Filmworld
Vidya Balan campaigns for sanitation in UP, Bihar

Lucknow, Aug 25
Bollywood actress Vidya Balan,
who is the national sanitation brand ambassador, along with with Uttar
Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav flagged off an initiative titled
"Changing Behaviour: Creating Sanitation Change Leaders" here on
Tuesday.
The project, which aims to make 100 villages in the
country's most populous state open defecation free, is backed by RB
(formerly known as Reckitt Benckiser) India as part of its nationwide
'Dettol Banega Swachh India' national initiative, Pehel, a division of
Shri Puranchandra Gupta Smarak Trust that has been actively involved in
awareness generation and the state government.
"For the past two
years, I have dedicated myself towards raising awareness around
importance of hygiene and to stop open defecation. I am really proud to
be a part of this campaign which is taking a different route of engaging
with stakeholders and creating change leaders at community level to
bring about this behaviour change," Vidya said in a statement.
Through
the initiative, the program will reach out and work closely with
Panchayati Raj Institutions members, natural and faith-based leaders,
Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs), Aanganwadi Workers (AWWs)
and mothers to drive a positive behaviour towards sanitation practices.
It
will include various activities like training of Panchayati Raj
Institutions members using toolkits, exposure tours, sanitation chaupal,
capacity building of frontline health workers through game shows and
folk shows for sensitizing mothers.
The progress will be
monitored at each step to track the progress and achievements of change
leaders will be recognised across these 100 villages in the state's
Varanasi, Kannauj and Etawah districts.
The campaign was
launched with the involvement of dignitaries like veteran
actor-politician Shatrughan Sinha and Jack Sim, founder, World Toilet
Organization among many others.
"We have a dedicated initiative
targeting school children, we believe it is equally important to educate
and encourage communities to adopt healthier hygiene and sanitation
practices to create a positive impact on the society they live in. By
the end of this campaign, we aim to help these 100 villages in Uttar
Pradesh become Open Defecation Free," said RB's regional director, South
Asia, Nitish Kapoor.
According to National Sample Survey Office
(NSSO) and World Health Organisation (WHO), over 600 million Indians
have no access to toilets.
The proportion is worse in rural India - where 68 percent of rural households don’t have their own toilets.













