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A smelly trail from barracks to grounds: Regiment's daily battle in Delhi
A smelly trail from barracks to grounds: Regiment's daily battle in Delhi

Hindustan Times

time26-05-2025

  • General
  • Hindustan Times

A smelly trail from barracks to grounds: Regiment's daily battle in Delhi

Every morning, like clockwork, over 3,000 soldiers of the Rajputana Rifles march out of their barracks and head for the parade ground. But to get there, they must first duck under a narrow, crumbling culvert, entirely covered in garbage, that straddles a foul-smelling drain. Four times a day—twice before breakfast and twice after dusk—this is the path they must cross, navigating muck and stench. This isn't an image from a neglected outpost or a border camp. It's the daily reality inside the headquarters of the Rajputana Rifles, the oldest rifle regiment of the Indian Army, located in Delhi Cantonment, a short walk from the bustling Delhi Cantonment Metro Station. And with monsoon clouds beginning to gather, their path to the parade ground is about to become even more treacherous. Every year, as the rains swell the nallah, the already-difficult crossing becomes a hazard. Flooded, slick with sludge, and nearly waist-deep in places, it forces soldiers to roll up their fatigues and wade through water. They do this till the water reaches a level when it is hazardous to even try crossing the culvert. Locals said that the culvert was flooded again on Sunday morning after heavy rains in the area, disturbing the morning training session of the soldiers. The water drained out only by early afternoon. 'Today was not an exception. This is the ordeal that the soldiers have to face every single time it rains. The purpose of the culvert actually is to drain out water and to provide passage to the men. They use it as there is no other way,' said Aditya Tanwar, a local activist. 'I was recruited in 1990, and we had to use the same drain crossing for training even back then. It got dangerous at night and during the rains. Now, 35 years later, when I'm posted here again, I find the situation hasn't changed,' said a soldier who asked not to be named. 'There have been multiple requests for a foot overbridge, but the Delhi government has done nothing.' It is a cruel irony. Even as the nation celebrates its military strength with symbolic marches and political speeches lauding the success of Operation Sindoor, the soldiers at its heart are left to wrestle with crumbling infrastructure in the very Capital. What deepens the irony is the Delhi government's aggressive push to build foot overbridges (FOBs) across the city since coming to power in February. The Public Works Department (PWD) has sanctioned multiple new FOBs over arterial roads and busy markets. Several lie underutilized or locked up, while one of the city's oldest military institutions continues to be denied a bridge that has been requested for years. 'The proposal has been acknowledged several times. But nothing moves beyond the files. This isn't just about convenience—it's about safety and respect,' said a senior official from the regiment who asked not to be named. 'Even Olympian Neeraj Chopra used this culvert during his training. The new batch of Agniveers will do the same. We are soldiers—we don't complain. But this is not how it should be.' When the culvert floods over during monsoon, which it invariably does, soldiers are forced to walk nearly 2.5km to a traffic light to cross the six-lane Ring Road. The road above is pristine—well-paved, painted, flanked by wide walking paths and six-foot-high iron grills to deter jaywalking. Below it, however, the soldiers inch through filth. Nearby residents have long witnessed this daily indignity. Civil society activists have raised the issue repeatedly. 'We've written to the Public Works Department (PWD), to the lieutenant governor, to the defence ministry. Everyone agrees that an FOB is needed here. But there's been no action. We even moved the court, which asked the government to look into it. We met the chief minister—she gave a positive response, but that was a month ago,' said Paras Tyagi, founder of the Centre for Youth, Culture, Law and Environment, who has led the campaign. PWD officials maintain they are 'considering the matter' and are assessing financial feasibility. But people familiar with the matter admit the file has moved little in two years — despite a strongly worded recommendation from the Central Road Research Institute (CRRI), which is part of Delhi's subway committee and oversees feasibility assessments. Velmurugan S, chief scientist, CCRI, said in the letter: 'It is understood that a minimum of 1,500 commuters must be using this informal pathway with the peak flow of 400 to 500 RRR commuters/soldiers at any instant of time during each of the morning drills, afternoon lunch and evening dinner timings... Considering the prevailing inhuman condition at the site and inadequate facilities for the saviours of our nation, the feasibility of the construction of an FOB is fully justified without having the need to conduct any traffic study. This is because of the fact that the above quantum of commuters is fixed considering the regimented schedule of training every day. The approach of the FOB landing at the RRR Centre side can be oriented to have two landings one on the Ring Road and the other within the premises of the RRR having a gated facility manned by Army.' PWD did not respond to a request for comment. Aditya Tanwar, the activist, recalled how the initial CRRI inspection happened at 11am—long after soldiers had crossed the culvert. 'The team reported that no one used the route. But we requested a second visit at a more relevant time, and they were shocked to see the volume of daily movement,' he said. That second visit changed everything. 'I sent a revised letter to the PWD, stressing the urgency,' said Dr S Velmurugan, chief scientist and head of the traffic engineering and safety division at CRRI. 'What I saw was inhumane. Soldiers, who are supposed to be our protectors, being made to crawl through a drain to train. How has no government thought to build a footbridge here in all these years?' As monsoon approaches again, the need for a decision grows more urgent. Everyone—from local officials and urban planners to military officers and civil society—agrees that a bridge is needed. Yet the papers continue to languish in offices. Until then, soldiers trained to cross mountains, rivers, and deserts will continue to use their skills to duck beneath a broken culvert in the nation's Capital.

Pond turns concrete dumpyard
Pond turns concrete dumpyard

New Indian Express

time09-05-2025

  • Politics
  • New Indian Express

Pond turns concrete dumpyard

NEW DELHI: Despite the allocation of Rs 50 crore for the revival of the capital's water bodies, the depletion and misuse of these bodies remain as rampant as ever. In West Delhi's Naraina village, residents say that a local pond has been systematically destroyed over more than a decade through unchecked construction activities, with full complicity and negligence of government authorities. A recent petition filed in the Delhi High Court by the NGO Centre for Youth Culture Law and Environment details a chronological degradation of the pond beginning in 2012, when it was fully water-filled and surrounded by clean, dry land. By 2024, the site had turned into a concrete dumping yard littered with construction debris. According to Aditya Tanwar, one of the petitioners and a local resident, the Delhi Cantonment Board has begun constructing a paved road in the green areas beside the pond, despite the fact that the land belongs to the Public Works Department (PWD). 'In the course of constructing this road, they have cut multiple trees, and also dumped construction debris into whatever remains of the pond,' said Tanwar. Residents say that the pond has a long history of encroachment and misuse. In 2013, the Public Works Department (PWD) allocated part of the dry land to the Delhi Metro for a construction plant. Over the years, various agencies, including the Defence Ministry and the Delhi Cantonment Board, allegedly carried out construction on or near the water body. Soil excavation, debris dumping, and unauthorised constructions like sewage sumps, porta cabins, and concrete roads steadily shrank the pond's area and depth.

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