Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 28th May 2026, 6:36 PM
The waste management operations initiated for the annual festival of Eid-ul-Adha have progressed substantially across the administrative jurisdictions of the Dhaka South City Corporation (DSCC). Dedicated cleansing teams successfully collected and transferred vast amounts of animal refuse generated during the religious sacrifice to central landfills, ensuring municipal sanitation under an accelerated timeline.
During an official press briefing convened on Thursday evening, 28 May 2026, at the Shitalakshya Hall within the Nagar Bhaban municipal headquarters, the DSCC Administrator, Bir Muktijoddha Mohammed Abdus Salam, provided a comprehensive data-led breakdown of the ongoing urban sanitation campaign. The administrator confirmed that during the initial day of the festival, a total of 118,789 sacrificial animals were slaughtered within the geographical boundaries of the southern city corporation.
The scale of the multi-ward operations required a heavy deployment of heavy logistical vehicles, mechanical dumpers, and waste-hauling trucks. Presenting verified quantitative records from the field, Administrator Mohammed Abdus Salam stated that exactly 12,684 tonnes of sacrificial animal waste had been entirely cleared from the city’s streets and residential sectors by 8:30 pm on Eid evening.
Projected Operations: Based on the continuous data streaming from regional waste transfer stations, municipal planners calculated that the aggregate volume of cleared refuse would successfully surpass the 18,000-tonne mark before midnight on Thursday.
Concurrently, cleansing crews have achieved major breakthroughs in rehabilitating the locations allocated for temporary livestock markets (haats). The DSCC administration verified that approximately 65 per cent of the substantial solid waste and organic refuse accumulated at these temporary trading zones had already been thoroughly collected and treated with bleaching powder.
The DSCC administrator highlighted the rapid operational progression observed across the municipality’s localized zones. Out of the 75 distinct municipal wards that fall under the direct administrative purview of the Dhaka South City Corporation, a total of 71 wards have been officially certified as completely free of sacrificial waste, achieving a 100 per cent sanitation clearance rate within the designated deadline.
In the remaining four municipal wards where operations are ongoing, field supervisors reported that approximately 90 per cent of the generated refuse had already been successfully managed. Large contingents of municipal street sweepers and waste disposal staff continue to work continuously to clear the remaining pockets of solid refuse and restore baseline sanitary conditions to these lingering sectors.
The following detailed matrix offers a concise, fact-based overview of the verified operational variables, statistical quantities, and administrative outcomes verified during the initial day of the DSCC post-Eid cleanup operation:
| Operational Parameter | Verified Municipal Record |
| Reporting Authority | Dhaka South City Corporation (DSCC) |
| Briefing Location | Shitalakshya Hall, Nagar Bhaban, Dhaka |
| Presiding Municipal Executive | Administrator Bir Muktijoddha Mohammed Abdus Salam |
| Sacrificial Animal Count | 118,789 Animals Slaughtered (Day 1) |
| Cleared Waste Volume (by 8:30 pm) | 12,684 Tonnes |
| Midnight Projected Clearance | Anticipated to exceed 18,000 Tonnes |
| Livestock Market Cleaning Progress | 65% of Waste Extracted and Treated |
| Fully Cleared Wards (100% Free) | 71 out of 75 Total Wards |
| Remaining Wards Clearance Level | Approximately 90% Completed |
Concluding his formal address to the media assembly, Administrator Mohammed Abdus Salam extended formal commendations to the residents of the metropolis for their active civic compliance and necessary cooperation during the disposal process. He emphasized that sustaining a sanitary, hazard-free urban environment requires continuous public awareness and mutual collaboration between the civilian population and municipal authorities during major religious and cultural events.
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