Ironically, as they grappled with another day of a growing civic crisis, union Urban Development Minister M. Venkaiah Naidu was announcing the list of India's cleanest cities in faraway Delhi.
With Mayor Mukta Tilak in Mexico and Pune District Guardian Minister Girish Bapat in Australia, there was little hope of the impasse, embodying the global urban crisis of waste management and collection, being resolved.
The sprawling depot is where Pune dumps tons of garbage every day. The site also houses waste disposal and treatment plants.
The city generates 1,600 tons of garbage everyday, of which 1,000 tons is treated within city limits, while the rest is taken to the site near the twin villages, civic officials said.
Amongst those participating in the protest was Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) MP Supriya Sule.
Seeking Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis' intervention to resolve the deadlock and safeguard the health of the villagers, she said decision makers were on foreign trips at a time when people were suffering.
"I have written a letter to the mayor and also tagged (on Twitter) the chief minister and sought his intervention," she told reporters.
Workers of the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) had also staged a demonstration outside the mayor's home.
The problem had started after a fire broke out at the garbage depot. Though the blaze was brought under control, villagers complained of toxic fumes emanating from the site and causing health problems.
About two weeks ago, they launched an agitation and stopped trucks carrying garbage from the city to dump the waste at the site.
The villagers have been demanding that the civic administration shift the depot. The continuous dumping of garbage had polluted the groundwater and the air and put their heath at risk, they said.
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