What are the changes that have taken place pre and post of swach bharat abhiyan in Indore??
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New Delhi: Indore aces the Swachh Survekshan yet again for the third consecutive year Madhya Pradesh’s commercial capital has retained its swachh crown in Swachh Survekshan 2019 as announced today by President Ram Nath Kovind along with Hardeep Singh Puri, Union Minister of State in Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA) in New Delhi. After Indore, Chhattisgarh’s Ambikapur and Karnataka’s Mysuru bagged the title of India’s second and third cleanest city. Congratulating the city on its Swachh hat-trick, Mayor of India’s cleanest city, Indore, Malini Gaur said, “Indore has proven to be No. 1 for the third time in a row in Swachh Survekshan. It is a moment of proud for each one of us. I would like to thank Indore wasis (citizens of Indore) along with the municipal corporation on this huge success.”
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logoSUPPORThomePOLITICS ECONOMY EXTERNAL AFFAIRS SECURITY CULTURE OPINION VIDEO ANALYSIS MEDIA GOVERNMENT WORLD EDITOR'S PICK TOP STORIES LIVE WIRE SCIENCEPoliticsDemolitions, Evictions and Toilets for Show: How Indore Won Swachh Bharat's Top RankIn an attempt to make the city 'open defecation free', families who had paid for toilets and were midway through construction allege that their houses were destroyed before surveyors came around.Oct 02, 2017 | Sukanya Shantha
In an attempt to make the city ‘open defecation free’, families who had paid for toilets and were midway through construction allege that their houses were destroyed before surveyors came around.
Nanjubai and 40 other families lost their houses to a demolition drive carried out by the Indore Municipal Corporation at Sukhniwas slums after the corporation failed to build toilets on time. Credit: Sukanya Shantha
Indore: In November last year, Indore Municipal Corporation (IMC) officials moved around in the city in twos or threes to ensure that every household without a personal toilet was enumerated. Nanjubai’s house was one among 40 – all belonging to the Bhil community – built on one end of the Sukhniwas road. An official meeting was called with all the residents, details collected from each household and the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan scheme explained.
At the end, Nanjubai and the others were informed that they would have to pay about Rs 1,360 within a week – the subsidised amount to be paid to get a toilet built under the scheme. For Nanjubai, a 22-year-old mother of four whose husband works as a daily-wage labourer, this was a hefty sum. But a separate toilet also seemed like a gateway to a dignified life in the future. “I was excited that I would soon be able to use a personal toilet and would not have to worry about using open spaces during the night time or even walk a kilometre to use a public toilet. My house would have its own.
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