On the service road between Moosarambagh and dilsukhnagar, ghmc officers from the malakpet circle under the charminar zone demolished sheds and booths that had been unlawfully built by street vendors and absentee street vendors.
 
Remarkably, there was no opposition or disorderly situations. By around 8 am, when the disassembly began, the majority of the street sellers had not yet arrived at their place of employment. Along with destruction, there was a clean-up campaign in honour of ghmc Commissioner K Amarapali's travel to the region.


The supervisor of ghmc, govinda reddy, asserted that ghmc was doing its hardest to restore order and that no attempt had been made to negatively impact the street sellers' lives along the route.
 
Reddy claims that because the street sellers were gathering leaves and dust from the trees and passing cars on the main dilsukhnagar road, the ghmc had sent them many letters requesting them not to build any unlawful shelters on top of their food and beverage stands.
 

"We have previously presented them with warnings and punished them, but each time they have paid the Rs 500 fine and continued to dump their trash at open areas on their way home. We are instructed to provide them two dust bins (red and green) to segregate their wet and dry waste. reddy told Siasat.com, "They have not been giving the garbage to the ghmc autos despite repeated requests."
 
According to him, the majority of street sellers were in possession of street vendor identity cards, which allowed them to apply for loans of up to Rs 10,000. But he issued a warning: these merchants had no right to erect unauthorised shelters at their establishments.
 
 

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