Key Points

Union Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan actively participated in a cleanliness drive in Raisen's Avantika Colony. He also joined a tree plantation initiative and attended a blood donation camp as part of BJP's nationwide Seva Pakhwada. Chouhan praised India's improved sanitation ranking under PM Modi's leadership since 2014. The minister announced a cleanliness champion program where participants take an oath to clean for two hours weekly for 100 days.

Key Points: Shivraj Singh Chouhan Leads Cleanliness Drive in Raisen Under BJP Seva Pakhwada

  • Chouhan participated in multiple service activities under BJP's Seva Pakhwada initiative
  • Planted trees and attended blood donation camp in Raisen district
  • Highlighted India's improved sanitation ranking since 2014 under PM Modi
  • Launched cleanliness champion oath for 2 hours weekly for 100 days
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Union Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan participates in cleanliness drive in Raisen under 'Seva Pakhwada' initiative

Union Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan participates in cleanliness drive, tree plantation, and blood donation camp in Madhya Pradesh's Raisen as part of BJP's Seva Pakhwada initiative.

"When the Prime Minister picked up the broom, the entire country picked it up, and now cleanliness is visible everywhere. - Shivraj Singh Chouhan"

Raisen, September 21

Union Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan on Sunday participated in a cleanliness drive organised in the Avantika Colony in Madhya Pradesh's Raisen under the 'Seva Pakhwada' initiative.

The Union Minister also attended a blood donation camp and planted trees under the initiative launched by the Bharatiya Janata Party on September 17.

"BJP has kicked off a nationwide Seva Pakhwada (service fortnight), coinciding with the Prime Minister's birthday, Deendayal Upadhyaya's birthday on September 25, and Mahatma Gandhi's birthday on October 2. As part of this, the party has organised various programmes. We're just back from the tree plantation drive. Next, we'll be attending a blood donation camp. Here, a cleanliness drive was organised in Avantika Colony," Chouhan told reporters.

Chouhan lauded India's sanitation ranking under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, highlighting poor progress in the sector before 2014. He also informed that during the cleanliness drive program, the people took an oath to conduct such drives for two hours, 100 days, and following which they would be called "cleanliness champions."

"Do you know how India's situation was before 2014? Our country had a very poor ranking in sanitation, and other countries would often comment on it. But when the Prime Minister picked up the broom, the entire country picked it up, and now cleanliness is visible everywhere. However, a lot of work needs to be done, as cleanliness is not a one-day job... Today, there is an oath program for this, and people have taken an oath that they will clean for 2 hours a week for 100 days a year. And with this, they will try to become cleanliness champions. We have all resolved to spread the message of cleanliness everywhere and to strive to maintain cleanliness ourselves, so that next year, Raisen district will also come in the race for cleanliness," he added.

The Bharatiya Janata Party has launched a two-week-long Seva Pakhwada on the occasion of PM Modi's birthday, and that will conclude on Mahatma Gandhi's birth anniversary on October 2.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Appreciate the minister leading by example. But I hope these cleanliness drives continue beyond photo opportunities. Our colonies need regular maintenance, not just occasional campaigns.
A
Aman Q
Blood donation + tree plantation + cleanliness drive - what a wonderful combination of seva activities! More leaders should participate in such grassroots initiatives 👍
S
Sarah B
The 'cleanliness champions' concept is interesting! Making it a regular commitment rather than one-time activity could really create lasting change. Hope this catches on across India 🌟
K
Kavya N
While I appreciate the effort, we need permanent solutions - better waste management systems, regular garbage collection, and proper infrastructure. Cleaning drives alone won't solve the problem.
M
Michael C
Good to see political leaders getting their hands dirty literally! This sets a positive example for citizens. Clean India should be everyone's responsibility, not just the government's.

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