Live
- Counting of votes for Maharashtra and Jharkhand assembly election begins
- FABA announces Lifetime Achievement award to Dr Soumya
- Cantt residents urge intervention into merger issue
- Value buying spurs a quick pullback rally
- Certificates awarded to those who completed vocational training
- Biz activity surges to 3-mth high in Nov: Report
- Hyderabad property registrations rise 14% to Rs 3,617 cr in Oct
- Release funds for temples located in Boath constituency: Cong leaders
- Rs 37.81 crore to develop Shringaverpur Dham in UP
- PM Modi should order arrest of Adani: CPI
Just In
Strong stench at the Taj Mahal's toilets forces ASI to work out truce with employees on strike
The employees of BVG who were on strike alleged they had not been paid their salaries for the past six months, and even after repeated reminders, no action had been initiated by the ASI.
Agra: Alarmed over a spate of complaints from tourists regarding stinking toilets in the Taj Mahal, the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) officials on Wednesday worked out a truce with the sanitation workers on strike who returned to work to clean up the mess.
After Tuesday's downpour, the Taj Mahal looked dazzling white and the lawns were fresh with lush green grass cover. Visitors expressed satisfaction at the level of cleanliness.
On Tuesday, around 30 'safari karamcharis' hired by the Bharat Vikas Group (BVG) had gone on strike to demand disbursement of their salaries.
Within a few hours, the whole area was filled with the stench causing uneasiness among the visitors who started complaining about this.
The ASI deployed its own staff to help clean the toilets and clear the mess left unattended by the striking workers of the Bharat Vikas Group. BVG has been contracted by the ASI to clean and maintain public toilets in the Mughal monuments in Agra.
The employees of BVG on strike alleged they had not been paid their salaries for the past six months, and even after repeated reminders, no action had been initiated by the ASI.
ASI officials said they had informed the headquarters in New Delhi and "some action was likely to happen soon."
The workers who were on strike levelled serious charges against the ASI and blamed the officials for dragging their case for long, showing hardly any sensitivity to their plight.
They alleged that the wife of one of the worker's had died in hospital as her treatment was delayed for want of money.
Meanwhile, Ved Gautam, a tourist guide at the Taj Mahal said: "The ASI should have made alternative arrangements or ensured the workers were paid. How can they take this problem so lightly?
The holiday crowds are already here. It is, therefore, necessary that the basic infrastructural facilities be maintained in top condition.
The ASI should also provide protection to visitors from stray animals, monkeys, dogs and buffaloes, seen going berserk so often," Gautam added.
Meanwhile, security arrangements were beefed up ahead of the Independence Day, both in the monuments and in the city, following intelligence inputs of violence.
Senior officials, including the District Magistrate N.G. Ravi Kumar, inspected the central jail where Kashmiri detainees had been shifted. The constant vigil was being kept at known flashpoints in the city, police officials said.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com