KJD, In the case of Singapore, its a country by itself and is ruled basically by a dictator. Thus the government is answerable to itself, and people have no rights, and bureaucracy is cut-short.
As for Guwahati, the size may be small compared to a Singapore, but the City is answerable in some capacity to the the DC, the GOA, which in turn to the GOI. Its not as if the mayor of Guwahati can rule with an iron fist to enforce cleaniness. In Singapore even chewing gum is banned (so I have heard). Do you think its possible for the mayor, the CM, Governor or even the PM ban tamul-paan chewing? --Ram On 5/18/05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Sarangapani, > > What disadvantage does the city of Guwahati have ,in terms of size,which > renders it to remain so unclean? I wonder!! > > KJD > _______________________________________________ > Assam mailing list > Assam@pikespeak.uccs.edu > http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/listinfo/assam > > Mailing list FAQ: > http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/assam/assam-faq.html > To unsubscribe or change options: > http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/options/assam > > > _______________________________________________ Assam mailing list Assam@pikespeak.uccs.edu http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/listinfo/assam Mailing list FAQ: http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/assam/assam-faq.html To unsubscribe or change options: http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/options/assam