Headlines
President's Estate breeding mosquitoes - gets 76 notices
New Delhi, Aug 26
The sprawling President's
Estate has been found to be breeding mosquitoes at many accumulated
pools of stagnant water -- with 76 notices slapped on Rashtrapati Bhavan
by civic agency NDMC.
The notices were issued to Rashtrapati
Bhavan since January by the New Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC) after
mosquito larvae were found at many places dotting the 320-acre estate,
said an NDMC official.
With the capital reporting many dengue
cases, the NDMC has decided to control the mosquito menace, including in
the President's Estate.
Four teams comprising four members each were set up on Tuesday to control mosquito breeding at the President's Estate.
The
teams included members from the sanitation and horticulture units at
Rashtrapati Bhavan, and the civil engineering unit under the Central
Public Works Department (CPWD) and personnel of the malaria unit of the
NDMC health department.
According to an NDMC official, the
decision to send the teams was taken after a meeting between the NDMC
and the director of the President's Estate.
"We are helping
officials of the President's House make the entire area free from
mosquito-breeding conditions. The notices were issued from January 1
till August 25 at individual capacity by different departments," R.N.
Singh, chief medical officer for malaria and dengue at NDMC, told IANS.
Other
government institutions have also been served notices for mosquito
breeding. These are Safdarjung Airport, Mausam Vibhag, Railway Officers
Colony at S.P. Marg, Chhattisgarh Bhavan and hospitals like AIIMS,
Safdarjung and RML.
Advisories have been issued to more than 50
embassies that fall in the NDMC area to be active in controlling
breeding of mosquitoes.
The NDMC official said the civic body
does not have the authority to issue challan or serve notice to
embassies, and would extend all support to embassies in controlling
mosquito breeding.
Regarding government offices and residential
colonies, the official said if after inspection, the premises are found
to be positive for mosquito breeding, then notices are served.
"If after repeated notice, no improvement is seen, then challans are issued," he said.
This
year, already 3,215 notices have been served for mosquito breeding in
various places in the NDMC area, and 137 challans have been issued.
This
year, 530 dengue cases have been reported in the national capital so
far, with more than 440 cases reported in August alone. Two deaths have
been reported so far due to dengue this year.
