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Govt calls in cops for clearing city of garbage

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The Times of India    24.08.2012

Govt calls in cops for clearing city of garbage

BANGALORE: Deputy chief minister R Ashoka says the government is exploring all options and even deploying cops where needed to sort out the garbage mess before it overwhelms the city and the downpour on Thursday evening threatened to make it worse.

The basic flaw, Ashoka says, is the location of the landfills. The deputy CM says: "We need to improve basic amenities in the villages where the landfills have been set up. I've released Rs 5 crore to provide basic infrastructure, roads and sanitation in these places. I've spoken to the pollution control board officials and the BBMP to dump garbage in the landfills."

However, A Sadashivaiah, chairman, Karnataka State Pollution Control Board, said: "We have not lifted the ban on Mavallipura landfill. The BBMP must submit its compliance report first and we'll take a decision later. As of now, there is no permission to dump garbage in Mavallipura."

THE MUCK STOPS HERE

STINK BOMB

FRIDAY FLASHPOINT: The situation threatens to go out of hand after an anti-dumping activist dies during a protest on Thursday. Villagers of Mavallipura call for a Yelahanka bandh; Pollution Board says garbage can't be dumped there

With protests hotting up in the suburbs where landfills are located, Bangalore's powers-that-be wrestled with the mounting heaps of garbage, worsened by rain through the evening. The BBMP trucks heading out to Mavallipura to dump the city's 12,000 tonnes of accumulated waste were diverted as activists took to the streets.

Emotions ran high after an anti-garbage dumping activist died on Thursday in the middle of the protest. The tragic development came as residents of Mavallipura and 24 other villages in the neighbourhood began protesting the state government's announcement that Bangalore's garbage would be dumped in the landfill from Thursday. An 800-strong police force turned up at the landfill in the morning, sending tempers soaring. Srinivas Jayaramaiah, 40, who had been in the forefront of the Mavallipura agitation for over a decade, and his fellow villagers were part of the agitation against the deployment of the policemen. Realizing it would not be too long before the garbage trucks arrived , the villagers began lining the road leading to the landfill. "Srinivas collapsed even as we were protesting," said B Srinivas, gram panchayat member of Shivanahalli, near Mavallipura.

Srinivas was rushed to Baptist Hospital, Hebbal , where doctors declared him brought dead. A doctor said he died of cardiac arrest. "Other details of his health condition will come to light only after the autopsy," he said.

Srinivas' brother Venkatesh told TOI the garbage dumping and its after-effects in the area had upset them deeply. "He was part of the protests since 2002. He neglected his health and family," Venkatesh claimed.

Mavallipura villagers have decided not to cremate Srinivas's body till a CBI probe is ordered. They will gather at Yelahanka General Hospital around 9am Friday and stage a day-long protest. The villagers and Srinivas' relatives demanded Rs 25 lakh as compensation for his family.

VILLAGERS ASK FOR ASHOKA

The Mavallipura protesters demanded that home minister R Ashoka, who on Wednesday had asked KSPCB to allow dumping of garbage in Mavallipura, come to the village and give them a hearing. Ashoka chose not to go to Mavallipura.

Ashoka told TOI later that Srinivas' death had nothing to do with police entering the village or the dumpyard. "They are separate issues. I have cross-checked . Police were at the dumpyard only to maintain law and order," he said.

Last Updated on Friday, 24 August 2012 08:51