Toilet campaign in Bihar accelerated in run-up to Champaran celebrations: Govt

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

The week-long 'se Swachhagrah' campaign in Bihar, in the run-up to the centenary celebrations on April 10, accelerated toilet campaign in the state, the Union Ministry of Drinking Water and said today.

Over some people rejecting as Narendra Modi's comment that "built more than eight lakh toilets in just past one week", based on calculation of per day or per minute rate of toilet construction working backwards from these figures, the ministry said this was an incorrect interpretation of the data.

In a statement, it said that in the run-up to the event, the ministry in coordination with the government, worked to spread the message of 'swachhata' (cleanliness) by initiating the 'se Swachhagrah' campaign from April 3 to 10.

"Toilet campaign accelerated in in the run-up to the celebrations on April 10. Around 10,000 'Swachhagrahis'from different parts of the country were invited to

"They worked with 10,000 'swachhagrahis'from to trigger behavioural change in the 38 districts of the state and build momentum of the 'jan andolan' (people's movement)," the statement said.

On April 10, addressed around 20,000 'Swachhagrahis' in Motihari, district of Motivated by the address, saw 10.2 lakh toilets being built across its 38 districts, the ministry said.

Most of this activity was seen during the 'se Swachhagraha' campaign, wherein the focused activity by 20,000 'swachhagrahis' across the state lent greater momentum to the campaign, it said.

At the event in Motihari, the praised the "Swachh Bharat Abhiyan" initiatives of the government, and had said, "I have been told that Bihar, under the leadership of Nitish Kumar and (Deputy CM) Sushil Kumar Modi, has succeeded in constructing more than eight lakh toilets in just past one week we can look forward to making free of filth by Gandhi Jayanti next year."

Refuting some reports that such a rate of progress is impossible, based on the calculation of "per day" or "per minute" rate of toilet construction working backwards from these figures, the ministry said, "This is an incorrect interpretation of the data of the progress reported in "


"A twin pit toilet typically takes three to four days to construct, and this activity happened in parallel across approximately 34,000 villages in Dividing the total toilets constructed in this period (March 14 10, 2018) by the number of villages in Bihar, this works out to 1.1 toilet constructed per day per village, which is easily doable.

"To calculate a per minute rate of these toilets is therefore misleading, as it incorrectly assumes construction of all toilets in one village sequentially," the ministry clarified.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, April 12 2018. 20:05 IST