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Updated May 29, 2026 · 17:50
Delhi News Updated May 29, 2026

Delhi CM Rekha Gupta Slams Disorder at Rohini Sub-Registrar Office, Orders Swift Fixes

Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta conducted a surprise inspection of Revenue Department offices in Rohini, expressing displeasure over poor conditions. She directed officials to complete repair works within one week, including fixing lights, ACs, floors, and seating. The CM warned of strict action against bribery and delays in citizen services. She also emphasized the need for digitization and security of important revenue records.

Delhi CM Rekha Gupta expresses displeasure over disorder at Rohini Sub-Registrar's office, issues strict directives to officials

New Delhi, May 29

Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta on Friday conducted a surprise inspection of the Revenue Department's E-Sub-Registrar Offices VI-A and VI-C, operating from Ambedkar Bhawan in Rohini Sector-16.

During the visit, she reviewed the condition of the office building, citizen facilities, cleanliness, record management and the services being provided to the public. The Chief Minister expressed displeasure over the dilapidated condition of the building, poor lighting arrangements, non-functional air-conditioners, broken flooring, unclean toilets, inadequate seating and negligence in maintenance.

She told officials that such disorder was unacceptable in a place where a large number of people visit every day for important documentation and property-related work.

The Chief Minister also interacted directly with citizens present at the office and listened to their grievances. Several citizens complained about having to wait for long periods while standing, inadequate seating arrangements, the absence of a token system, poor air-conditioning and the lack of other basic facilities.

Directing the concerned officials on the spot, she said that citizens should not face any inconvenience and that it is the government's responsibility to provide a dignified and comfortable environment in public offices.

Chief Minister Rekha Gupta said that the condition of the office building had remained neglected for years. Expressing surprise, she said that if lights were not working, toilets were unusable, floors were damaged, and even basic seating arrangements for citizens were unavailable, it raised serious questions about administrative accountability.

She directed the concerned officials to submit complete records of all correspondence and repair proposals related to the matter. During the inspection, the Chief Minister also expressed concern over scrap material, unused items and the disorganised management of records in the building.

She directed that clear responsibility be fixed for the regular upkeep and maintenance of the premises and that a responsible officer or caretaker be designated in every office to ensure regular monitoring of basic facilities, cleanliness and maintenance.

The Chief Minister directed officials to complete the necessary facelift and improvement works within one week. This includes replacing all faulty lights, repairing air-conditioners, fixing broken floors and tiles, ensuring cleanliness, providing adequate benches and seating arrangements for citizens and developing better facilities for people waiting at the office.

She said that until a new and modern office building is arranged, the available resources at the existing premises should be utilised to provide maximum convenience to citizens. She said it was unacceptable that elderly citizens, women and others visiting the office for official work should be made to stand for hours. Even small problems, she added, require sensitivity and the will to resolve them.

The Chief Minister also inspected the record room and arrangements for the safety of documents. She directed officials to accord the highest priority to the security, digitisation and preservation of important revenue records so that government documents remain protected in the event of any accident or technical problem.

During the inspection, the Chief Minister also took a strict view of unnecessary delays. She clearly warned officials that citizens' work must be completed within stipulated timelines and that no person should be subjected to unnecessary inconvenience. If any complaint of bribery, harassment or deliberate delay in work is received, strict action will be taken against the concerned officer.

The Chief Minister said that government offices are meant to serve the public, not to trouble them. "Our government's priority is to ensure that every citizen receives transparent, corruption-free and dignified services. No citizen should have to run from office to office or face harassment for getting legitimate work done," she said.

The Chief Minister directed the concerned officials to submit a detailed report on the improvement works carried out within one week. She said that she would personally conduct a follow-up inspection to review the arrangements and ensure the effective implementation of the directions issued to provide better facilities to citizens.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Sneha F

As someone who had to register a property last year at that very office, I can tell you it was an absolute nightmare. Stood in queues for hours, toilets were broken, and the staff couldn't care less. But honestly, will the facelift really happen in one week? Past governments have said the same thing and nothing changed. Let's see if she delivers.

James A

Love the proactive approach! A surprise inspection is the best way to catch things as they really are, not a stage-managed visit. The fact she interacted with regular citizens and heard their problems directly—that's leadership. Now the real test will be whether those officials actually fix things or give excuses after one week.

Kavya N

Dilapidated building, broken ACs, no token system—this is the reality of most government offices in India. What I appreciate is that she didn't just blame the previous government but took immediate action and set a deadline. However, I'm skeptical about the "one week" timeline for facelift work. In Delhi's bureaucratic maze, that's ambitious. But at least someone is trying! 🇮🇳

Rohit L

Good that she's cracking down on corruption and delays too. The warning about bribery and harassment is exactly what we need. But here's my respectful criticism: why did it take so long for the government to notice this? These offices have been in this state for years. A surprise inspection shouldn't be news—it should be routine. Still, better late than never.

Ananya R

The attention to detail is impressive—she even checked the record room and document safety! Most politicians just do a

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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