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Deonar dumpyard: BMC bars ragpickers

MUMBAI: The waste at the Deonar dumping ground may neither be processed nor segregated.

Published on: Aug 3, 2016, 07:53:08 IST
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MUMBAI: The waste at the Deonar dumping ground may neither be processed nor segregated.

HT Image
HT Image

Three months after assuring 1,000 ragpickers they would be allowed to resume their jobs at the dumping ground with ID cards, the civic body has cancelled the plan. “There is no plan to allow rag-pickers inside the dumping ground,” said senior civic official.

Deonar landfill was declared a prohibited area, barring entry to ragpickers, after a number of pocket fires in March. The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) officials then had a meeting with the three NGOs working for ragpickers — Apnalaya, Force and Stree Mukti Sanghatana. Cricketer Sachin Tendulkar had extended his support to the ragpickers.

After the meeting, the civic body gave out registration forms to the ragpickers. The BMC planned to install three biometric devices, with a facial recognition feature, and issue ID cards too. The BMC had suggested introduction of radio frequency identification feature for ragpickers. The civic body had also planned to set up watchtowers and high masts around the 120-hectare ground for increased surveillance.

However, the plan seems to be lost. “We had several meetings, but the BMC is not interested in allowing ragpickers inside the ground. Accordig to the new Central Pollution Control Board guidelines, local authorities are supposed to survey ragpickers and employ them. The BMC is only concentrating on earning money through the incineration plant and not on waste management,” said Jyoti Mhapsekar, of Stree Mukti Sanghatana.

This could mean increased burden on the landfill and no segregation of waste. In 2012, the BMC had issued a circular stating the corporation would stop accepting mixed waste and issue legal notices to housing societies that fail to segregate waste at source by July 2013.

Currently, there are 32 segregation centres in the city. The BMC aims to add 35 more by the end of the year.

  • Sanjana Bhalerao
    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Sanjana Bhalerao

    Sanjana Bhalerao is a Senior Reporter with Hindustan Times, Mumbai. She covers civic issues and governance.

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