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MCG starts mapping garbage burning spots

Residents of areas along the Golf Course Extension Road alleged that there is a constant blanket of smoke, but officials were failing to take action despite sending them videos of sanitation workers involved in collecting and burning waste

Updated on: Apr 12, 2024 05:32 AM IST
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The Municipal Corporation of Gurugram (MCG) on Thursday started mapping areas close to residential areas where there is rampant open burning of waste, following repeated complaints from residents, officials said.

Garbage burning in an open area at Sector-12 green belt near Vivekananda Aarogay Kendra in Gurugram on Thursday. (HT PHOTO)
Garbage burning in an open area at Sector-12 green belt near Vivekananda Aarogay Kendra in Gurugram on Thursday. (HT PHOTO)

According to MCG officials, most of the complaints were from sectors 49, 50, 51 and 57, and areas along the Golf Course Extension Road, following which teams were sent to the spot. They said outsourced employees who are supposed to collect and dump waste at secondary dumping points, were, instead, dumping in the open and burning it.

Residents of these areas allege that there is a constant blanket of smoke, but officials were failing to take action despite sending them videos of sanitation workers involved in collecting and burning waste. They alleged a lack of accountability on part of the officials.

MCG joint commissioner Naresh Kumar said that they have penalised 65 offenders, all employees of private agencies, since January 1. “We have shared numbers of the sanitation officers sector-wise with the residents’ welfare associations and are closely coordinating with them. The suspects set garbage on fire either late night or early morning, due to which it is difficult to deploy teams round-the-clock to keep a control on the situation,” he said.

Ruchika Sethi Takkar, founder-member of ‘Why Waste Your Waste’, a civil society movement for a zero-waste city, said that massive fires were noticed at waste collection sites regularly. “Waste is regularly set afire because it is an unmanned unregulated open dump or collection site, as well as because waste is managed through a transportation model and not a waste recovery decentralised model . We cannot afford to breathe this polluted air day-in and day-out. It is indeed a health crime. Accountability remains unfixed,” she said.

Takkar said there is an absence of infrastructure to scientifically manage waste at the ward level and lack of enforcement by civic authorities. “We have no option left and have appealed to the ULB minister to recognise the prolonged exposure of Gurugram residents to poor air due to the unabated waste burning,” she said.

Vartika Nijhawan, a resident of Hibiscus Society in Sector 50, said that daily garbage burning envelops her condominium in smoke and fumes. “We have been running home purifiers 24x7 and still, the pungent smell does not go away. I have been a regular visitor to ENT doctors for allergies due to pollution,” she said.

Satish Tuli, a senior citizen living in Mayfield Gardens Block B, said that the foul smell due to waste burning in the vicinity makes it impossible to take morning and evening walks in the complex. “We are left with no option but to stay indoors or take a walk in afternoons, under the hot sun,” he said.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Leena Dhankhar

Leena Dhankhar is the Bureau Chief of the Gurugram bureau at Hindustan Times, where she covers crime, excise, civic agencies, forests and wildlife, real estate, and politics. With over a decade of experience at the organisation, she has reported some of the region’s most impactful stories, known for her deep investigative work and on-ground reporting. Leena has extensively covered major crime cases, systemic lapses and financial irregularities, often exposing civic agency failures and prompting administrative action. Her journalism is driven by accountability, public interest, and a commitment to highlighting issues that shape everyday life in Gurugram.

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