Indian politicians have an uncanny knack of turning the hardships they foster on electorates into political issues that preclude problem solving. The recent Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) report revealing the abysmal quality of Delhi’s drinking water has sparked just such a political controversy and has diverted attention from the search for solutions. Last week, the BIS report showed that the National Capital Territory’s (which is Delhi’s) tap water was the most unsafe among 21 state capitals. The state failed on all 19 parameters, with Mumbai (no failure), Bhubaneshwar (one failure), and Hyderabad (one failure) coming up trumps. For any responsible state administration, the report should have encouraged some serious introspection. It certainly reflects poorly on the ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). The BIS report is particularly embarrassing for AAP because it discredits Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal’s controversial 2015 move to distribute water free or at hugely subsidised rates — which prompted the resignation of at least one senior bureaucrat in protest — and the matter was compounded by mandating a wholesale waiver of water dues earlier this year.
In effect, the Delhi government has been distributing contaminated water — albeit mostly free — to the denizens of the city-state for the past five years. Investment in more robust water treatment plants that the pricing of water would have enabled (not to speak of promoting conservation in this parched city) is an obvious solution but probably unviable, with Assembly elections just three months away. But like most politicians caught in a populist trap of his own making, Mr Kejriwal has chosen the default position of aggressive denial, accusing the report of being “false and politically motivated”. Apart from revealing institutional distrust in the government’s standards-setting body, Mr Kejriwal has not explained why other state capitals ruled by opposition parties should have done better than his city. He would have done well to accept the BIS study and work with the administration to work out ways to fix the system instead.