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Mumbai women fighting for Right to Pee want men to join campaign

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Lalit

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Yes, Right to pee definitely forms part of the human rights of every human including the women!

[h=1]Mumbai women fighting for Right to Pee want men to join campaign[/h] THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION

The Right to Pee campaign is calling attention to the lack of free, clean and safe public toilets for women in Mumbai.
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In the city of more than 22 million, only about one-third of the 11,000 or so pay-to-use toilets are for women.

Mumbai: Activists and charities campaigning for better access to public toilets for women in Mumbai are asking men to join the movement, saying greater gender sensitivity can solve the problem faster.
The Right to Pee campaign, a collaborative effort of 33 non-profits, is calling attention to the lack of free, clean and safe public toilets for women in Mumbai.
In the city of more than 22 million, only about one-third of the 11,000 or so pay-to-use toilets are for women.
"There is a huge disparity between facilities for men and women, largely due to the gender insensitivity of the authorities," said Supriya Sonar, an activist with the Right to Pee campaign. "Which is why we are telling men who pee in the open: you too don't have adequate facilities, so why don't you join our campaign."
The lack of adequate sanitation costs India the equivalent of more than 6 percent of its gross domestic product every year, according to non-profit Dasra, an Indian foundation promoting social change.
The issue is particularly important to slum dwellers - more than half Mumbai's population - and to those who work on construction sites and on the streets.
Public toilets for women are often dirty, with broken doors and no running water or lights. Where there are no public toilets, the search for a suitable place comes with the constant threat of sexual harassment or rape.
Women who lack access to clean, safe sanitation tend to drink less water and control their bladders for as many as 13 hours a day. This has significant, long-term effects on their reproductive, sexual and overall health, Dasra said in a report released last week.
In Mumbai, where men can often be seen urinating at street corners and near dumpsters, almost 100 sites have been identified for the construction of toilets for women.
"But nothing has been built, and the funds have lapsed," said activist Sonar, who on Monday returned an award the Mayor's office gave to the campaign last year, saying there had been no progress.
"This is about a woman's dignity," she said. "We urge the Mumbai corporation to think about that. And we urge men who pee in the open to also join this campaign to bring more pressure on the authorities."
The shortage of toilets is a nationwide issue: more than half India's adolescent girls, about 63 million, have no access to a private toilet, according to Dasra.
Girls tend to miss school for an average of six days a month because of the lack of safe toilets there, leading to almost a quarter of them dropping out of education on reaching puberty. This "sharply degrades their potential as individuals and future workers," Dasra said.
The United Nations said in a 2014 report that it was a "tragic irony" that there were more mobile phones per 100 people in India than toilets.
In economic terms, the importance of tackling the problem is that there is a return of between $3 and $34 for every dollar spent on sanitation, through reduced poverty and health costs, and higher productivity, the United Nations said.
The "Clean India Mission" launched in 2014 by Prime Minister Narendra Modi aimed to improve sanitation and increase funding for public toilets to end open defecation.
A separate $7.5 billion renovation of 20 Indian cities is under way with the aim of making them "Smart Cities" by upgrading roads, utilities and sanitation .


http://www.deccanchronicle.com/life...g-for-right-to-pee-want-men-to-join-campaign/



 
Saw yet another news-item:

[h=1]What a relief: No more New York arrests for public urination[/h] AFP

Petty offenders will no longer be arrested for minor misdeeds such as drinking or urination in public.
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Officials say the city is introducing the reform to give police more time to focus on serious crime (Photo: Twitter)

New York: New York police are loosening up -- at least when it comes to drinking alcohol and urinating on the street.
From next Monday, petty offenders will no longer be arrested or prosecuted in Manhattan for minor misdeeds such as public consumption of alcohol, public urination or putting your feet on the seat in the subway.
Officials say the city is introducing the reform to give police more time to focus on serious crime -- following an increase in homicides, gang-motivated shootings, rape and robbery in 2015.
Overall crime fell 1.7 per cent in the largest US city, but major crime rose three per cent in Manhattan in 2015, albeit up from an historic low in 2014.
"Today's reforms allow our hardworking police officers to concentrate their efforts on the narrow group of individuals driving violent crime in New York City," said Mayor Bill de Blasio.
People will be arrested for minor offences, other examples of which include littering or taking up two seats on the subway, only if there is a clear public safety reason to do so, Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance said.
The change in policy is expected to ease the burden of around 10,000 arrests otherwise being processed in the Manhattan criminal court.
America has the highest incarceration rate in the developed world, around 20 per cent of whom are awaiting trial. Officials hope the reform will prevent unnecessary jail time for low-level offenders who cannot post bail.
"By ensuring courts are not unnecessarily bogged down with minor offences committed by those who pose no threat to public safety, we help focus police and prosecutorial resources on those who commit serious crimes," said Vance.
"We enable officers to get back to patrolling, investigating and keeping our neighbourhoods safe. And by reducing unnecessary incarceration, we make our criminal justice system fairer for all New Yorkers," he added.
Crime has fallen steadily in New York city, the financial and entertainment capital of the United States, since "zero tolerance" policing was introduced in the 1990s.

 
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