The power of shame in Uganda

A remote district in Uganda got 97% of its householders to install toilets with a combination of fines and societal pressure

November 18, 2017 07:38 pm | Updated December 01, 2021 06:43 am IST

A social worker explains the importance of toilets to residents of Kabale with posters.

A social worker explains the importance of toilets to residents of Kabale with posters.

Twinomujni Enock’s wife is ‘more pleasant’ with him, he says, and that makes him happy. The 45-year-old farmer grows Irish potatoes and pineapples in his one-acre farm in Kabale, in western Uganda. He sells his produce in the neighbouring sub-county, or if he’s lucky, to tourists wandering by on their way to Lake Bunyonyi or to Bwindi Impenetrable National Park to spot mountain gorillas. He makes around 100,000 shillings (around ₹1,800; UGX 1 = around INR 0.02) a month. Nothing much has changed in his life or fortunes in the past few years to affect his spouse’s equanimity. Except for one thing: “I built a latrine at home.”

In Kabale, most residents didn’t have modern toilets in their properties. The men would use the fields, while their families used the areas around their homes. To get rid of the smell, women traditionally burnt banana leaves and then cleaned up the area.

After Mr. Enock built the latrine — a tiny hole in the ground in a thin-walled cabin behind the house, which cost him UGX 1,50,000 — his wife doesn’t have to do that any more. But, Mr. Enock confesses, love for his family wasn’t his only motivation: he feared arrest or an UGX40,000 fine and worse, public shaming.

“Many other farmers were being shamed,” he says. “I didn’t want to be humiliated. In a way, I was left with no other choice.”

He admits, though, that he now takes much less time off work, as his seven children fall sick much less often.

Uganda has a population of 42 million, almost as many as Odisha. The country loses 33 children every day to diarrhoea (similar all-India figures are 328). Kabale is mostly a rural district, over 400 kilometres away from the country’s capital, Kampala.

Incomes aren’t high — the average Ugandan rural household earns around UGX 3,03,000, less than half an urban household’s UGX 7,03,000 (as per Uganda Bureau of Statistics figures for 2016–17).

But this little district, with a population of around 5,00,000 (less than that of the Mumbai suburb of Andheri East) in 1,18,878 households, has succeeded in getting 97% of them to build toilets, becoming the first in the country to declare itself open-defecation-free. Seven other districts now follow the same programme.

“The credit goes to the harsh measures we took,” says Namanya Oliver, district health officer of Kabale. First, a field survey identified households which did not have latrines. Next, offending households were sensitised to the dangers of poor sanitation, then given around three months to build a toilet. If they didn’t, the man of the house was arrested, and faced a choice between a fine, two weeks in jail, or community service. “We also put out their names in a ‘list of shame,’” Mr. Oliver says. “We even go on radio shows to announce names of people found defecating in the open or who fail to have a latrine at home.”

In the last two years, 64 households have been fined, and hundreds featured on the list.

Not everyone uses them

The battle hasn’t been won yet, though. Ensuring that everyone uses their latrine is the next challenge: actual usage is just 54%.

Allen Saturday, 41 and a mother of six, is happy the family has had a toilet since 2016. “Who likes cleaning all that up,” she asks. “I did it for so many years, then my daughters helped me.” But she isn’t sure about her husband; he’s out in their fields all day, so he must be doing his business out there.

“We are now focussing on behavioural change,” says Munduni Samuel, a government health assistant.

“We insist on making it a habit to defecate only twice, morning and night time. Our message emphasises that those who defecate more than twice are ill. We tell them to follow this for three days and the body will get used to it.”

Officials are spreading awareness about diarrhoeal deaths among children, worm infestations, and other results of poor sanitation. They are also promoting simple hand-washing techniques, like a soap bottle and water can hanging from a wooden frame; the can tips over slightly when a stick, connected to it with string, is stepped on.

They teach school children to use this jugaad hands-free handwasher, and through them, the adults.

Mr. Oliver says the district aims to achieve 100% latrine usage in a couple of years.

Top News Today

Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.