
The first thing that strikes you when you reach Sri Lanka,
India’s southern neighbour is
the cleanliness and the orderly traffic. Coming from Goa and India, these two
virtues are indeed a pleasant surprise.
You do not spot any
garbage, plastic waste and rubble on the drive from the Bhandaranaike
International airport right up to downtown Colombo, the capital city. In
Colombo too, every road, street and by-lane is spotlessly clean. You do not
find motorists chucking plastic and paper wrappers out of cars and nobody is
found spitting on the roads.
It was also
heartening to see the respect accorded for pedestrian crossings. The moment a
pedestrian steps on a designated crossing, all motor vehicles come to a grinding
halt. No motorist breaks this rule and follows it even in the absence of police
personnel. As we learnt very soon, the fine for not stopping at a pedestrian
crossing or breaking a red light is Sri Lankan Rupees (LKR) 2,500.
According to Colombo
based businessman Kanapathy Sritharan, the strict pedestrian crossing rules
started getting implemented about five years ago. “Presently, school children
across Sri Lanka are being taught daily skills of crossing roads in a practical
manner,” he said.
We spent five days in
the capital city and wondered if the cleanliness and traffic discipline was
restricted to the metropolis alone. However, the cleanliness and traffic
discipline trail followed us through the historical towns of Polonnaruwa,
Piturengala, Kandy city and the popular hill-station of Nuwara Eliya.
What was interesting
to note was the presence of clean washrooms in all the tourist destinations.
Unlike India, where we often see motorists relieving themselves on highways,
Sri Lanka did not present any such ugly sights.
In the 2014 book,
‘Municipal solid waste management in Asia and the Pacific islands: challenges
and strategic solutions’ authors, Benedict Basnayake and Visvanathan
Chettiyappan refer to the Sri Lankan government’s ‘Pilisaru’ waste management
program which was launched in 2008 with the aim of making the island nation
‘waste free’ by 2018, a goal the country seems to have achieved.
The magic mantra for
achieving this ‘waste free’ goal has been the Sri Lankan government’s dogged
insistence on garbage segregation (wet and dry garbage) at source. A point
which is extremely relevant to Goa and India.
The need for garbage
segregation at the household level was disseminated by the Sri Lankan
government through a mass-awareness campaign on TV, radio, newspapers and
through posters and leaflets.
Most importantly,
waste management officials went door-to-door explaining the need for
segregation of wet and dry waste. The government has also made the subject of
‘waste management’ compulsory from classes VI-IX in all Sri Lankan schools.
Of course, the
government also put an integrated waste management infrastructure in place
which included setting up 120 composting centres, 22 bio-gas plants and
providing multiple tractors, compactors, excavators and composting bins across
the country.
Says businessman,
Sritharan, “Civic sense is very high in our country. We have a literacy rate of
over 90 per cent.” According to Sritharan, the segregated garbage collection
rule is strictly imposed. “The private collectors or the municipality will
refuse to collect your garbage if it is not neatly segregated. They will also
report you to the authorities.”
The waste segregation
message seems to have percolated right down to the towns and villages as well.
Up in the hills of Ella (1,083 metres) school teacher Bandula Arunashantha’s
family runs a home-stay facility. Says Bandula, “Normally, almost every house
in our hill-town has a compost pit. We ourselves recycle the wet garbage. We
handover the plastic and polythene to the recycling centres.”
If that is not all,
the island nation has achieved success in making their roads safer too. For
starters, it is mandatory for all two-wheeler riders to wear helmets. This
includes the rider, the passenger and even little children (see picture of an
entire helmeted family).
Failure to wear a
crash helmet on a two-wheeler attracts a fine of LKR 2,500. Says policeman
turned tourist taxi driver, Anura Mudithananda from the coastal town of
Negombo, “The strict fine is good deterrent. Everybody follows the helmet rule
now.”
Just how serious the
Sri Lankan government is about road safety can be gaugedfrom a report uploaded
on the Lankan news portal, adaderana.lkas recently as April 2, 2019. The report
states that the ministry of transport and civil aviationwill present a gazette
notification before the country’s Parliament proposing fines of LKR 25,000 for
seven traffic offences which includedriving without a valid driving licence,
deploying persons without driving licence in services, driving under the
influence liquor and drugs and driving a vehicle without a valued insurance
cover, among others.
Goa
and India has a lot to learn from this small island nation.