An Indian woman has been rewarded for her "bold" decision to leave her marital home within days of the wedding to protest against the lack of a toilet in the household, an official said on Thursday. Anita Narre will be handed $10,000 by Sulabh International, a non-profit group, for refusing to defecate in the open and sparking a "toilet revolution" in her village in central Madhya Pradesh, according to the district magistrate. "Narre motivated other women of her village to coax their partners to build toilets. The village is transformed today, thanks to her bold act," B. Chadrasekhar told over phone. Narre left the household of Shivram, a labourer, after her marriage in May last year because the house had no indoor lavatory. She returned only once he had built one with help from district officials. Chandrasekhar said a sanitation campaign that offered to build toilets in the district free of cost had previously hit a roadblock as villagers thought it was "dirty" to have facilities inside the house. "Narre's story is changing mindsets and our sanitation drive is back on track," he said. "Lots of people from nearby villages have also followed suit and requested us to build latrines. We have moved a proposal to make use of Narre's good example and take her help to motivate others to use toilets." Lack of toilets and other proper sanitation costs India nearly $54 billion a year through hygiene-related illnesses, lost productivity and other factors, a World Bank study has found. The problem is especially acute in rural areas where women suffer the most due to lack of toilets. "Women have to wait for darkness for the sake of privacy before attending to the call of nature. They have to leave before sunrise or wait for the sun to go down," Bindeshwar Pathak, founder of Sulabh International, said. "Narre took a very brave step to leave her marital home because the prestige of her family and the entire village was at stake. We announced the award because we want to encourage girls around the country to speak up." A UN study in 2010 found more people in India have access to a mobile phone than to a toilet. India's mobile subscribers totalled around 894 million at the last count, enough to serve more than half of the country's 1.2 billion population. But just 366 million people — around a third of the population — had access to proper sanitation, said the UN study. Jairam Ramesh, India's rural development minister, on Wednesday called for making India "an open defecation free" country in the next 10 years. Ramesh said it was shameful that India accounted for almost 60 per cent of open defecations in the world, according to a statement.
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