Dear Madam / Sir,

Please see Kozhikode (Calicut) being declared the litter free city in India!

Prashant

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
     
      From today, India gets first litter-free city: Kozhikode
     
            RAJEEV P I   
     
      Posted online: Friday, August 12, 2005 at 0231 hours IST
     
     
       KOZHIKODE, AUGUST 11: Many Kozhikodans love to believe that Vasco Da 
Gama won't lose his way if he returns to the city now, 507 years after his 
ship famously docked here-the narrow, winding city streets haven't changed 
much since. 

      But Kozhikode is now all set to be declared India's first litter-free 
city, tomorrow. Author and social critic Sukumar Azhikode will make the formal 
declaration at an elaborate function here.          
           
      The only rough patch is, the Congress-led opposition in the local city 
corporation has decided to boycott the declaration. They allege it is a vote-
catching ploy of the CPM-led front ruling the civic body, five months to 
Kerala's local bodies poll. 

      The change, however, is for real. Gone are the odious heaps of fly-
infested trash, even the eyesore public rubbish bins. No one throws garbage 
out anymore, or need to. Thanks to an initiative that has caught the fancy of 
much of the city population, smartly uniformed young women arrive driving 
specially designed cargo autorickshaws at each city home, shop and office 
every morning, picking up the garbage. Every home has been given two covered 
containers-a white one for plastics and other non-biodegradable wastes, green 
for other trash. 

      Together, the 730-odd trained women belonging to local self-help 
collectives now handle some 300 tonnes of city wastes, over the 83 square 
kilometres that this small city straddles. They are organised into 73 
different units of ten women each. The city corporation gives each unit a 
grant of Rs 1.25 lakh and helps get an equal amount as bank loans, to buy two 
autorickshaws. Almost all of them are the unemployed from poorer city homes. 

      It's not a free service. Each home must pay them a service charge of up 
to Rs 30 each month. Shops, hotels and offices pay more. But few seem to 
grudge it, except in politically polarised city pockets. ''It is any civic 
body's basic responsibility to keep its city clean. It's not fair to charge 
people for such a service,'' says Noorbina Rashid, councillor and a leader of 
the opposition in the corporation. 

      But others are happy. ''All 73 units remain comfortably viable a year 
since launch,'' says P Venugopal, the corporation secretary. Initially, the 
women used to hire male drivers, but not anymore. They drive their autos 
themselves. 

      The city corporation's covered trash trucks relay the collected rubbish 
from the autorickshaws to the refuse yard on the outskirts at Nheliyamparamba. 
A private company, Poabs Ltd, then gets down to turning wastes into manure at 
the corporation's refuse processing plant on the site, while the segregated 
plastic and non-degradables go to landfill sites. 

      The Rs 6.13-crore model solid waste management project is funded jointly 
by the Union Ministry for Environment and Forests, the state pollution control 
board and the city corporation. Before its kick off in 2004 June, the 
corporation had managed to rope in local NGOs, officials, residents 
associations, trade bodies and others to pledge their support. 

      Local monitoring committees headed by the respective ward councillors 
and nine local members monitor the garbage collection and cleanliness drive. 
Hotels and the trade have their own street monitoring committees. 

      ''There have been some non-cooperation in some areas, mostly political. 
So we are going to bring in adequately hefty fines for garbage throwing, with 
a built-in option of designated rubbish drop points in the city for those 
wanting to keep off this project,'' says city mayor Thottathil Raveendran. 

      The only remaining hitch in cleaning up the city, the Mayor claims, is 
finding a site to house the city's Rs 50 lakh night soil disposal plant. Its 
attempts have been meeting with stiff local resistance everywhere.
     

"INDIA INVITES" 
Member - IATO & Recognition - DOT, Government of Goa
Shop 1 / Flat 3, Opposite Pandava Church, Coelho Apartments, Aquem Alto
Margao, GOA - 403601, INDIA
------------------------------------------------
Telephone: ++ 91-832-2715781 Fax: 2713421
Mobile:      ++ 91-9326113063 (Prashant) ++ 91-9822486136 (Nilita)
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web:  www.indiainvites.com

Reply via email to