The Sun (Malaysia)

India goes on beautifica­tion blitz

From building walls to removing strays, authoritie­s on clean-up mission ahead of Trump’s official visit

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AHMEDABAD: US President Donald Trump makes his first official visit to India today and work has been going on around the clock to spruce things up, to the annoyance of some locals.

The photo opportunit­y highlights of the 36hour trip include a rally of 100,000 people at the world’s largest cricket stadium and watching the sunset with First Lady Melania at the Taj Mahal.

A long wall has been hastily built, along the route in Ahmedabad in western India to the new Sardar Patel Stadium in order, locals believe, to hide a slum, although officials deny it.

Sardar Sarania, a resident of the slum, is disgusted at what he sees as Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s attempt to conceal reality.

“So Modi has supposedly made everything good and there’s developmen­t everywhere, right? But he’s hid us behind here,” Sarania told AFP.

“We’re made invisible. So the gutter we live in, he (Trump) won’t see us. That’s why they’re building this.”

Scores of banners and hoardings with pictures of Trump, Modi and Melania Trump have been put up across the city, projecting the “Namaste Trump” rally as a historic event in US-India relations.

The route will be lined with thousands of people, well short of the 6-10 million Trump says he has been told will attend, as well as stages for performers and images independen­ce hero Mahatma Gandhi.

The local Cattle and Dog Nuisance Control Department has constitute­d a crack team to remove dogs and errant cows, another common sight in Indian cities, in a threekilom­etre radius of the route.

A local NGO and the state forest department have also been roped in to keep birds and bands of monkeys out of Air Force One’s way on the runway at Ahmedabad airport.

“In the past 10 days, we have caught 45-odd monkeys. They come in search of food,” Raag Patel from the Nature Conservati­on Foundation said.

Next stop for the Trumps will be sunset at the Taj Mahal in Agra, south of New Delhi, and here too workers have been busy making the world-famous mausoleum more beautiful.

Back in the 17th century, some 20,000 labourers, sculptors, calligraph­ers and stone cutters, along with 1,000 elephants, took 16 years to construct the white marble monument.

Time, and also air pollution, have, however, taken their toll, turning parts of the Taj Mahal yellow, necessitat­ing several rounds of treatment.

Authoritie­s have also released vast volumes of water into the Yamuna river flowing adjacent to the Taj in order to lessen the usual whiff of raw sewage and industrial effluent.

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