Resource:

The Ripples of Transformation: How Jhenaidah Became Bangladesh’s Mentor City

Publisher(s): ITN-BUET

2026

Category: Video


How Jhenaidah Transformed Its Sanitation System 🇧🇩

Jhenaidah, a city in southwestern Bangladesh with nearly 190,000 residents, once struggled with basic sanitation. Today, it stands as a national Mentor City — a model for the rest of the country to follow.

📍 The City Established in 1958, Jhenaidah spans 34.42 sq km. About 39% of its residents come from low-income communities, making affordable sanitation a critical need.

🚽 The Challenge Poor sanitation hit low-income households the hardest. Septic tanks and pits were overflowing, and unsafe manual emptying methods put workers and communities at risk.

✅ What Changed The municipality launched awareness campaigns, built community and public toilets, and introduced a modern Vacutug emptying service — with subsidised rates for poor households. A Fecal Sludge Treatment Plant (FSTP) now safely processes waste citywide, with a second plant planned.

A Public-Private Partnership (PPP) keeps services running efficiently while generating revenue for the city.

💡 Bold Firsts Jhenaidah introduced Bangladesh’s first-ever sanitation tax — raising around $400,000 USD over five years. It also developed a long-term Sanitation Action Plan and earned ISO certification for service quality.

👷 People at the Centre Sanitation workers received housing, training, safety equipment, and financial support — proving that good sanitation is about human dignity, not just infrastructure.

Built on equity, safety, sustainability, responsibility, and accountability — Jhenaidah is a city of inspiration. 🌟

📄 To learn more, please read the document on Jhenaidah Paurashava as a CWIS Mentor City.
🔗 [English]   🔗 [Bangla]

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