Kiran Mazumdar Shaw slams Bengaluru’s poor infrastructure, DK Shivakumar responds
Bengaluru: Biocon founder Kiran Mazumdar Shaw has said Bengaluru boasts the "best talent and the best weather but the worst infrastructure", arguing that if the city fixed its problems with garbage, debris and roads, it could rank among the world’s best.
In a post on X, she stressed that the Greater Bengaluru Authority (GBA) had a "great opportunity" to resolve these issues and urged collective determination to achieve it.
Namma Bengaluru has the best talent and the best weather but the worst infrastructure - if we fix garbage debris and roads, we can be among the best cities in the world. GBA has a great opportunity to do this. Let’s use collective will to do this @DKShivakumar @BBMPCOMM
— Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw (@kiranshaw) August 28, 2025
Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister DK Shivakumar responded on X, concurring with her concerns. "Agree with you, @kiranshaw avare, Bengaluru has always had the talent, the weather, and the spirit. What it lacked was political will. That's exactly what we are fixing now," he wrote.
Agree with you, @kiranshaw avare, Bengaluru has always had the talent, the weather, and the spirit. What it lacked was political will. That’s exactly what we are fixing now.
— DK Shivakumar (@DKShivakumar) August 28, 2025
From garbage to roads, from debris to planning - every challenge is being addressed with purpose and… https://t.co/uWtxXjH0MF
He said problems ranging from garbage and roads to debris and planning were being tackled with "purpose and urgency".
Calling Bengaluru a city of innovation, opportunity and unmatched spirit, he assured that infrastructure and governance would now act as a catalyst for growth.
"With the Greater Bengaluru Authority (GBA), we now have a unique opportunity to transform this vision into reality, and we will deliver," he added, urging citizens, government, businesses and civil society to join forces.
"This is the time to come together and shape a new chapter for Namma Bengaluru. The future is ours to build - together!"
Responding to his post, Shaw pressed, "Let's do so with a sense of urgency."
Her remarks also triggered a flurry of reactions online.
One user wrote, "Beyond govt. work on garbage and roads, most important is the issue of people's habits—civic sense, traffic rules, basic etiquette & standing up for fellow Indians. Get this right, the rest will follow!"
Another commented, "Traffic, pollution, garbage, roads, corruption, illegal constructions on Lake and forest areas. List goes on. People who are addicted to power, money and alcohol cannot make anything substantial. I don't see a single leader who love Bangalore as much as we do and work like that."
Calling for immediate action, one user said, "This is a very important issue and government needs to address this with utmost urgency. Let's all help towards making Bangalore a world class city."
Others expressed personal disappointment. "A part of me never left Bangalore and whenever I go there, it feels sad to see how the city has deteriorated," a user wrote.
Some offered practical suggestions such as timely and free garbage collection, proper segregation and processing facilities across the city without dumping on roads, minimising packaging waste through industry partnerships, encouraging biodegradable materials, and holding civic sense sessions in every ward.
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