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          Patna, Aug 27 (IANS) Millions of poor families in Bihar are   still living without toilets as the state government has failed to provide the   facility at their homes, an official said Monday.
 Latest data from Public   Health Engineering Department (PHED) shows that over 7.57 million households in   Bihar, particularly in rural areas, don't have toilets.
 
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        "The government has aimed at providing toilet facilities to more than 11 million   families in the state this year. But till last month, only 41,13,545 households   had been provided toilets," a PHED official said.
 PHED will provide   toilets to 8,25,248 Below Poverty Line (BPL) families and 4,52,350 Above Poverty   Line (APL) families during 2012-13. "The government has decided to achieve its   target of providing toilet facilities to more than 11 million families by 2017,"   the PHED official said.
 
 Bihar PHED Minister Chandra Mohan Rai told IANS   that it is a hard fact that millions of poor people in Bihar still don't have   toilet facilities, which forces them to defecate in the open.
 
 "The state   government is working to provide toilets to all families," Rai said.
 
 The   Bihar government launched a special scheme named after veteran socialist leader   Rammanohar Lohia in 2007 to speed up construction of toilets, but its   implementation has been lagging.
 
 The central government has launched the   Total Sanitation Campaign to ensure sanitation facilities in rural areas to   eradicate open defecation. But Bihar is among the states lagging   behind.
 
 Two years ago, Oliver Cumming, a senior policy analyst with   London-based international NGO WaterAid was in Bihar to devise ways to make the   state free of open defecation in two years.
 
 Cumming observed that an   estimated 85 million toilets were needed to stop open   defecation.
 
 WaterAid, in partnership with PHED, has tied up with Unicef,   the World Bank's Water and Sanitation Programme and Britain's Department for   International Development for a project to make Bihar free from open defecation   by 2012.
 
    
	
	
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