The Prague Post - In India's mining belt, women spark hope with solar lamps

EUR -
AED 4.324154
AFN 78.157867
ALL 96.380904
AMD 449.158318
ANG 2.108093
AOA 1079.712962
ARS 1707.873194
AUD 1.754262
AWG 2.119688
AZN 1.999458
BAM 1.95299
BBD 2.371787
BDT 143.902932
BGN 1.955025
BHD 0.444259
BIF 3482.588746
BMD 1.177441
BND 1.511924
BOB 8.15523
BRL 6.527791
BSD 1.177605
BTN 105.800759
BWP 15.47966
BYN 3.437254
BYR 23077.838258
BZD 2.368382
CAD 1.60882
CDF 2590.36996
CHF 0.928153
CLF 0.02719
CLP 1066.653911
CNY 8.275639
CNH 8.246871
COP 4352.998369
CRC 588.153679
CUC 1.177441
CUP 31.202179
CVE 110.106563
CZK 24.243036
DJF 209.254683
DKK 7.471336
DOP 73.813786
DZD 152.710828
EGP 55.991804
ERN 17.661611
ETB 183.215585
FJD 2.671852
FKP 0.872351
GBP 0.871178
GEL 3.161415
GGP 0.872351
GHS 13.101093
GIP 0.872351
GMD 87.720245
GNF 10292.190104
GTQ 9.022018
GYD 246.364449
HKD 9.15031
HNL 31.040335
HRK 7.53668
HTG 154.188132
HUF 387.806549
IDR 19748.389113
ILS 3.759133
IMP 0.872351
INR 105.740421
IQD 1542.680168
IRR 49599.690848
ISK 148.039836
JEP 0.872351
JMD 187.839709
JOD 0.83484
JPY 184.298916
KES 151.831173
KGS 102.937779
KHR 4720.187865
KMF 492.17016
KPW 1059.705246
KRW 1698.257793
KWD 0.361663
KYD 0.981384
KZT 605.239094
LAK 25485.219945
LBP 105453.011101
LKR 364.535453
LRD 208.429197
LSL 19.598699
LTL 3.476676
LVL 0.712222
LYD 6.37283
MAD 10.74404
MDL 19.75449
MGA 5385.228084
MKD 61.549288
MMK 2472.346208
MNT 4189.139655
MOP 9.432587
MRU 46.631899
MUR 54.103641
MVR 18.19104
MWK 2041.95307
MXN 21.079132
MYR 4.766874
MZN 75.250941
NAD 19.598699
NGN 1708.571976
NIO 43.33764
NOK 11.787441
NPR 169.281413
NZD 2.022398
OMR 0.452858
PAB 1.1776
PEN 3.962598
PGK 5.085682
PHP 69.127216
PKR 329.873231
PLN 4.215832
PYG 7980.516475
QAR 4.292324
RON 5.088307
RSD 117.376107
RUB 93.026567
RWF 1715.124746
SAR 4.41623
SBD 9.600135
SCR 17.02842
SDG 708.242547
SEK 10.770133
SGD 1.511955
SHP 0.883386
SLE 28.346908
SLL 24690.347649
SOS 671.83042
SRD 45.137774
STD 24370.645815
STN 24.464797
SVC 10.304173
SYP 13018.784566
SZL 19.582821
THB 36.583624
TJS 10.822082
TMT 4.132817
TND 3.42597
TOP 2.834995
TRY 50.421581
TTD 8.010439
TWD 36.965774
TZS 2908.2785
UAH 49.678515
UGX 4250.883212
USD 1.177441
UYU 46.023774
UZS 14192.57766
VES 339.207527
VND 30956.094165
VUV 141.639692
WST 3.262542
XAF 655.011693
XAG 0.014845
XAU 0.00026
XCD 3.182093
XCG 2.122346
XDR 0.815724
XOF 655.01447
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.76029
ZAR 19.626465
ZMK 10598.378125
ZMW 26.583635
ZWL 379.135434
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.11

    -0.13%

  • BCE

    0.0400

    23.05

    +0.17%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    77.64

    +0.19%

  • BCC

    0.4200

    75.13

    +0.56%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    41.11

    +0.05%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    23.09

    +0.3%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5500

    80.71

    -0.68%

  • RIO

    1.3500

    82.24

    +1.64%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.47

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    15.56

    +0.19%

  • GSK

    0.1200

    49.08

    +0.24%

  • BTI

    0.0300

    57.27

    +0.05%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    13.12

    +0.15%

  • AZN

    0.4500

    92.9

    +0.48%

  • BP

    -0.0400

    34.27

    -0.12%

In India's mining belt, women spark hope with solar lamps
In India's mining belt, women spark hope with solar lamps / Photo: HIMANSHU SHARMA - AFP

In India's mining belt, women spark hope with solar lamps

Santosh Devi is proud to have brought light -- and hope -- to her hamlet in western India, taking up solar engineering through a programme for women like her whose husbands suffer chronic disease from mining work.

Text size:

Her husband is bedridden with silicosis, a respiratory illness caused by inhaling fine silica dust which is common across some 33,000 mines in Rajasthan state, where the couple and their four children live.

Santosh, 36, has joined seven other women for a three-month course at Barefoot College in Tilonia, a two-hour drive from her village in the desert state's Beawar district.

There, the group learned the basics of solar engineering -- installing panels, wiring them, and assembling and repairing lamps -- to help light up homes and provide electricity for anything from charging phones to powering fans.

With their sick husbands out of work, the training has allowed these women to make a living and support their families.

Barefoot College has trained more than 3,000 women from 96 countries since it was set up in 1972, according to Kamlesh Bisht, the technical manager of the institute.

The college offers rural women new skills with the aim of making them independent in an environment where jobs are scarce and healthcare generally inaccessible.

Santosh, who is illiterate, said she wants to "offer a good education and a better future" to her children, aged five to 20.

She now earns a small income by installing solar panels, and hopes to eventually make the equivalent of $170 a month.

The time away from her family was tough, but Santosh said it was worth it.

"At first, I was very scared," she recalled. "But this training gave me confidence and courage."

She showed with enthusiasm the three houses where she had installed a photovoltaic panel powering lamps, fans and chargers.

- Slow killer -

Her husband used to cut sandstone for pavers exported around the world.

But now he can barely walk, needs costly medication and relies on a meagre state allowance of $16 a month.

Wiping away tears with the edge of her bright red scarf, Santosh said she has had to borrow money from relatives, sell her jewellery and mortgage her precious mangalsutra, the traditional Hindu wedding necklace, to make ends meet.

The family share a similar fate with many others in Rajasthan state's mining belt, where tens of thousands of people suffer from silicosis.

According to pulmonologist Lokesh Kumar Gupta, there are between 5,000 and 6,000 cases in just a single district, Ajmer.

In Santosh's village of 400 households, 70 people have been diagnosed with silicosis, a condition that kills slowly and, in many cases, has no cure.

An estimated 2.5 million people work in mines across Rajasthan, extracting sandstone, marble or granite for less than $6 a day.

Those using jackhammers earn double but face even higher exposure to toxic dust.

Vinod Ram, whose wife has also graduated from the Barefoot College course, has been suffering from silicosis for six years and struggles to breathe.

"The medication only calms my cough for a few minutes," said Vinod, 34, who now weighs just 45 kilos (99 pounds).

He started mining at age 15, working for years without a mask or any other protective gear.

- No choice but to work -

His wife Champa Devi, 30, did not even know how to write her name when she arrived at Barefoot College in June.

Now back home, at a village not far from Santosh's, she is proud of her newfound expertise.

But her life remains overshadowed by illness and poverty.

Champa, who has dark circles under her eyes, has installed solar panels in four nearby homes but has not yet been paid.

For now, she earns about 300 rupees ($3.35) a day working at construction sites -- hardly enough to cover her husband's medical bills, which come up to some $80 a month.

The couple live in a single dark room with thin blankets covering the floor, and the near-contact sound of detonations from nearby mines.

"There is no treatment for silicosis," said pulmonologist Gupta.

Early treatment can help, but most patients come only after five to seven years, he said.

Under state aid schemes, patients receive $2,310 upon diagnosis, and their families get another $3,465 in the case of death.

Ill miners, who are physically capable, sometimes continue to cut sandstone for a pittance to support their families, despite the dire health risks.

Sohan Lal, a 55-year-old mine worker who suffers from shortness of breath and severe cough, sees no other option but to keep working.

"If I were diagnosed, what difference would it make?" he said.

G.Turek--TPP