
PART 2: Damoh
Damoh: When people start drinking water from dirty ponds
frequented by animals for drinking and bathing, that’s enough evidence that the
situation is critical.
Members of the Gond tribe, who are residents of Dahagaon
village under Damoh district’s Batiagarh block, a part of Bundelkhand, have
been pushed to do just that — try to survive on contaminated water.
With a population of around 800, the village has no
access to potable water, a basic amenity that the state government should have
ensured. All the six handpumps in the village, which is located around 45
kilometres from the district headquarters of Damoh, have been lying dead.
The village’s troubled waters
Bablu Gond, a resident who lives in a kachcha house and
spends half the day searching for water to take back home, has been going to a
pond frequented by dogs, pigs, cows, and goats to fill up. He’s been doing this
for so long, that it no longer even occurs to him how unhygienic it is, which
just goes to show how long the area has been making do without proper drinking
water. “We use this water for drinking and preparing food,” he shrugged.
Such dirty ponds have become multi-purpose for the
villagers, considering the lack of adequate water sources — besides using the
water for drinking and cooking, children in the village bathe in the same
stagnant waterbody, and women wash clothes, where wandering animals quench
their thirst. The water is contaminated with animal faeces, but villagers have
run out of options.
Mura, another tribal, said, “Handpumps do not work here,
and even when they used to, the water was heavily adulterated with corroded
metal. Diarrhoea and vomiting have become regular, with women and children
being the most affected.”
Pointing towards a woman filling her utensils in the pond,
Mura added, “She lost her two-year-old boy after he got sick on drinking the water.”
According to a report of the Institute of Health Metrics
and Evaluation, an independent population research centre of the University of
Washington, diarrhoea was the second biggest cause of death among children in
the age group 0-14 years in Madhya Pradesh in 2016. Nearly 36.1% children in
that age group died due to diarrhoea and respiratory tract infections in the
state that year.
Another resident, Bhagwati, said, “Most of my life has
been spent in fetching water; providing clean water is the least the sarkar
(government) can do for us!”
How deep does the crisis go?
Kamal Singh Adivasi, the sarpanch of Dalpatpura gram
panchayat under which Dahagaon falls, said, “I have approached the panchayat
and administration officers many times to complain about the lack of clean
drinking water, but they send me off with a hollow assurance every time.”
Access to clean drinking is not only the problem of
Dahagaon, Adivasi added, saying most villages in the area are facing an acute
water crisis in this sweltering summer, and yet, the local administration has been
turning a blind eye to it.
The magnitude of the problem becomes apparent when you
look at the statistics — the government itself has declared nearly 4,000
villages as drought-affected, and 120 urban local bodies across the state are
failing to provide the daily water supply to the citizens; 38 towns in the
state are getting water only every third day.
According to a report of the Central Ground Water Board
(CGWB) tabled in the Rajya Sabha, groundwater table in the state has dipped by
65%.
A CGWB analysis of water level from monitoring wells, carried
out from 2008 to 2017, showed that 59% of the wells analysed — 782 of 1,330 — showed
a decline in the water level. The same report showed that groundwater in 150
areas across 45 districts was found contaminated with an above permissible
limit of fluoride.
Yet the buck keeps getting passed
When contacted, Bharti Mishra, sub-divisional magistrate of
Patharia sub-division, said, “As of now, there are no new measures to tackle
the water crisis in the area.”
CEO of the Damoh Zilla Panchayat Girish Mishra, however,
said the village sarpanch has been directed to utilise 10% funds from the Panch
Parmeshwar scheme to provide water to the residents. “There are many remote
areas where water supply is not proper, and locals have to rely on alternative
sources,” he admitted.
On being asked whether he was aware of the situation in
Dahagaon, he said he wasn’t but would look into it.
It is, however, becoming more and more apparent that the
Congress state government is finding it hard to tackle the water crisis. The Kamal
Nath-led government on Friday (June 7) had issued an advisory through its home
department to the civil and police administration to man the major water
sources across the state to prevent untoward incidents due to the crisis.
Though calls made to P L Tantuway, local BJP MLA, went
unanswered, state BJP chief Rakesh Singh, in a series of tweets, accused the
Congress government of “failing to serve the public” as it needs police to
distribute water. “The Congress government is escaping its responsibility,
which is unfortunate,” Singh wrote in one of the tweets.
Congress media coordinator Narendra Saluja, however,
blamed scanty rainfall for the water crisis. “The situation has arisen due to poor
rainfall; no government or party can be blamed. The advisory to the police is
issued every year, there is nothing new in it. The BJP has resorted to petty
politics.”
Urban Development and Housing Minister Jaivardhan Singh said, “We are actually doing better than the BJP, as 258 urban local bodies out of 378 have been getting water daily; in 2018, the figure was 193. Also, wherever needed, we are arranging water tankers as well.”
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