The Star Malaysia

Mountains of rubbish and despair in India’s dirtiest city

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GONDA CITY:

Flies throng over piles of faeces, the drains overflow with sewage and the foul smell in the air is inescapabl­e.

Welcome to Awas Vikas, one of the most exclusive parts of Gonda, a city suffering the ignominy of being branded the dirtiest in India.

Even in such upmarket areas, garbage trucks are rarely seen, green spaces are littered with rubbish, and residents are desperate for their bickering leaders to bring about change.

Gonda, 125km from the Uttar Pradesh state capital of Lucknow, was best known as a quiet stopover point for people travelling to Nepal or to see the region’s temples.

Infamy arrived in May when Gonda came bottom of an Indian government cleanlines­s survey of 434 cities. The study looked at the use of toilets, waste collection, civic infrastruc­ture and other areas.

It is a daily battle for pedestrian­s and cars to navigate the piles of plastic bottles, discarded food containers and animal excreta.

The stray cows love it, but residents in Awas Vikas are at breaking point.

“The filth and the stench have made us infamous across the country,” said Durgesh Mishra, gesturing desolately at a crater in the road by his house, which is now filled with dirty water and buzzing with mosquitoes.

“It is a really pathetic state of affairs. We’ve been rated as India’s dirtiest – just look around and you can see it’s a perfect ranking. You can’t imagine how we live here,” he added.

Most locals hope the ‘dirtiest city’ accolade will shame politician­s into action and break the cycle of civic apathy and corruption, which is blamed for the mess.

“The manpower and infrastruc­ture issues that we face today are a result of unplanned developmen­t over the last 10 years,” Rajiv Rastogi, a trader and veteran local politician told.

Political rivalry between Gonda and the Uttar Pradesh state government has also bogged down projects. Signs of the dysfunctio­n are everywhere.

Houses have been abandoned and left to decay, while neighbourh­ood parks and ponds have become dumping grounds.

Those who can afford it hire labourers to clear garbage from outside their homes – even if that means discarding it out of sight in another part of town.

Kanshiram colony is regarded by some as the most insalubrio­us part of India’s dirtiest city.

“We live in sickness. Diseases like cholera are an everyday issue,” Kanshiram resident Sushila Tewari said as she swatted away flies and mosquitoes from a waste-filled pond opposite her home.

“We don’t see a municipal worker around here for days at a time. When stray animals die and lay rotting, we have to cover them with soil ourselves,” she added.

Kirti Vardhan Singh, a three-term lawmaker for the area, said he has been “bombarded” with telephone calls and social media messages since the survey.

“It was very, very embarrassi­ng,” he said.

“I explained to as many as I could that, as a parliament­arian, I don’t have any say or authority over local civic body matters – the mismanagem­ent, inaction and corruption over the last decade.”

Singh acknowledg­es that Gonda is dirty but is sceptical that it is really the dirtiest city in the nation.

“I feel it got the ranking because of a lack of cooperatio­n and communicat­ion between the survey team and the local administra­tion,” he said.

He feels Gonda’s story is typical of other smaller Indian cities that have grown quickly in India’s economic boom without a plan or rules.

Some argue Gonda’s ranking and the subsequent media attention has made an issue that is endemic across the nation, seem like a unique local problem.

Even if the city’s administra­tive and political problems are solved, many feel the biggest challenge is changing attitudes in a populace often happy to dump at will. — AFP

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