Hindustan Times (Noida)

Garbage piles up as strike continues

- Ashish Mishra ashish.mishra2@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: Garbage continues to pile on the streets of areas under the North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n as the strike by sanitation employees of the civic body stretched into more than a fortnight on Sunday.

On Sunday, garbage lay piled outside dumping sites and roads across many localities in north Delhi, even as the agitating sanitation workers dumped more on the streets in areas such as Model Town, Timarpur, Daryaganj, Civil Lines, Sadar Bazar, Mukherjee Nagar, Narela, Rohini, Karol Bagh and Keshavpura­m.

Sanitation workers along with the employees of other department­s such as nurses, paramedic staff, teachers, engineers, horticultu­re department staff, clerical staff started an indefinite strike on January 7 against nonpayment of their salaries for the last three months. The strike is being conducted under the aegis of Confederat­ion of the MCD Employees Union — an umbrella body of 45 associatio­ns of three civic bodies.

“Our strike will continue and we will not return to work until salary of employees of all department­s are cleared,” Ram Niwas Solanki, general secretary of the confederat­ion, said.

Besides payment of salaries, sanitation workers are also demanding regular jobs.

JP Tank, president Delhi Nagar Nigam Shramik Sangh, said, “We will continue our strike and will not remove garbage from any locality. We have not been paid salaries of October, November and December. January is also about to end so one more month will be added when our salary will be due. We want a permanent solution to this problem so we have decided to continue our strike despite the mayor’s announceme­nt of two months salary payment, which is yet to be made.”

Residents, meanwhile, complained about stench and garbage not being lifted from across north Delhi areas due to the ongoing strike.

“All streets are littered with garbage here. Even as the Covid-19 pandemic sweeps through the country, this garbage menace is further endangerin­g public health, said Anam Khan, a resident of Daryaganj near Golcha

Cinema.

Manish Bajwa, a resident of Sadar Bazar, said people are bearing the brunt of the face off between the civic authoritie­s and the state administra­tion.

“When we go to the sanitation workers, they say they are on strike. Neither the government nor the civic bodies are paying attention to the crisis. Residents are the real sufferer,” he said.

Jai Prakash, mayor North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n, said that arrangemen­ts are being made to clear pending salaries of all employees. “We have released two months salaries of sanitation workers. I now appeal them to return to work as garbage is seen strewn across streets. Salaries of other department’s employees will also be released soon,” Prakash said.

Responding to this, acting president of Delhi Nagar Nigam Shramik Sangh, Pawan Tank said, “Sanitation workers are yet to get the said salaries. And also it is now not a matter of only sanitation workers but it is concerned to all civic employees. We have supported the call of the strike by the confederat­ion so we will continue the strike until the matter is resolved.”

 ?? SANCHIT KHANNA/HT PHOTO ?? Garbage lays strewn by a roadside in Patel Nagar on Sunday. Sanitation workers of the North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n have been on strike since January 7.
SANCHIT KHANNA/HT PHOTO Garbage lays strewn by a roadside in Patel Nagar on Sunday. Sanitation workers of the North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n have been on strike since January 7.

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