My
home city of Pune has a decalared policy about city garbage, under
which, the local Government has set up a Solid Waste Collection and
Handling cooperative of waste-collectors known as SWaCH - Waste
Collectors' Cooperative, for undertaking door to door collection of
biodegradable and non biodegradable solid waste from households,
shops, offices and other commercial premises. It is a novel idea and
appears to be working well. This Cooperative of wastepickers is a
professional service delivery organisation within the broad framework
of developing business models that are inclusive of the poor. It has
been conceived as a professionally managed social enterprise of the
poor in the area of waste management that includes collection,
resource recovery, scrap trading and waste processing. It is an
autonomous entity but functions under the aegis of the Pune Municipal
Corporation (PMC) and is financially supported by it for a period of
five years during which, it is expected to explore revenue sources
and become a revenue earning model.
With
formation of this cooperative, the municipal corporation also decided
to do away with open type garbage collection bins kept on the
roadside in a slow and phased manner. In my neighbourhood, only two
such garbage bins still exist, which are really an eye sour for
otherwise clean landscape. The problem exists mainly with citizens,
who carelessly throw away garbage without taking care that it is
properly dumped in the bin. The garbage bins are usually overflowing
but are cleaned up by the municipal corporation each day and I hope
that sooner or later they would be removed as per declared policy.
Though
things are fairly under control in my home city, as far as garbage
collection is concerned, same can not be said to be true in most
other cities in India. Kanpur is an historic city in north Indian
state of Uttar Pradesh. The city may have a glorious history, but the
present state of the city is pathetic and deplorable as far as
garbage collection is concerned. Patel Nagar is a neighbourhood in
Kanpur, where about 100,000 residents live, but there are no formal
arrangement by the Kanpur municipal corporation to collect waste from
people's homes because according to it, the corporation was not
responsible for the area. People therefore simply throw their
rubbish by the side of the road and a local authority truck picks it
up once or twice a month and dumps it outside the city.
However
since last two months, overflowing drains and piles of litter has not
been cleared by the authorities. Piles of garbage has collected in
front of people's homes and heaps keep growing bigger and bigger, the
water from choked drains had begun to enter people's homes. The
sweepers would go there, but they wouldn't do any work of cleaning.
On several occasions, the residents have complained to the authority,
the Kanpur Municipal Corporation, about the situation, without any
action forthcoming. The residents have become so much frustrated and
angry at the build-up of mounds of waste and rubbish heaps that
finally they decided to take the matters in their hands on Tuesday
5th
February 2013, and started removing rubbish and cleaning drains
themselves.
Mr.
Manoj Yadav is an elected local councillior or corporator from the
Patel Nagar area of Kanpur. By his misfortune, Mr. Yadav happened to
visit that area at the same time. After seeing him there, the angry
residents caught and accosted him and then pushed him on the garbage
heap and held him there to take out the frustration and anger over
unhygienic conditions prevailing in the area until he promised to
arrange for the authorities to attend to the area. He says:
"Some people pushed me into the garbage heap, it was wet, and
they did not let me come out of it for an hour. I thought about
stripping and jumping into the drain to clean it. But some women from
the area intervened and set me free."
Perhaps
keeping his eyes on the next election, Mr Yadav has decided not to
lodge an official complaint against those who pushed him onto the
rubbish heap. On the contrary he is sympathetic towards the Patel
Nagar residents and says: "Diseases have begun to spread in
Patel Nagar, five people are ill. I promised them I'll do something
and pledged to get the locality cleaned within a couple of days.. I
can understand their anger. Also, I have to live with them."
After
his horrific experience, Mr. Yadav might not visit his constituency
in future unless the garbage is removed.
7th
February 2014
Those pictures are disgusting! All this garbage can cause illnesses !
ReplyDeleteIt's really sad how a beautiful and full of historical heritage country as India is so left behind. I think that the big countries have to pay attention to that, not to their interests in the countries which has oil.
ReplyDelete