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War against water privatisation

Smriti Kak Ramachandran

`There are so many models of public participation'


  • `Indian Government should draw lessons from Bolivia and Venezuela'
  • `Privatisation is for earning profits, it does not care for public satisfaction'

    NEW DELHI: Citing the example of Bolivia, where customers had to pay 440 dollars -- equal to eight months' salary of an average citizen -- to get a water connection, activists waging a war against privatisation of water hassaid the Government must think of viable models instead of opting for privatisation of the basic, essential utility.

    Attacking governments across the world for considering privatisation as a panacea for water woes, Olivier Hoedeman, member of the Corporate Europe Observatory, an Amsterdam-based voluntary organisation, said: "There is reluctance on the part of the governments to see beyond privatisation. There are so many other options, so many models of public participation that can be explored. Privatisation has proved to be a failure."

    Urging India to emulate countries that have "people-centred, participatory public models", Mr. Hoedeman along with his counterparts from Bolivia and the United Kingdom is here in the country to sensitise policy makers about the problems of privatisation. He said the Indian Government should draw lessons from Bolivia and Venezuela, where the Governments were forced to cancel the privatisation deals following widespread public protests.

    "There have been several models of people-centred, participatory public models that have been successful in places like Cochabamba in Bolivia, in Argentina and Brazil. India, too, should encourage transparency, public scrutiny, public participation in decision-making," he added.

    Claiming that privatisation fails to protect the rights of the consumers, Julian Perez of Bolivia said: "Privatisation is for earning profits, it does not care for public satisfaction. In Cochabama the tariffs rose by 300 per cent after privatisation of water."

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