DDCA Denies Hygiene Breach in Viral T20 World Cup Drink Refilling Video

The Delhi and District Cricket Association has issued a clarification regarding a viral video from a T20 World Cup match. The video appeared to show a vendor pouring cold drink back into bottles at the Arun Jaitley Stadium. The DDCA states this was part of a waste segregation process by the authorized concessionaire before responsible disposal. The association firmly denies any adulteration or breach of hygiene protocols.

Key Points: DDCA Clarifies Viral Drink Refilling Video at Arun Jaitley Stadium

  • DDCA rejects adulteration claims
  • Viral video showed vendor pouring drink back
  • Says it was part of waste segregation
  • Operation followed hygiene protocols
  • Concessionaire acted per guidelines
2 min read

T20 WC: DDCA issues clarification on viral video of alleged soft drink refilling at Arun Jaitley Stadium

DDCA rejects adulteration claims, says viral video shows waste segregation process. Full statement on T20 World Cup incident.

"The bottles were disposed of responsibly in line with established environmental and operational guidelines - DDCA Statement"

New Delhi, Feb 12

The Delhi and District Cricket Association has rejected claims of adulteration and lack of hygiene in soft drinks sold at the Arun Jaitley Stadium during a match of the ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026 recently.

In a statement issued on Thursday, the DDCA rejected claims made in a video circulating on social media that has shown a vendor pouring cold drink back into bottles. DDCA claimed the drink was poured back into the bottles as per agreed commercial arrangements and operational standards, and those bottles were later disposed of "responsibly in line with established environmental and operational guidelines".

In its statement issued on Thursday, the DDCA said, "We have come across a video circulating on social media, particularly on X (formerly Twitter), alleging that a vendor was seen pouring cold drinks back into bottles during a recent match." The video went viral on Twitter following Tuesday's match between the Netherlands and Namibia.

The DDCA clarified that the operation was carried out by the authorised concessionaire for the stadium, in line with the event guidelines.

"In this regard, it is clarified that pouring is undertaken by the authorised concessionaire for the stadium, in line with the event guidelines. The concessionaire was serving Coca-Cola products in accordance with the agreed commercial arrangements and operational standards," the statement said.

The DDCA also claimed that they followed strict hygiene protocols in this regard.

"We follow strict hygiene protocols at the venue. In the instance shown in the video, the vendor, while segregating wet and dry waste, poured the unused beverage back into the bottle before disposal as part of the waste collection process. The bottles were subsequently collected, segregated, and processed in accordance with the venue's waste management and recycling policy," the statement added.

"It is reiterated that the bottles were disposed of responsibly in line with established environmental and operational guidelines," the statement said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
I was at that match! The drink prices were already so high, and now to think they might be reusing stuff... feels very wrong. DDCA needs better on-ground supervision.
R
Rohit P
Their explanation sort of makes sense for waste segregation. Wet waste in bottles is easier to handle than in cups. But the video looked bad, they should have trained the staff to do this away from public view. Communication is key.
S
Sarah B
As a visitor, this is concerning. The World Cup is a global event. India's image is at stake. DDCA must ensure the highest standards, not just issue statements after the fact.
V
Vikram M
The real issue is the exorbitant price for a soft drink at the stadium! Pay ₹200 for a cola and then see this. DDCA should focus on fair pricing and transparent operations.
K
Karthik V
While the explanation seems plausible, public trust is broken. They should invite a third-party audit of their hygiene and waste management processes and publish the report. Action speaks louder than words.

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