Tinsukia’s ‘Hall of Shame’ Goes Viral: CCTV Video of Littering, Public Urination Displayed on LED Screens
A municipality in Assam has come up with a novel, if embarrassing, solution to tackle public littering and urination, issues that have long plagued Indian cities despite repeated awareness campaigns.
A municipality in Assam has come up with a novel, if embarrassing, solution to tackle public littering and urination, issues that have long plagued Indian cities despite repeated awareness campaigns.
The Tinsukia Municipal Board has launched a "Hall of Shame" campaign that publicly identifies people allegedly caught littering or urinating in public spaces.
How The Campaign Works
CCTV cameras installed across the town record civic violations, and the footage is then played on large LED screens at busy intersections. The message behind the initiative is simple: rule breakers risk becoming the town's newest public spectacle. Train Puja Viral Video: Railway Clarifies Ritual Was Held in Privately Booked Saloon Car, Not Passenger Coach .
Assam: Tinsukia Municipal Board Launches 'Hall Of Shame' To Publicly Expose Litterbugs
Tinsukia Municipality in Assam is displaying images of people caught urinating in public on LED screens.
Should @mybmc also consider naming, shaming & fining habitual public urinators, spitters, litterers & blacklisted contractors? At the same time, clean, safe & accessible… pic.twitter.com/pnPkScTfjp
— Milind Deora | मिलिंद देवरा (@milinddeora) July 13, 2026
Officials say the goal is to promote civic responsibility and deter repeat offenders, rather than relying solely on fines as punishment.
Mixed Reactions Online
The campaign has quickly gained attention online, with many praising it as a creative way to address a problem that conventional awareness drives have struggled to solve. 'Suhagraat in Train': Railways Suspends Official Over Viral 'Honeymoon Suite' Decoration in First AC Coach of Nandigram Express.
Not everyone is convinced, though. Critics have questioned whether publicly displaying the faces of alleged offenders amounts to shaming people without due process, and whether the initiative strikes the right balance between civic discipline and the right to privacy.
A Model For Other Cities?
Whether the initiative becomes a model for other Indian cities or sparks a wider debate on privacy, one thing is clear: in Tinsukia, littering could now land offenders on the big screen.
(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Jul 13, 2026 01:29 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).