Water Smartness is Vital to Embrace
the “New Normal”
In
recent times, in our fight against the Novel Corona Virus COVID-19,
the
need for staying connected and being informed has been felt more than
ever before especially in the case of rural communities in far flung
areas. Since women share majority space as frontline health workers both
in rural and urban areas, they are bearing the brunt of water scarcity.
Unclean water is the source of diseases and effects our immune system
which is vital in fighting Corona Virus. Since frequent hand wash is
critical to contain the spread of COVID-19, access to clean and
sufficient water sources is important. As per the NSO survey, in rural
areas, less than 20% have exclusive access and less than 15% have access
to public sources of water. The rest walk for miles in search of water
especially women and girls. Effective implementation of COVID-19
protocols of frequent hand wash will thus be difficult to implement
among the rural poor.
Additional water requirements to contain
COVID are impacting the rural women more than men due to the
stereotypical role that they play as primary users, providers and
managers of water in the households. In order to reduce such
disparities, we need to think of designing smart solutions. Such
solutions should be able to meet both the information needs and also the
special needs of disadvantaged women and girl children for their
domestic needs, personal needs such as menstrual hygiene and for
maintaining clean sanitation facility, besides the farm tending needs of
women
farmers.
To reduce gender disparities and to design a
gender sensitive ‘new normal’, we need to find smarter ways of
communication, newer ways of augmenting more clean water not only for COVID related preventive health measures, but health and immunity
protection in general. As part of the efforts for COVID prevention
awareness, Oxfam India has reached out to large number of people across
India using a mobile app-based training. Development Alternatives (DA)
has joined hands with Oxfam in training the field staff, frontline
health workers especially women, Panchayat level officials etc. in
Bundelkhand, one of India’s most drought prone regions and the National
Capital Region. DA has also been reaching out to women who do not have
android phones through its community radio programmes.
DA’s other efforts such as catching every
drop in the villages of Bundelkhand with the approach of “Khet ka pani
khet mein, Gaon ka pani gaon mein” is yielding results in increasing
water tables in the wells and making water available for agriculture
needs in their farm ponds. These efforts are helping the water scarce
villages to not only become water surplus but help them meet the
additional water needs. Besides this, promotion of water efficient
agricultural practices and water budgeting through water users’
associations with a focus on women representation are ensuring source
sustainability and efficient use of available water sources. Coupled
with this, we are training village youth and school children in testing
the water quality using field kits and encouraging them to display the
information on quality and quantity in their village “Panchayat Ghars”
which are the equivalent of village water dash boards. Through wall
paintings, radio and phone messages, we are building awareness on
sanitation and water handling practices to prevent diseases.
It is high time that we design gender
sensitive water policies, focus on both quality and quantity and tone
down the exploitation of water sources by agriculture, industry and
urban sectors through pricing of water, removing energy subsidies to
farmers, incentivising reduce, reuse and recycle measures with a focus
on health and safety.
■
Dr. K. Vijayalakshmi
kvijayalakshmi@devalt.org
Back to Contents
|