Pipelines Of Deadly Disease: India’s Failing Urban Water Systems
The distressing deaths of several people in Indore and a wave of typhoid infections in Gujarat’s Gandhinagar have been linked to an old and familiar scourge—contaminated municipal water supply. As city dwellers know, sewage intrusion into drinking water is common in India when water pressure dips and pathogens infiltrate the supply. The pollution unleashes several ailments, notably acute diarrhoeal disease, typhoid, hepatitis, gastroenteritis and meningitis.
Safe drinking water remains elusive
Safe drinking water has remained elusive for millions, producing the perverse effect of making India the world’s fastest-growing bottled water market. That this is the state of a life-sustaining public good in the world’s most populous nation is an indictment of development policies.
Indore case........© Free Press Journal
