Indore’s Water Contamination Crisis: Anatomy of a Preventable Urban Disaster and the Road Ahead
I ndore, repeatedly celebrated as India’s cleanest city, entered the closing days of 2025 with an unsettling contradiction. Beneath its polished streets and award-winning sanitation rankings, a silent failure was unfolding in Bhagirathpura ( densely populated locality or area within the city of Indore, Madhya Pradesh, India, functioning as part of the Indore Municipal Corporation ) . This densely populated neighbourhood would soon become the epicentre of a major public health emergency. What began as complaints of foul-smelling, discoloured, and bitter-tasting water escalated into a deadly waterborne disease outbreak that exposed deep structural weaknesses in urban planning, governance, and environmental management. The crisis was not merely about contaminated water. It was about how modern cities measure cleanliness, how invisible infrastructure is neglected, and how preventable failures continue to cost human lives. The First Warning Signs: When Water Turned Dangerous Residen...