Leh cleanest city in J&K

Excelsior Correspondent
JAMMU, May 4: Indore in Madhya Pradesh has emerged as the cleanest city in the country and Gonda in Uttar Pradesh as the dirtiest while Jammu and Srinagar have been placed at 251 and 241ranking, respectively in the list of cities covered in the Swachh Bharat 2017 survey by Government of India.
With a ranking of 100, Leh is the cleanest city in Jammu and Kashmir State, which is followed by Srinagar and then Jammu.
Union Urban Development Minister M Venkaiah Naidu, announced   the results and described the exercise as a citizens’ verdict. Overall, 37 lakh people responded to a set of six questions about  the city they belonged to in the survey of 434 cities, which account for about 60 per cent of the total urban population in the country.
The response of 18 lakh people was taken into consideration for the  survey after the elimination of duplicate feedback.
Bhopal, also in MP, occupies the second best spot among 434 cities  and towns, followed by Visakhapatnam in Andhra Pradesh and Surat  in Gujarat.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s constituency, Varanasi, has soared  up the cleanliness scale, occupying the 32nd position in ‘Swachh  Survekshan-2017′, which is a part of the Modi Government’s flagship  Swachh Bharat Abhiyan (SBA) or Clean India Mission. It ranked 65th  last year and 418th in 2014.
Mysuru in Karnataka, which bagged the first spot in the last two  surveys, has slipped to the fifth position.
Gujarat, with 12 cities in the top 50, has the best score among  the States, and Uttar Pradesh, which accounts for half of the 50  dirtiest cities, is at the bottom of the list.
Madhya Pradesh, with 11 cities in the top 50, and Andhra Pradesh,  with eight, follow Gujarat. West Bengal did not take part in the survey.
Tiruchirapally in Tamil Nadu is the sixth cleanest city, followed  by the New Delhi Municipal Council area of the national capital.
Bhusawal in Maharashtra is the dirtiest after Gonda while Bagaha and Katihar (Bihar), Hardoi (Uttarakhand) Bahraich, Shahjahanpur and Khurja (UP) and Muktsar and Abohar (Punjab) are in the bottom 10.
The Urban Development Ministry had commissioned the survey for 434  cities and towns with a population of 1 lakh and above in January  and February this year.
Naidu described Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh,  followed by Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, “as Movers and Shakers”  for having significantly improved their rankings since 2014.
The first survey in 2014 was launched before the announcement of  the SBA in October, 2014. The 2016 survey covered 73 cities with over 10 lakh population each  and capital cities. The Minister said all the cities surveyed in Madhya Pradesh and  Jharkhand have substantially improved their rankings since 2014. Gujarat has done so in every city, barring Rajkot. Likewise, every  city in Chhattisgarh, except Bilaspur, has shown an improvement, he said.
Naidu said UP, Bihar, Rajasthan, Punjab and Kerala needed to substantially  step up efforts to improve sanitation standards in urban areas.
In Bihar, 19 out of the 27 cities surveyed have ranks beyond 300.  The cleanest city — at 147 —  is Biharsharif.
In  Rajasthan, 18 of 29 cities are ranked beyond 300 with 13 in  the bottom 100. Bundi, at 171, is the best ranked city in the state.
In Punjab, 7 of the 16 cities surveyed figure among the bottom 100,  with SAS Nagar at 121 getting the highest rank in the state.
Faridabad in Haryana, which improved its rank from 379 in 2014 to  88 this year, has been recognised as the “Fastest Mover” among cities  with a population of above one million each.
In a total score of 2,000, 900 marks were assigned for a city’s  performance in ending open defecation and on solid waste management,  600 marks for citizens’ feedback and 500 marks for independent observations.
The QCI deployed 421 assessors for an on-the-spot assessment of  17,500 locations in the cities and towns.