A four-minute video of piles of poo dancing to a techno dance beat doesnât sound like the stuff of great entertainment, but UNICEF India is hoping it could be the stuff of a great social media campaign.
The charity recently released an animated music video of turds terrorizing Indians with clouds of flies and stench in an effort to raise awareness about a public health threat that few Indians choose to discuss: public defecation.
India is home to the worldâs largest population of people who defecate in the open. About half the countryâs population -- 620 million people -- donât regularly use toilets, the charity says, answering the call of nature wherever they are.
Twenty years ago, the problem was even worse, when 75 per cent of the countryâs population regularly defecated in the open. But the country has set a goal of getting 100 per cent of the population regularly using toilets and disposing of infant waste in sanitary ways.
Open defecation poses a serious public health problem, since fecal bacteria can enter water supplies and cause a host of diarrheal diseases, polio, hepatitis A, and other illnesses.
Many Indians donât have access to toilets and water facilities. But the country also suffers from a lack of awareness about sanitation, after centuries of acceptance of open defecation.
So Unicef India enlisted the help of composer Shrikanth Sriram, who wrote the theme for the movie âThe Life of Pi.â The result is âPoo Party,â an undeniably catchy techno dance number punctuated by a chorus of âTake your poo-oo to the loo-oo!â
The video is now being shared across social media through a Poo2Loo account, and page.
Thereâs also an online game and a mobile app in which users can let a character named âPoo Manâ wreak havoc on the streets of New Delhi, Mumbai or other Indian cities.
In the music video, the people terrorized by the dancing poo work together to build a giant, neon-lit toilet, into which they lure the turds before flushing them away, once and for all.
Itâs not unlike what UNICEF would like to see done to the problem of open defecation.