City
Epaper

TN BJP slams poor state of public toilets in Chennai; alleges ₹1,000-cr irregularities in management

By IANS | Updated: July 30, 2025 13:24 IST

Chennai, July 30 Tamil Nadu BJP president Nainar Nagendran on Wednesday accused the state government of corruption and ...

Open in App

Chennai, July 30 Tamil Nadu BJP president Nainar Nagendran on Wednesday accused the state government of corruption and mismanagement in the maintenance of public toilets in Chennai.

He claimed that despite spending close to Rs 1,000 crore, the condition of public conveniences across the city remains deplorable and called for the people to remove the ruling DMK from power in the next Assembly election.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, Nagendran alleged that around Rs 620 crore had been spent under the 'Swachh Bharat Mission' for the upkeep of 10,000 public toilets spread across 1,260 locations in Chennai.

Additionally, he alleged that Rs 430 crore was allocated for the privatisation of public toilets in Royapuram and Thiru Vi Ka Nagar zones.

“Nearly Rs 1,000 crore has been spent, yet the quality of these facilities is abysmal. Who is this government fooling?” he asked.

Nagendran also pointed to what he called an inexplicable hike in maintenance costs.

“In January 2022, the cost of maintaining a single public toilet was Rs 3.18, but by September 2022, it had shot up to Rs 363.90. Where did the remaining Rs 360.72 go?” he questioned.

He added that three-fourths of the toilets in Chennai lack basic amenities such as water supply, doors and latches, with stained floors and a persistent stench. “This exposes the corrupt face of the DMK government,” he said.

The BJP leader also recalled the women-centric 'She Toilets' initiative launched in 2023 at a cost of Rs 4.5 crore, alleging that most of these mobile units had disappeared within a year. “The few remaining units are in such poor condition that they cannot be used, posing a major public health hazard,” he said.

Chennai’s public toilets have long faced criticism over poor maintenance and accessibility. While the city corporation has tried various models, including outsourcing maintenance to private contractors, the results have been inconsistent.

Many residents complain that a majority of the facilities remain unhygienic, and women and children, in particular, find it difficult to use them.

Civic activists have often cited a lack of monitoring and accountability as key reasons for this state of affairs.

Calling the alleged irregularities “outrageous,” Nagendran said the DMK government was “plundering people’s money” even in the name of basic amenities.

“This government will go to any extent to fill its coffers. Tamil Nadu will be revived only when this regime is removed from power,” he claimed.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketIndia assistant coach hails Nair for resilient fifty, says veteran handled pressure coming with Test comeback well

CricketWant to respect where his body is, wasn't worth including him: Doeschate explains Bumrah's absence at Oval

International"Pahalgam attack was unacceptable, Panama stands with India": Vice Minister Hoyos

InternationalUS, European allies condemn Iran's threats on foreign soil, call for end to 'illegal activities'

InternationalUS announces construction of USD 200 million White House State Ballroom

National Realted Stories

NationalUnder fire NCP minister Manikrao Kokate stripped of Agriculture Ministry portfolio; Dattatray Bharne given charge

NationalPrevious Left govt distributed jobs from party offices: Tripura CM Saha

NationalDo you have regulatory approval for Kaleshwaram project, Lokesh asks Telangana

NationalRajasthan records highest rainfall for month of July in 69 years

NationalDharmasthala mass grave case: SIT completes excavation at 6th burial site, recovers bones