New Delhi — If cleanliness is next to godliness, then the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH) just became a full-time saint. Under the ongoing Special Campaign 5.0, MoRTH has proudly achieved 100% of its cleanliness targets, covering an astonishing 15,004 sites across the country — from bustling toll plazas to humble roadside dhabas where samosas meet destiny.
These sites include offices, construction camps, National Highway stretches, toll plazas, wayside amenities, bus stops, and perhaps a few chai tapris that finally found their broom-mate. The Ministry’s sweeping success (pun fully intended) also comes with measurable progress elsewhere — 22% of pending MP references, 68% of public grievances, and 38% of grievance appeals have been neatly tucked away, all before they gathered bureaucratic cobwebs.

🚗 Operation Sparkle Highway
With the enthusiasm of a Formula 1 pit crew and the precision of a German engineer, MoRTH officials have been scrubbing, inspecting, and sprucing up every kilometre under their watch. Senior officers are personally inspecting regional offices, toll plazas, and wayside amenities — ensuring not even a stray toffee wrapper dares to linger.
The Nodal Officer of the campaign, taking cleanliness quite literally in high gear, is reviewing progress daily and chasing pending matters faster than a speeding expressway patrol.
📱 Swachhata Goes Viral
MoRTH isn’t stopping at mops and dusters — it’s gone full digital! Updates of the campaign are lighting up social media timelines across X (Twitter), Instagram, and Facebook, making the humble broom the new national influencer. After all, what’s better than a selfie? A “Swachh-site” selfie.
As Special Campaign 5.0 reaches its midway mark, MoRTH has once again proven that a clean highway is not just a road to somewhere — it’s the road to a cleaner, prouder India.