New Delhi: Many states make "tall claims" that there are no manual scavengers and nil insanitary latrines there, but these are "far from the truth," was an observation made during a workshop organised by the NHRC, officials said on Monday.
The Commission, therefore, has recommended that accountability must be fixed in case of "wrong reporting" by the authorities concerned about the number of manual scavengers in any region of the country, they said.
"It was strongly felt at an NHRC-organised regional workshop on manual scavenging that many states make tall claims that they have zero manual scavengers and nil insanitary latrines but these are far from the truth," the rights panel said in a statement.
Advocating the broadening of the definition of manual scavenging to cover other types of hazardous cleaning or enactment of a new law for hazardous cleaning, the National Human Rights Commission has also recommended that a "penal section" may be put in the law to prevent discrimination and harassment faced by the children of manual scavengers and women manual scavengers.
Some of the other important recommendations, which the Commission is sending to the authorities concerned in the Centre and states, including Union ministries of Home Affairs, Finance, Social Justice and Empowerment for implementation, include rehabilitation process of manual scavengers to be linked to schemes under which they can immediately start earning like MNREGA and revisit to see how they and their families are doing, the statement said.
READ: JD(S) to revamp party set-up to bounce back in 2023: Kumarswamy