logo
With garbage everywhere, Gurugram stinks: What's going on?

With garbage everywhere, Gurugram stinks: What's going on?

First Post23-07-2025
Gurugram is facing a full-blown waste crisis with garbage piling up across neighbourhoods of the high-tech city. The problem arises as migrant workers, many of whom work as waste collectors and house helpers, have stopped showing up for work due to frequent police verifications. This exodus has left residents to fend for themselves read more
Gurugram is choking, and this time, it's not just the traffic. It's the trash.
Over the past few weeks, mounds of garbage have started piling up across the city, spilling over onto footpaths, roads, and even upscale neighbourhoods. From Golf Course Extension Road to Southern Peripheral Road, the stench of uncollected waste hangs heavy in the air. It is hard to miss, and becoming even harder to ignore.
Locals are angry, civic activists are demanding accountability, and experts say this full-blown waste crisis was years in the making. So what exactly is going on in one of India's most high-profile cities? We take a closer look
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Gurugram's messy situation
Across several parts of the city, residents say their daily routines have been turned upside down. Car cleaners, house helpers, and garbage collectors have stopped showing up for work, leaving many societies to fend for themselves.
The reason? A large number of these workers, many of them migrant labourers from Bengal and Assam, have reportedly fled Gurugram and returned to their villages in fear.
According to a report by Hindustan Times, the panic began after a verification drive by Gurugram Police, which allegedly involved random checks, detentions, and threats of deportation.
Between July 13 and 21, nearly 100 people, mostly working as domestic staff or sanitation workers, were reportedly picked up by the police. Some were later released but allegedly instructed to board trains back to Assam.
'They were not even allowed to go home and fetch their Aadhaar cards. The police just dragged them into vans,' a relative of 45-year-old garbage collector Anwar Hussain told HT, adding that some of his family members were among those detained.
Residents in areas like Sectors 69 and 70 say workers who had been living and working in Gurugram for years have either left or are preparing to leave, with many heading back to West Bengal or Assam.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
So far, police have refused to disclose the locations of the four holding centres or the number of individuals currently detained or deported, citing security reasons.
The impact on the city's sanitation services has been immediate and severe. Gurugram's door-to-door waste collection system, which heavily depends on these informal workers subcontracted by the Municipal Corporation of Gurugram (MCG), has virtually collapsed in several neighbourhoods.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Even MCG officials have acknowledged the disruption. 'Most of the drivers and waste collectors are migratory workers, and their going away will affect our operations. We're working with senior officials and the chief minister to find alternatives and minimise disruption,' MCG commissioner Pradeep Dahiya told the outlet.
The collapse years in the making
While the current crisis may have been triggered by a sudden exodus of workers, experts and civic activists say the writing had been on the wall for years.
'This is not a sudden crisis,' waste management expert Kusum Sharma told Hindustan Times. 'This is a collapse years in the making. Had MCG followed Solid Waste Management (SWM) norms—created dry waste centres, enforced source segregation, and integrated informal workers—this situation could have been averted. Now, the city is entirely dependent on a workforce that is being criminalised.'
Activists argue that the Municipal Corporation of Gurugram (MCG) has consistently ignored its responsibility under the SWM Rules, 2016. The rules call for source segregation, decentralised waste processing, and formal integration of waste workers, none of which have been properly implemented in the city.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
'Gurgaon's waste services have catastrophically failed,' Ruchika Sethi Takkar, founder of Citizens for Clean Air told the outlet. 'MCG's disregard for SWM Rules 2016 and failure to institutionalise waste workers has brought the system to its knees.'
Takkar added that citizen groups have already submitted a representation to the MCG and the deputy commissioner, urging an emergency plan to tackle the garbage crisis. The demands include setting up temporary dry waste depots, putting out immediate public advisories, and arranging interim waste collection services.
Meanwhile, citizens continue to raise alarms. Residents have taken to social media to post videos and pictures of overflowing garbage bins, uncollected waste rotting in corners, and stray dogs and cows feeding on the filth.
This is the main chowk on Gurugram #wazirabad chowk. You can see a trolly of waste material that is brought here each day. @MunCorpGurugram @DC_Gurugram @cmohry - is this the cleanliness you are promising.
I challenge commissioner Gurugram to stand in front of it for 20 mins. pic.twitter.com/wufiQQIJXJ — Vivek Lamba 🇮🇳 (@VivekLamba_) July 22, 2025
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Close to Nirvana Country, during my morning cycling.
Gurgaon is setting a new bench mark in urban planning and sustainability.
Most animal and garbage friendly city.
Such a joy to live in the millennium city 😊#Gurgaon #Gurugram @IndianGems_ @DC_Gurugram @cmohry pic.twitter.com/R71jTYaLgj — Maj Gen (Dr) YashMor (@YashMor5) July 23, 2025
Will a Rs 400 crore waste collection tender save Gurugram?
As the garbage crisis in Gurugram escalates, the Municipal Corporation of Gurugram (MCG) has finally received clearance to float a massive Rs 402 crore tender for door-to-door waste collection, according to a Hindustan Times report.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
This tender is part of a long-overdue revamp of the city's broken waste management system. Bidding is expected to begin Wednesday.
According to officials, each selected agency will have 21 days to submit applications and start operations in their designated zones by December 1. They've also been given a 90-day boarding period to prepare for the rollout.
On paper, it sounds promising. But not everyone is convinced.
Rahul Khera, a Sector 54 resident and social sector expert, pointed out that the plan still depends entirely on migrant workers.
'Regardless of who's collecting the waste, it's migrant labour doing the job. They make up 100 per cent of the city's frontline waste workforce. If they leave, this city will shut down,' he said.
Khera welcomed reforms but criticised the current tactics, especially the fear-driven police checks. 'Even immigrants with valid documentation are afraid. This isn't governance — it's fear mongering.'
With input from agencies
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fake Passport Racket Busted: Akola Emerges As Key Hub For Afghan Network
Fake Passport Racket Busted: Akola Emerges As Key Hub For Afghan Network

NDTV

time7 minutes ago

  • NDTV

Fake Passport Racket Busted: Akola Emerges As Key Hub For Afghan Network

In a sensational twist to the recently busted inter-state fake passport racket, the communally sensitive city of Akola in eastern Maharashtra has emerged as the fourth major hub of an Afghan-led network operating across Madhya Pradesh, West Bengal, and Chhattisgarh. The alleged kingpin, 30-year-old Afghan national Sohbat Khan, now in the custody of the Madhya Pradesh Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS), has been spilling one bombshell after another during interrogation. According to sources, a religious place in Akola served as a covert meeting point for Afghans living illegally in India. It was here that Sohbat allegedly met Akbar and Iqbal, two Afghan nationals illegally residing in West Bengal, who had already managed to obtain Indian passports through this racket. "When we made the first three arrests, our investigation was limited to Jabalpur (Madhya Pradesh), West Bengal, and Chhattisgarh. But Sohbat's interrogation revealed Akola's crucial role, bringing the communally sensitive city into the spotlight," a senior ATS officer said. Before settling in Jabalpur in 2010, Sohbat had also lived in Nagpur and Akola. So far, six people have been arrested - the kingpin Sohbat Khan, his aide Dinesh Garg (a forest guard posted in the district collectorate's election cell), Chandan Thakur (who posed as a lawyer), and Mahendra Kumar Sukhdan from Jabalpur - along with Afghan nationals Akbar and Iqbal from West Bengal. Investigations have revealed the pivotal role of Chandan Singh, who disguised himself as a lawyer to prepare fake documents. Wearing a black coat, he would enter government offices and handle the legal paperwork to push these fake applications through. ATS has arrested him as well. According to the ATS, Sohbat first created a fake residential proof and birth certificate showing him as a permanent resident of Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh's cultural and judicial capital. Using these forged documents, he obtained a driving licence, and in 2020, an Indian passport, followed by Aadhaar, PAN, and voter ID cards. With aides Garg, Sukhdan, and Thakur, Sohbat began replicating this modus operandi for Afghan youths living illegally in West Bengal and Chhattisgarh. All were shown as "permanent residents of Jabalpur" through fake address proofs and manipulated Aadhaar cards. The racket also hacked the delivery system. Normally, passports are delivered to the applicant's home by the postal department. But this gang would intercept the postman midway, hand him Rs 3,000 in cash, and walk away with the passport right on the street. The ATS has concrete evidence that at least three Afghans, including Akbar and Iqbal, obtained Indian passports through this racket, while 15-17 more applications were in the process. One of them, Akbar, paid Rs 1.20 lakh immediately after his passport was issued. Sohbat Khan's arrest was triggered by a Facebook photo of him posing with an AK-47, which went viral and caught the attention of security agencies. Further investigation revealed his fake Aadhaar and Indian passport. Akbar, on the other hand, had destroyed his original Afghan passport and joined the racket in hopes of returning to Afghanistan through illegal means.

MP Man Stabs Woman, Slits Her Throat For Refusing Conversion Before Marriage
MP Man Stabs Woman, Slits Her Throat For Refusing Conversion Before Marriage

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

MP Man Stabs Woman, Slits Her Throat For Refusing Conversion Before Marriage

Last Updated: A man in Madhya Pradesh was arrested for murdering a woman after she refused to convert to Islam and marry him. A 42-year-old man was arrested on charges of killing a 35-year-old woman by slitting her throat and stabbing her multiple times in Madhya Pradesh's Burhanpur district, NDTV reported. According to the report, the incident happened at the victim's house after the accused barged in, allegedly because she had refused to convert to Islam and marry him. The accused, identified as Sheikh Raees, allegedly slit the throat of Bhagyashree Namdev Dhanuk and stabbed her multiple times, leaving her dead on the spot. He was arrested hours later. In a statement, the woman's sister accused Raees of killing Bhagyashree. She alleged the accused used to 'grab her hair, beat her, harass her, and had been pressuring her for marriage and religious conversion for a long time," the report quoted her as saying. 'My sister refused, so he entered the house at night and slit her throat," the woman's sister was quoted as saying. Meanwhile, the accused was charged under various sections of murder and atrocity, and was taken into custody. In a separate incident, the Gurugram Police arrested a woman and her neighbour, with whom she was allegedly having an affair, along with three others, on charges of murdering her husband and hiding his body. The victim was identified as Vikram (37), a resident of Dundahera village, who originally hailed from Nawada in Bihar. Vikram's wife, Soni Devi (35), told the police during questioning that she and the main accused, Ravinder (34), plotted the murder with the help of online content, as her daughter had seen their inappropriate video on his phone and had told her husband about it. Giving details of the entire episode, the spokesperson said that Soni Devi had filed a complaint at Udyog Vihar police station on July 28 that her husband was missing. On July 31, the woman filed another complaint in which she alleged that Ravindra, a neighbour, raped her in March 2025 while her husband was away for work. She claimed that Ravindra had made a video of the incident and threatened that if she told anyone about it, he would make the clip public. view comments Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Brinda Karat writes: Harassment of tribal youth, nuns raises urgent questions about minority rights
Brinda Karat writes: Harassment of tribal youth, nuns raises urgent questions about minority rights

Indian Express

time5 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Brinda Karat writes: Harassment of tribal youth, nuns raises urgent questions about minority rights

The arrest of two nuns, Sisters Preeti Mary and Vandana Francis, and Sukhman Mandavi, an Adivasi youth belonging to the Christian community in Chhattisgarh, has been widely reported in the media. I was part of a delegation of Members of Parliament and political leaders who met them in Durg central jail. The cases against them are of forcible conversion and human trafficking. They were released after being granted bail by an NIA court on Saturday. On July 25, three adult Adivasi women accompanied by Mandavi, their family friend, reached Durg station from their village in Orchha, Narayanpur. This was the first time they were travelling outside their district, and were understandably nervous. They were on their way to an Agra hospital to get trained as kitchen help to be employed in institutions run by the nuns. They were waiting at the railway station for two nuns who were to escort them to Agra. They had heard of the jobs through Mandavi's sister Sukhmati, who had worked at the Agra hospital for several years. Mandavi had not bought a platform ticket and was questioned by a passing inspector. This attracted attention and soon a crowd gathered, led by the local Bajrang Dal, who insisted that the group of Adivasis and the nuns, who had arrived by then, should be taken into police custody on charges of trafficking. The Adivasi women showed their Aadhaar cards, which proved that they were not minors. Their parents spoke to the police on the phone, assuring them that their daughters were travelling with their consent. They offered to make the journey from their village several hours away to make written statements to this effect. Thus, no charge of human trafficking was made out. They also stated clearly that they and their daughters had been Christians for several years. There was, therefore, no question of forcible conversion. These are the facts. But it is not facts that mattered. The police control room at the railway station became an arena for open hooliganism. There is video evidence of Bajrang Dal memebers, led by a woman, humiliating, intimidating and shouting at the nuns in filthy, sexist, abusive language. The video shows them beating Mandavi, threatening him to make him 'confess' to being part of the nuns' 'conspiracy'. The young women were taken one by one into an adjoining room and beaten and bullied into changing their statements and agreeing that they were being forcibly taken away. The police stood by while the Constitution, rule of law and the norms of human rights were shredded. Without any independent inquiry, on grounds of 'suspicion' on a complaint filed by a Bajrang Dal leader, the nuns were booked and arrested along with Mandavi. The terrorised Adivasi women were taken to a government home where they were isolated, and when their anxious parents arrived, they were not permitted to meet them. There has been tremendous pressure on the women and the parents to give statements against the nuns and the Church. The women were released after a week of what is termed 'counselling' by the government. Statements given under custodial pressure have little legal value. There are several issues that arise, apart from the utter lawlessness and targeting of Christians by Hindutva outfits backed by the BJP government. This is an attack on the constitutional right of a citizen to travel and work anywhere in the country. Does a young Adivasi woman who belongs to the Christian community have to get a passport stamped by a Sangh Parivar outfit to travel to another state? Why should adult Adivasi Christian women have to show evidence as to why and with whom they are travelling? This case establishes a terrible precedent that directly impacts the lives and livelihoods of young Adivasi women travelling out of their villages for work. A second issue is the nature of the attack on the nuns and the Adivasi women. Can anyone, man or woman, use language that amounts to verbal sexual assault against those in custody and not be prosecuted? This was also a sexist attack that concerns the rights of all women. Then again, the only time the brave Sister Preeti Mary broke down was when she narrated that she was accused by the hooligans of being a 'foreigner' and called a 'deemak' (termite) working against national interest: 'After all my years of work for the poor, for the leprosy-afflicted, in the most remote areas without any facilities, am I to be termed an anti-national termite? My religion inspires me to work for the poor — am I to be punished for that?' We have heard words like 'termites' used by the Home Minister to abuse Bengali-speaking Muslims routinely, as being 'illegal migrants'. Here, we have Christian nuns being called termites. The words we heard joined the dots between that cell in Durg jail and the bastis of Delhi and elsewhere, where Indian citizens are being harassed and tortured in the name of detecting of illegal immigrants: Anyone and everyone who does not fit into the framework of Hindutva can be termed a 'foreigner' and their rights curtailed. The deletion of lakhs of voters in Bihar — mainly the poor, Dalits and marginalised communities — in the Special Intensive Revision to 'purify' the electoral lists is also being done in the name of detection of foreigners. The number of foreigners detected is negligible, but the EC's demand for documents, impossible to procure, has basically robbed the poor of the fundamental right of every Indian to vote in an election. Join the dots of what is happening across India. The horrific aggression and arrest of the nuns and Adivasi Christians is not an isolated incident. To paraphrase what Pastor Martin Niemöller had said, 'If we stay silent today, there will be no one to protest when they come for us tomorrow.' The writer is a member of the CPI(M) Politburo

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store