
Gurugram hit by worker shortage amid police raids
The Gurugram police recently intensified efforts to identify and detain illegal immigrants. However, the drive has sparked panic among the city's migrant workforce, many of whom now fear being wrongly targeted. The sudden exodus has disrupted daily life for many residents in upscale localities.
'Nearly 80% of domestic staff and waste collectors have left in the past few days. Garbage collection has been hit. The municipal vehicle comes once every three to four days now,' said Abhey Poonia, senior vice-president of the Gurgaon Citizens' Council, an umbrella body of over 80 RWAs.
Residents of Sushant Lok-II and Sector 43 shared similar accounts. A couple living in Regency Park-I said both their help and car cleaner, verified by police, fled to Assam after night raids in their building. 'The ongoing drive scared them. Their landlord also told tenants from Bengal and Assam to vacate,' they said.
Migrants from these States typically stay in villages like Chakkarpur, Nathupur, Sikanderpur Ghosi and jhuggi clusters around DLF Phase-I, III and Sector 56.
Firdos, a car washer who stays with his wife and two daughters in Carterpuri village, said he, too, is planning to return to West Bengal. 'Many people I know have been detained by the police. One of them was also beaten up,' he said.
A contractor managing waste collection in Sector 15 Part-II and its neighbouring areas reported labour fleeing en masse. 'Most of my workers have vanished. It could take over a week for things to settle,' he said.
However, Municipal Corporation spokesperson Satyabir Rohilla denied any disruption to garbage collection.
Gurugram Police spokesperson Sandeep Kumar said the crackdown had been slowed after the RWAs flagged the disruption. 'We are acting only on specific inputs. So far, 10 people have been identified as illegal residents based on documents from the respective District Magistrates. They were found to own land in Bangladesh and were born there,' he said. Mr. Kumar dismissed allegations of harassment or torture, saying proper verification is being done.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
2 hours ago
- Mint
Gurugram police detain 10 illegal Bangladeshi immigrants, deportation underway
Ten Bangladeshi nationals have been detained in Gurugram as part of an ongoing drive to identify illegal immigrants, and they will be deported, police said on Saturday. As reported by ANI, citing Sandeep Kumar, PRO, Gurugram Police, 'Gurugram Police has detained 10 illegal Bangladeshi immigrants. Bangladeshi documents have been recovered from them. The process to deport them has begun.' Earlier on Friday, Police told PTI that strict instructions have been given to landlords in Gurugram to complete police verification of their tenants before renting houses to them. According to police, many illegal migrants have now gone underground. In the absence of valid documents, they are moving towards rural areas or other cities. Police sources told PTI that on Thursday that under the drive, which has been going on for the past week, more than 250 suspected illegal immigrants have been sent to holding areas, where their documents are being verified. Hundreds of domestic workers and sanitation staff have left Gurugram due to fear of police checks and detention. This sudden exit has severely disrupted waste collection. Garbage has been piling up on the streets while door-to-door waste collection systems have collapsed. According to the Hindustan Times, areas like Sector 103, Palam Vihar, Sector 56, 57 and Sector 29 are now facing waste problems. Residents are hiring tractor-trolleys without proper waste separation or trained workers. It is causing random dumping that risks turning into a serious health crisis. In a separate incident, two suspected Bangladeshi smugglers were shot dead by the BSF at the international border in South Tripura, PTI reported. "BSF personnel were keeping a close vigil on the border when they spotted a major smuggling attempt. As they tried to intercept, the smugglers got violent. In self-defence, the security personnel opened fire," a senior officer of the border-guarding force said. (This is a breaking news)


The Hindu
3 hours ago
- The Hindu
Two suspected Bangladeshi smugglers shot dead at International Border in Tripura
'Two suspected Bangladeshi smugglers were shot dead by the Border Security Force (BSF) at the International Border in South Tripura,' officials said on Saturday (July 26, 2025). 'Another Bangladeshi was injured in the firing, while two Indian smugglers were arrested. The incident happened at Amzadnagar in the early hours of Friday (July 25, 2025),' they added. 'BSF personnel were keeping a close vigil on the border when they spotted a major smuggling attempt. As they tried to intercept, the smugglers got violent. In self-defence, the security personnel opened fire,' a senior officer of the border-guarding force said. Flash flood hits Tripura: More than 100 families rendered homeless 'Three smugglers received gunshot wounds and fell to the ground. While one of them died on the spot, two others were taken back to Bangladesh by their companions,' he said. 'They were taken to the Parshuram Upazila health centre in Bangladesh, where one of them died. The other person is undergoing treatment there,' he added. 'A medicine consignment worth ₹15 lakh was recovered from the site,' the BSF officer said. 'The body of the Bangladeshi smuggler, who died on the spot, was handed over to the authorities of the neighbouring country in the presence of Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) officers on Friday (July 25, 2025),' he said. BSF Eastern Command reviews operational preparedness through technology modernisation 'A commandant-level flag meeting was also held and BGB officers expressed concern over the firing. But we made our position clear that smuggling will not be tolerated along the India-Bangladesh border. Besides, the BSF was compelled to fire in self-defence as the smugglers became violent,' the officer said. Assistant Inspector General (Law and Order) of the Tripura Police, Ranadhir Debbarma, told PTI that two Indian smugglers were arrested in connection with the smuggling attempt.


Mint
3 hours ago
- Mint
Gurugram cries for help: Househelps, sanitation workers ‘vanish' without notice; social media reacts, ‘What's going on?'
A Reddit user was left in shock after the maid and the cook had disappeared suddenly from Gurugram. 'What's going on?' the user asked. 'Since Sunday there is a issue we all are facing in Ardee City, the maids and cooks are vanished suddenly and their cells are not reachable as well. The garbage collection guy is not coming though,' add the user while wondering what could have happened. 'It's all over Gurgaon. The immigration check for the people specifically domestic helps and sanitation workers is making them flee Gurgaon,' replied one Reddit user. 'Not flee, they're being put in detention centres in Manesar,' countered another. Another posted, 'My didi cried to me today saying that they have been forcefully picking people up despite them showing their papers that they are from India. And, then they've been beating them up and also switching their phones off.' 'Police have cracked down on some of the areas where a lot of Bengali helpers live and detained some claiming they are Bangladeshi. Few others have fleed to their villages out of fear of mistreatment and forced nabbing by police,' came from another. Hundreds of domestic workers and sanitation staff have left Gurugram due to fear of police checks and detention. This sudden exit has severely disrupted waste collection. Garbage has been piling up on streets while door-to-door waste collection systems have literally collapsed. According to the Hindustan Times, areas like Sector 103, Palam Vihar, Sector 56, 57 and Sector 29 are now facing waste problems. Residents are hiring tractor-trolleys without proper waste separation or trained workers. It is causing random dumping that risks turning into a serious health crisis. The immigration drive primarily targets suspected undocumented migrants, mostly from Bangladesh and Myanmar. About 250 people remain held in detention centres set up in four community halls in Gurgaon. Migrant workers say Bengali-speaking people are being unfairly targeted during verification checks. Around 200 migrants from Sector 58 have already left for Assam. Locals accuse police of randomly arresting and assaulting their family members. The Times of India spoke to Saminul Islam from Assam. He has lived in Gurgaon for 15 years with his family. "Suddenly, we are being labelled as illegal Bangladeshis. Several of our relatives have been detained in community centres even though they possess identity proofs of their citizenship. We are Indians, not criminals," TOI quoted Saminul as saying.