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Bhopal: 106 nodal officers are now on the ground in Bhopal, overseeing a citywide sanitation drive launched by the Bhopal Municipal Corporation (BMC) ahead of Swachh Survekshan 2025–26.
The campaign comes as the capital enters the Super Swachh League, where it will compete against Indore, Navi Mumbai, Surat, Vijayawada, Ahmedabad, and Lucknow.The operation, monitored directly by BMC commissioner Sanskruti Jain. The current initiative BMC claims has transformed areas once marked by garbage and neglect. Back lanes behind government quarters, previously filled with waste and foul odors, now feature murals and clean pathways.
Sanitation workers are active from before sunrise until late in the day, clearing not only garbage but accumulated dust, repairing roads, and sprucing up walls, official said.Strict accountability measures are in place. Two officials were suspended last week after filth in their ward, and show-cause notices were issued to others. The action has heightened vigilance across all 21 zones. Despite fewer resources compared to rivals like Indore, BMC’s staff are visibly working at full capacity, with the BMC promising recognition for field workers who excel.
Residents across Ashoka Garden, Ginnori, Narayan Nagar and Bijli Nagar report visible improvements. They describe cleaner streets, murals that brighten neighborhoods, and a sense that back lanes are finally being treated with the same importance as main roads. Jain has emphasized that the survey is not only about rankings but about civic responsibility, adding that employees who perform exceptional work will be specially honored this year.Bhopal’s entry into the Super Swachh League marks a significant step in its bid to be counted among India’s cleanest cities, with the current drive aimed at ensuring the capital can hold its own against the country’s strongest competitors.



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