NEW DELHI, MARCH 4: The city's top brass took to the roads today with brooms in their hands. But only after it had been adequately and evenly littered by the municipality's safai karamcharis, who came armed with a basketful of garbage for the occasion.Between the clicking of cameras, the clapping of the audience and safai karamcharis relaxing on a sofa, the Lieutenant Governor, the Chief Minister, the Municipal Commissioner and the Mayor -- along with a host of enthusiastic councillors swept the city, well, at least a small part of it, clean.
The only person who seemed uncomfortable with the idea of a broom in her hand was Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit, who had to be cajoled into posing with a broom.
The month-long Sanitation-cum-Cleanliness drive, timed well in advance of the `Visit India Year' which begins in April this year, was inaugurated by Lt Governor Vijai Kapoor amidst much fanfare at Humayun Tomb in Nizamuddin this morning.
Even though everyone made the right noises about how the drive should be a year-long affair, it was clear that the emphasis was on sprucing up the city for tourists, expected to arrive from April onwards.
Appreciating the timing of the drive, the Lt Governor said that since it had been scheduled before the beginning of summer and much ahead of the monsoons, it would help in controlling the spread of diseases. He also urged residents to join in the drive.
Speaking on the occasion, Dikshit said Home Minister L.K. Advani had asked that special attention be paid to cleaning up the city.
She announced that the Delhi government had instituted two trophies -- the Lt Governor's Trophy and the Chief Minister's Trophy to encourage `healthy competition'. One will be given to the best maintained zone, the other to the best-maintained area in Delhi, by a committee comprising NGOs, Resident Welfare Associations and officials of the Central Pollution Control Board.
Listing out the programme, Municipal Commissioner V.K. Duggal said that all the departments of the MCD -- Health, Engineering, Sanitation, Horticulture, Works, Education will make a composite effort during the drive. He said that for the first time, dumpers will be placed in congested localities for garbage collection. He added that the MCD would from now onwards use a mechanised system for deep sewage cleaning, which would reduce the risks faced by karamcharis.
The month-long drive will focus on removing accumulated refuse, sprucing up the Capital's railway stations and the Inter-State Bus Terminus, cleaning of sewers and dustbins and strengthening of the door-to-door garbage collection network. Street lights, roads and footpaths will be repaired, schools will be cleaned up and a special `action plan' to control vector-borne and water-borne diseases will be carried out.
Copyright © 1999 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.