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Calls for Indian PM Modi Not to Accept Gates Foundation Award for National Programme to Build Toilets

© AFP 2023 / ARUN SANKARAn Indian resident checks his phone as he waits to use a public toilet on a street in Chennai on November 15, 2017
An Indian resident checks his phone as he waits to use a public toilet on a street in  Chennai on November 15, 2017 - Sputnik International
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New Delhi (Sputnik): A group linked to the parent organisation of India’s ruling party has urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi not to accept an award from the US-based Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Responding to Minister of State for the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) Dr Jitendra Singh’s announcement of Modi receiving the award for his “Clean India” project, Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM), a group dedicated to promoting national self-reliance, on Monday urged Prime Minister Modi not to accept the award.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is doing business in India and other parts of the world under the guise of philanthropy, SJM’s national co-convener Ashwani Mahajan alleged in a tweet.

​Earlier, Dr Singh said: "Another award, another moment of pride for every Indian as PM Modi's diligent and innovative initiatives bring laurels from across the world”.

“PM Modi to receive an award from Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for Swachh Bharat Abhiyaan (Clean India Mission) during his visit to US (sic)", he added.

Prime Minister Modi launched the “Clean India Mission” on 2 October 2014. The aim of the nation-wide mission is to make India open defecation free (ODF) by 2 October 2019, the 150 birth anniversary of India’s Father of the Nation Mahatma Gandhi.

To end the stigma of open defecation, the central government announced an ambitious programme of building over 90 million toilets, besides ensuring clean streets, roads, and other infrastructure across the country.

In the last five years, people from different sections of society have joined this mass movement for cleanliness, including bureaucrats, soldiers, actors, sportspersons, industrialists, and spiritual leaders.

Keen to promote the cleanliness initiatives of the government, non-government organisations and community centres too have participated in frequent cleanliness awareness campaigns. They have also spread awareness about hygiene through plays and music across the nation.

Last month, the SJM asked the central government not to allow foreign firms, especially Chinese companies, entry into the country’s telecommunication industry on grounds that it is a critical and strategically important infrastructure sector.

"Telecommunications must be declared a critical and strategic infrastructure vital to India's security. Once this is done, the ban on imports cannot be challenged at the WTO (World Trade Organisation)", SJM national co-convener Mahajan had said at the time.  

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