Loo and behold! For Sudha, cleanliness is not just a wild concept

P G Sudha broke the conventions when she chose the life of a forest officer.
P G Sudha
P G Sudha

KOCHI: P G Sudha broke the conventions when she chose the life of a forest officer. It takes unique courage to travel 16 km per day through dense forest, braving the odds. There are many to tackle too. Tough terrain. Wild beasts. Poachers. But the 49-year-old, who is working in the Kuttampuzha range, has not scowled even once. Along with surmounting the gender barriers, Sudha recently won the state government’s recognition for contributing in an altogether different field.

She was instrumental in setting up around 497 toilets in nine tribal colonies spread inside the forest as part of the Open Defecation Free (ODF) campaign. Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan had presented the award to her during the Open Defecation Free declaration function on November 1. Nothing comes easy for the inhabitants of these colonies in Kuttampuzha panchayat in Ernakulam district.

It takes three hours travel by foot to reach these tribal settlements. Contractors were not ready to take up the task of setting up toilets in these colonies because carrying the building materials through the forest would cause a three-fold jump in construction cost.

“In this context, Ernakulam District Collector K Mohammed Y Safirulla entrusted the task of coordinating the work to Sudha, a tribal from the colony,” said Xavier T X, Kuttampuzha range officer. Sudha, who had won the Chief Minister’s award for the best forest guard in 2006, took up the challenge and completed 90 per cent of the work in record time. “It was a Herculean task to complete the work in time as only Rs 15,400 has been set aside for constructing a toilet.

But taking one load of rock, which costs Rs 900 in open market, required for construction inside the forest will cost around Rs 3,000 -4,000. “We had to cross a river en route to the forest and the building materials were ferried to the colonies on a raft and at one point the raft had capsized and the building materials were washed away. But the Collector stood with us in adverse conditions and we completed the work with his support and advice,” Sudha, whose husband had passed away 27 years ago, told Express.

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