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BMC Completes Overnight Cleanup After Maratha Quota Protest at Azad Maidan

City data show a massive sanitation deployment kept the protest zone functional, limiting health risks.

Overview

  • Following a Bombay High Court order to disperse, the civic body ran a night-long operation that cleared Azad Maidan and adjoining roads and restored routine services by September 2–3.
  • About 1,000 sanitation staff worked in shifts, with 200–400 on overnight duty, using compactors, skid-steer loaders, and suction–jetting machines to remove waste and wash streets.
  • Reported waste totals vary, with official tallies around 101 metric tonnes during the protest period and some outlets citing more than 125 tonnes, while one report put the figure at 153 tonnes.
  • Roughly 450 toilet seats, including about 100 mobile units, were maintained with jet-spray cleaning, and 25–26 water tankers supported the site along with a medical unit that treated around 4,000 people on September 1.
  • The Mumbai Fire Brigade installed 40 floodlights for night work, and BMC teams applied disinfectants including about 1,050 kg of bleaching powder and 100 kg of izol, routing collected waste via transfer stations to Deonar or Kanjurmarg.