๐ช"Heroes in Uniform, Struggling in Sewage: The Daily March Through Muck at Rajputana Rifles HQ" ๐♂️๐ง
๐ช Every morning, like clock-work, over 3,000 soldiers of the Rajputana Rifles march out of their barracks and head for the parade ground.
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๐ง But to get there, they must first duck under a nar-row, crumbling culvert, entirely covered in garbage, that straddles a foul-smelling drain.
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๐ฉ Four times a day—twice before breakfast and twice after dusk—this is the path they must cross, navigating muck and stench.
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๐️ This isn't an image from a neglected outpost or a border camp.
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๐️ It's the daily reality inside the head-quarters of the Rajputana Rifles, the old-est rifle regiment of the Indian Army, located in Delhi Cantonment, a short walk from the bustling Delhi Cantonment Metro Station.
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๐ง️ Every year, as the rains swell the nul-lah, the already-difficult crossing becomes a hazard.
๐ฆ Flooded, slick with sludge, and nearly waist-deep in places, it forces sol-diers to roll up their fatigues and wade through water.
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⚠️ They do this till the water reaches a level when it is hazardous to even try crossing the culvert.
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๐ฃ️ Locals said that the culvert was flooded again on Sunday morning after heavy rains, disturbing the morning training session of the soldiers.
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๐ The water drained out only by early after-noon.
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๐ข "Today was not an exception. This is the ordeal that the soldiers have to face every single time it rains. The purpose of the culvert actually is to drain out water and to provide passage to the men. They use it as there is no other way," said Aditya Tanwar, a local activist.
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๐ด "I was recruited in 1990, and we had to use the same drain crossing for train-ing even back then. It got dangerous at night and during the rains. Now, 35 years later, when I'm posted here again, I find the situation hasn't changed," said a soldier who asked not to be named.
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๐ "There have been multiple requests for a foot over-bridge, but the Delhi government has done nothing."
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๐ฎ๐ณ It is a cruel irony. Even as the nation celebrates its mili-tary strength with symbolic marches and political speeches lauding the success of Operation Sindoor, the soldiers at its heart are left to wrestle with crumbling infrastructure in the very Capital.
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๐️ What deepens the irony is the Delhi government's aggressive push to build foot overbridges (FOBs) across the city since coming to power in February.
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๐งพ The Public Works Department (PWD) has sanctioned multiple new FOBs over arte-rial roads and busy markets.
๐ Several lie underutilised or locked up, while one of the city's oldest military institutions con-tinues to be denied a bridge that has been requested for years.
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๐ "The proposal has been acknowledged several times. But nothing moves beyond the files. This isn't just about conve-nience it's about safety and respect," said a senior official from the regiment who asked not to be named.
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๐ฅ "Even Olympian Neeraj Chopra used this culvert during his training. The new batch of Agniveers will do the same. We are soldiers—we don't complain. But this is not how it should be."
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๐ถ♂️ When the culvert floods over during monsoon, which it invariably does, sol-diers are forced to walk nearly 2.5km to a traffic light to cross the six-lane Ring Road.
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๐ฃ️ The road above is pristine—well-paved, painted, flanked by wide walking paths and six-foot-high iron grills to deter jaywalking.
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๐ Below it, however, the sol-diers inch through filth.
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๐ง Nearby residents have long witnessed this daily indignity.
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๐ณ️ Civil society activists have raised the issue repeatedly.
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