Tragedy in ‘India’s Cleanest City’: 15 Dead as Sewage Contaminates Indore Water Supply
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Indore: A devastating public health crisis has tarnished Indore’s reputation as India’s cleanest city after laboratory reports confirmed that sewage-contaminated water triggered a deadly diarrhea outbreak. The investigation into the Bhagirathpura tragedy revealed a catastrophic infrastructure failure: a municipal water pipeline running directly beneath a public toilet had ruptured, allowing raw sewage to mix with the drinking water supply.
While official government figures currently acknowledge four deaths, local reports and the city’s Mayor, Pushyamitra Bhargava, have indicated the toll is significantly higher, with at least 10 to 15 fatalities reported, including a six-month-old infant. The state government is now facing intense scrutiny for a four-month delay in a tender, originally issued in August 2025, to replace the aging pipelines in the affected area, which was only fast-tracked after the outbreak turned fatal.
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has issued a formal notice to the Madhya Pradesh government over "administrative negligence," noting that residents’ repeated complaints about foul-smelling water went unheeded for weeks. Simultaneously, the Madhya Pradesh High Court has intervened, ordering the state to provide free medical treatment to all victims and demanding a comprehensive status report by this afternoon. As forensic teams conduct door-to-door screenings of over 40,000 residents, the state has pledged a complete audit of all underground water and sewer lines to restore public safety and trust in the city’s sanitation standards.
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