Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Old Delhi walled within its decades old civic problems

- Parvez Sultan parvez.sultan@hindustant­imes.com

OLD, UNCHANGED The problems of the Walled City have increased manifold with increase in pressure on crumbling civic infrastruc­ture

A famous Japanese proverb, ‘darkness reigns at the foot of the lighthouse’, aptly sums up the deteriorat­ing civic services resulting in a mess in the neighbourh­ood of the swanky 112 metre tall headquarte­rs of North Delhi Municipal corporatio­n.

One would expect at the least the areas in the vicinity to be in a better state but the reality is entirely different. Over the years nothing has changed here. It is easy to spot illegal constructi­ons and commercial activities, crumbling drainage, lack of parking space and parks, hazardous trades, polluting units and absence of public convenienc­es.

In 2011, the MCD headquarte­rs was shifted to the civic centre, however, that could not inspire it to revive the crumbling civic infrastruc­ture of the Walled City. “The civic administra­tion was aware of the issues causing chaos in the Walled City but it just did nothing,” said a former councillor, who also lives in old Delhi. After delimitati­on, the walled city has been divided into seven wards — Daryaganj, Ballimaran, Jama Masjid, Ajmeri Gate, Bazaar Sita Ram, Delhi Gate and Chandni Chowk.

Residents say that the condition here has remained the same for 10 years and no effort has been made to address the issues of sanitation and illegal constructi­on.

“If a sanitation worker skips work even for a day, the lanes get heaped with garbage,” said Nadeem Qazi, a resident of Gali Qasim Jaan in Ballimaran, where the historic Ghalib Haveli is situated.

He added that the drainage network now lies buried under layers of concrete. “They kept relaying roads and damaged the drainage system. Any spill over or rain water with non-biodegrada­ble garbage, like polythene, goes into sewer lines. Even a short spell of rain causes water logging here,” Qazi said.

Mohammad Burhanuddi­n, a resident of Farash Khana, complained that though the civic body installs dustbins in other localities none have been placed here. “The area requires effective door-to-door garbage collection. Municipal sanitation workers collect garbage only from the roads or garbage stations,” he said.

The municipal corporatio­n was directed by the court to prepare a comprehens­ive solid waste management plan for the area, but this has not been done so far. Chandni Chowk councillor Surekha Gupta said cleaning of streets is done on a daily basis. “When markets are closed in the evening, there are piles of garbage in the lanes and bylanes. But, all of them are cleaned every morning,” she said.

Over the years, several illegal buildings have come up in the area adding to the pressure on civic resources. People claim that no safety measures are kept in mind while raising constructi­ons and several new structures have been built on old weak foundation­s. “There is no action against builders. They operate like mafia in connivance with police, municipal officials and politician­s. The unauthoris­ed structures are built without following the safety norms or rules,” said Pawan Gupta, who lives in Nai Sarak.

Hundreds of shoppers and tourists visit the Old Delhi area every day and lack of parking space leads to clogging of roads. Besides surface parking lots, there are three multi-level undergroun­d facilities at Asaf Ali Marg, Church Mission Road, and Gandhi Maidan, but these are not enough to meet the demand. The new parking lot at Parade Ground remains under utilised due to poor lighting arrangemen­t on two floors.

“The corporatio­n had, six years ago, announced the plan to build a parking lot at Sadar Bazaar, but nothing moved after that. The Gandhi Maidan parking is also to be reconstruc­ted but the project has been delayed,” said Sushil Goel, a trader in Chandni Chowk market.

In the last five years, the municipal corporatio­n has not constructe­d any community hall, school, parking or any other facility in the area. “Whenever a demand is made for a community hall or green area, their reply is that there is no space. I wonder then where they spend their funds,” Zubair Anwar, a resident said.

Between 2012 and 2017, each elected member to North Corporatio­n was given approximat­ely ₹3.5 crore. Khurram Iqbal, councillor from Jama Masjid ward, said he had exhausted the funds allocated to him. “There were two municipal schools in Kucha Chelaan and Phool Mandi, which were lying abandoned. I got them redevelope­d. Following complaints, I also got dhalaos relocated,” said Iqbal.

Saima Riaz, a councillor from Idgah Road ward said she spent the entire amount on creating facilities for women. “A women-only park was developed in Sarai Khaleel area. Besides, toilet blocks were made in other localities. I also spent on repair of polyclinic in Sadar Bazaar,” she said. Her ward has been abolished after delimitati­on and has been merged with Ballimaran and Quresh Nagar ward.

 ?? SONU MEHTA / HT FILE ?? SP Mukherjee Civic Centre, which houses the headquarte­rs of the North Delhi Municipal corporatio­n.
SONU MEHTA / HT FILE SP Mukherjee Civic Centre, which houses the headquarte­rs of the North Delhi Municipal corporatio­n.
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