and culminate on 13 April.

Currently in its Chennai leg, the Andolan urged the state government to pay Rs 10 lakh to the families of all deceased workers since 1993 and cash payment of Rs 40,000 as immediate relief to individual manual scavenging workers.

Time and again, deadlines and dates were set to end manual scavenging. Nothing changed. Manual scavenging is a manifestation of untouchability and caste oppression and is followed shamelessly till date.

Samuel Velankanni, Tamil Nadu Convenor of the Andolan to The News Minute

The law must be followed, but it must be supplemented with the provision of alternatives for people like Koppaiya, who say, ‘We are not educated and this is the only work that we know so we tend to do this for supporting our families.’

(The author Pheba Mathew works with The News minute.)

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Topics:  Tamil Nadu   Manual Scavenger 

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