Hyderabad : Peeing in the open

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Hyderabad, March 7: Relieving oneself in public places is equivalent to stripping in public and should be made a punishable offence, a Hyderabad-based NGO said in petitions submitted to the National Women’s Commission and the Andhra Pradesh State Human Rights Commission.

Ms Kanthi Kanan, founder of the Right to Walk Foundation that filed the petition, further stated that urinating in public places — footpaths, near bus stands and even main roads — is not only a public nuisance, it also causes embarrassment and humiliation to women.

“Women have to turn their heads the other way or cover their faces with their sari pallus or chunnis to avoid embarrassment…The Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation has failed to check the menace,” Ms Kannan told this correspondent. Her petition to the human rights commission highlights a citizen’s right to walk unhindered on a clean footpath.

The failure of the GHMC to address the problem constitutes a violation of a citizen’s fundamental rights to education, work, an adequate standard of living, and freedom of movement and residence, she said.

The president of the Progressive Organisation of Women, Ms V. Sandhya, said that the onus is put on women to try and get past a man who is openly urinating in public. “A law needs to be brought with stringent punishment to put an end to the anti-social act,” she said.

The GHMC commissioner, Dr Sameer Sharma, says fining people “did not work” so “now we are identifying all roads where public toilets and urinals must be constructed.

Source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com/hyderabad/zip-pee-open-‘stripping’-128

Filed in: Articles • Wednesday, March 10th, 2010
 

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The Right to Walk Foundation is a Hyderabad based NGO campaigning for pedestrian rights. It is registered society under the Andhra Pradesh Registration Act, 2001 and the registration number is 468 of 2008. The Foundation takes its root from the shared concern that the GHMC had failed to provide the common man with a wide enough footpath; free of encroachments, stench and garbage to walk on and from the fact that to-date, there has been no clear-cut focus on problems faced by pedestrians in the city or measures to solve the same.