Dikshit visits Games Village

September 23, 2010 11:14 am | Updated November 28, 2021 09:39 pm IST - New Delhi

A view of the Commonwealth Games Village during its opening in New Delhi on September 16.

A view of the Commonwealth Games Village during its opening in New Delhi on September 16.

A day after her government was directed by Union Cabinet Secretary K.M. Chandrasekhar to take charge of the Commonwealth Games Village, Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit on Thursday took stock of maintenance and cleanliness facilities at the complex.

The handing over of the village in East Delhi to the Delhi government came after criticism over poor maintenance and filthy conditions at the Village complex where sports persons would be staying.

The maintenance of the Games Village was until now under the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) which is under the direct control of the Union Urban Development Ministry.

A senior Delhi government official said the Chief Minister toured all the towers and reviewed the work being undertaken there.

“She instructed the officials to work on a war-footing to ensure cleanliness and to ensure that athletes do not face any problem. She said the job should be in close coordination with the Organising Committee,” the official said.

As per directions by the Union Cabinet Secretary, the CWG Organising Committee will be the overall in-charge of the Games Village, while the Delhi government will look after issues of maintenance and cleanliness.

Already 40 DANIPS (Delhi, Nicobar and Andaman Island Police Service) officers have been deployed in the Games Village and if required, more officials will be pressed into service.

Cleanliness and maintenance of the Games Village has come under sharp criticism from foreign participants as well as Commonwealth Games Federation Chief Executive Mike Hooper who recently described the facility as “filthy and unimaginable”.

Concerned over the unhygienic conditions at the Games Village, Commonwealth Games Federation chief Michael Fennell had shot off a letter to the Cabinet Secretary asking him to take immediate steps to fix the deficiencies in the residential zone of the Village, which he said has “shocked” advance parties from New Zealand, Canada, Scotland and Ireland.

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