Maryam Nawaz has signed off on one of the toughest Eid sanitation crackdowns in Punjab’s recent history, with fines, vigilance squads and 176,000 workers on the ground.
If you throw animal waste, offal or blood on a street, drain or canal during Eid ul Adha this year — expect a Rs50,000 fine on the spot. That is the message from Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif, and the government says it is serious about enforcement.
Punjab held a high level video link meeting chaired by CM Maryam Nawaz to finalize the province’s Eid sanitation plan. The outcome was clear: this year, negligence will not be tolerated — by citizens, by contractors or by government officers.
The Rs50,000 fine for illegal dumping of sacrificial animal waste has been officially approved. Vigilance squads have been formed to monitor streets, drains, canals, private housing societies, railway colonies and cantonment areas across Punjab.
"وزیراعلیٰ پنجاب مریم نواز شریف کی زیر صدارت ویڈیو لنک ا جلاس،عید الاضحی پر صفائی کے فول پروف انتظامات کا پلان تیار"
— PMLN (@pmln_org) May 23, 2026
. وزیراعلی پنجاب مریم نوازشریف نے گلی،محلوں میں آلائشیں پھینکنے والوں کو 50ہزار روپے جرمانے کی منظوری دے دی
. ممنوع مقامات پر باقیات اور آلائشیں پھینکنے کی روک… pic.twitter.com/SwIoDRdkGe
What the plan actually looks like on the ground
The Punjab government is not leaving things to chance. Suthra Punjab teams will begin before Chand Raat, stay active through Eid day, and keep working until the third day of Eid. Here is what residents across Punjab can expect to see:
- Door-to-door waste collection by Suthra Punjab staff across all towns and cities.
- Degradable shopping bags distributed to households for collecting animal remains and offal properly.
- 3,800 primary collection centres and 3,100 dumping sites designated for animal waste.
- Rose water sprayed at Eid prayer gatherings and mosques on CM’s direct instruction.
- 2,687 commercial markets to get special cleaning treatment before and after Eid.
- 285 cattle markets and 171 sale points covered by dedicated Suthra Punjab teams.
- Special cleaning of graveyards completed before Chand Raat.
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What CM Maryam said in the meeting
“For Eid sanitation, every department must work as one government unit. Good performance will be rewarded and praised. Complaints will lead to penalties.”
— Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif
Provincial Minister for Local Government Zeeshan Rafiq and Secretary Local Government Mian Shakeel Ahmad gave the operational briefing during the meeting. The plan covers everything from drain dewatering machines to mini dumpers, loader rickshaws and tractor trolleys being hired for the three-day operation.
Each Municipal Corporation and Tehsil will receive 15 additional loader rickshaws, and every Union Council will get 4 extra vehicles. Control rooms are being set up in the offices of Deputy Commissioners, WASA, and Municipal Corporations to track complaints in real time.
How to report a problem
Punjab has activated 11 different channels for receiving sanitation complaints during Eid. The easiest one for citizens is the Suthra Punjab helpline — 1139 — which can be called to report uncollected waste, blocked drains, or any sanitation issue in your area. All collection points and disposal sites are to be fully cleared by the third day of Eid.
Why this is a bigger deal than usual
Eid ul Adha has historically been one of the most difficult times for Punjab’s municipal system. Millions of sacrificial animals are slaughtered across the province in just a few hours, creating a massive spike in animal waste, blood, and offal. In previous years, this has led to clogged drains, foul smells, disease outbreaks, and public health complaints.
The Rs50,000 fine is among the strongest Eid sanitation penalties introduced in Punjab in recent memory. Whether enforcement holds up in practice — especially in smaller cities and rural union councils — is the real test. But the scale of the deployment, with over 176,000 workers and more than 40,000 vehicles, suggests this year’s effort is genuinely different in size and seriousness.



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A fine for dumping animal waste? That seems pretty serious. I wonder how they’ll enforce it during the celebrations.