The city has lived for years with the stench of untreated garbage rising from its landfill. Achan has become a symbol of neglect, a dumping ground that holds millions of tonnes of waste, leaching into soil and water, poisoning the air, and spreading disease among those who live nearby. For residents, this has never been a technical issue alone; it has been a daily ordeal of foul air, contaminated water, and recurring illness. Children grow up breathing toxins, families endure skin infections and respiratory problems, and the community suffers silently as the site expands into a mountain of untreated filth. The promise of scientific waste management has been long pending, and the suffering has been real.
The announcement of an integrated solid waste management facility, with its composting units, biogas plant, recovery systems and leachate treatment, is not just another infrastructure project. It is an overdue response to a crisis that has festered for decades. The city’s waste has been piling up without scientific processing, and the landfill has become a breeding ground for disease. People living around Achan have carried the burden of this failure, their health compromised, their environment degraded, their dignity eroded. The new plan, if executed with discipline, offers a chance to reverse this trajectory and restore a measure of relief to those who have waited too long.
The cost of delay has been immense. Every day that untreated garbage lies exposed, toxins seep into groundwater, foul odours spread across neighbourhoods, and vectors of disease multiply. The landfill has not only scarred the landscape but has also scarred lives. Respiratory ailments, gastrointestinal disorders, and skin diseases have become common in the surrounding areas. The suffering of the people is a reminder that waste mismanagement is not an abstract environmental concern but a direct assault on public health. The urgency of action cannot be overstated. This is not about statistics or technical vetting alone; it is about lives lived in the shadow of a toxic dump.
The detailed project report, prepared after consultation with multiple agencies, promises a system that will ensure one hundred percent scientific processing of municipal solid waste. If implemented faithfully, it can reduce landfill dependency, enhance recycling, and improve compliance with environmental norms. But promises have been made before, and the difference now must be in execution. Floating tenders and holding pre‑bid meetings are procedural steps; what matters is whether the facility rises on time, functions as designed, and delivers relief to the people who have endured the consequences of neglect. Accountability must be built into every stage, and transparency must guide the process.
The monitoring mechanisms already in place, with laboratories assessing groundwater, air, soil and leachate, are important but insufficient unless they lead to corrective measures. Reports that merely record contamination without triggering action are of little comfort to those who suffer. The landfill has been a violation of environmental norms for years, and compliance with regulatory directions has often been delayed or diluted.
This issue has lingered far too long. The people have waited for years while committees sought reports and departments exchanged memoranda. Meanwhile, the landfill grew, the stench spread, and the diseases multiplied. The approval of the project is a step forward, but it must be followed by swift and disciplined action. The suffering of residents around Achan is a stark reminder that waste mismanagement is not a distant policy matter but a lived reality of pain and illness. The city cannot afford further delay. The health of its people demands urgency, and the environment demands responsibility.
