Now toilets to help reduce human-elephant conflict (Kolkata, India)

Author(s)

New Indian Express

Date Published

West Bengal has evolved a rather unique solution to growing human-elephant conflicts (HECs) — constructing toilets so that villagers don’t have to defecate in the open and face the wrath of the jumbos.

This has now become a thrust area for Forest Department officials to tackle HECs, particularly in the southern part of the state, which is a hub for such aggression.
Although Bengal harbours only two percent of India’s wild elephant population (around 30,000 jumbos in the country), they are believed to be responsible for over 20 percent of the total human deaths.
Open defecation is one of the concerns flagged by officials in West Midnapore district, where accidental deaths do occur when villagers, who come to relieve themselves in the wee hours, find themselves face to face with pachyderms in the forests bordering their hamlets.
Range officers are generating awareness and pushing for construction of toilets under the state’s Nirmal Bangla mission to transform all the hamlets to Open Defecation Free (ODF) villages by October 2, 2019.
“We are working in a concerted manner so that the Nirmal Bangla Scheme is implemented involving Divisional Forest Officers (DFO) so that all villages close to forests have toilets,” Chief Wildlife Warden and Principal Chief Conservator of Forests Pradeep Vyas told IANS.
The state government recently gave the green signal to create a new division in West Midnapore district in view of frequent elephant attacks.
Bankura and West Midnapore account for the maximum number of HECs.
In 2015-2016, 108 people were killed and 95 injured by wild elephants in the state. Fourteen elephants have been killed in retaliation.
In 2016, a rogue tusker was shot down in the forests of southern Bengal as a “last resort” as per a decision of the state government.
Though there has been a “sizable decrease” in human deaths over the year, Vyas said integration of development initiatives with environment protection is necessary. And toilets are part of the deal.
“There are several deaths that happen early in the morning when people go out to the fringes of villages to defecate. Out of 18 human deaths (mostly accidental) in 2016 in West Midnapore, four or five can be attributed to open defecation. 
We are spreading the message among people to avoid this habit and at the same time pushing for toilet construction in all houses,” Midnapore Divisional Forest Officer R.N. Saha told IANS.
Toilet construction coverage is close to 60 percent in the district.
“Among the 10.17 lakh (1.017 million) households in the district, 4.12 lakh (412,000) are yet to get access,” Dibyendu Sarkar, Commissioner in the Panchayat and Rural Development Department, told IANS.
Compounding the issue is the nearly year-round stay of the jumbos, which arrive from neighbouring Jharkhand.
Elephants were abundant in the dense sal forests of the erstwhile Midnapore District as early as 1900. The population dwindled and became very small by mid-1980s due to loss of forest cover and depletion of food, a paper authored by forest official Subhamay Chanda says.