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What Is The Primary Aim Of The Clean India Mission?

The u201cClean India Missionu201d is another name for the programme. The projectu2019s inception honoured Mahatma Gandhi. It is a nationwide effort to keep streets, roads, cities, and rural regions clean.

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What Is The Primary Aim Of The Clean India Mission?

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  1. What is the primary aim of the Clean India mission? On October 2, 2014, Prime Minister Narendra Modi introduced the Swachh Bharat Mission. Universal Sanitation coverage is the aim of the mission. The “Clean India Mission” is another name for the programme. The project’s inception honoured Mahatma Gandhi. It is a nationwide effort to keep streets, roads, cities, and rural regions clean. Background Mahatma Gandhi’s initiatives enabled India to start its road toward cleanliness. Our country’s founders launched a vital hygiene and sanitation awareness campaign, which was an example for many other leaders. In 2014, on the 150th anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi’s birth, Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, a national initiative to realise the goal of a Clean India. The Swachh Bharat Abhiyan mission logo The mission’s logo was chosen through a competition in which hundreds of people took part. Shri Anant Khasbardar of Kolhapur in Maharashtra took home the top prize. He created the campaign’s most meaningful yet straightforward logo. His logo features the National Tricolor in the foreground and two Mahatma Gandhi glasses with the words “Swachh Bharat” printed on them. The logo pays homage to Gandhiji’s principles and the entire country supporting his cause. Ms Bhagyasri Sheth of Rajkot, Gujarat, won the tagline competition with the lovely phrase “Ek Kadam Swachhata Ki Aur.” A pillar of the Clean India Mission 1. Swachh Bharat Abhiyan in Gramin It focuses on prohibiting open defecation and increasing access to rural sanitation. Better management of solid and liquid waste is another focus of the plan. Swachh Bharat Abhiyan- Urban Within its sphere of influence, the programme wants to accomplish three aims. Its primary goal is to reduce the percentage of households that engage in open defecation. The second aim is to transform pit latrines into sanitary latrines. The third aim of the Clean India Mission is to prevent the development of new, unhygienic bathrooms. The secretary of the drinking water and sanitation ministry serves as the mission coordinator for SBM. Evolution of Swachhata Abhiyan

  2. In the past, they started a sanitation programme in 1954. This was the country’s first such programme. They introduced the Central Rural Sanitation Programme in 1986. The Total Sanitation Campaign (TSC), created in 1999 when the scheme underwent a strategic revision, became the Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan in 2012. Finally, on September 24, 2014, the Cabinet approved the Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan’s transformation into the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan. Swachh Bharat Abhiyan’s goals To comprehensively encourage cleaning and hygiene. To lessen the prevalence of open defecation To enhance the standard of living in remote areas To promote the idea of environmentally friendly sanitation methods To raise consciousness about hygiene and health. To assist India in achieving Sustainable Development Goal No. 6 (SDG 6). To create locally controlled sanitation systems To concentrate on innovative Solid & Liquid Waste Management techniques. Conclusion One of the most robust initiatives in the world to promote cleanliness includes the public and encourages sanitation in India. Below this plan, we have addressed precisely the healthy goal of eliminating open defecation. The program’s focus has been more on the outcomes than on the results. Last but not least, the program’s effectiveness has clarified that it has had a massive effect on sanitation and hygiene.

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