Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation

Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation
Seal of the MCGM
Emblem of the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation
Type
Type
History
Founded1889; 137 years ago (1889)
Leadership
Sanjay Ghadi, SHS
Administrator
Structure
Seats227
Political groups
Government (118)

Opposition (109)

Length of term
5 years
Elections
Last election
15 January 2026[1]
Next election
2031
Motto
यतो धर्मस्ततो जय: (Sanskrit)
Where there is Righteousness, there shall be Victory
Meeting place
Municipal Corporation Building, Mumbai
Website
Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation

The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC)[2] is the governing civic body of Mumbai, the capital city of Maharashtra.

More well funded than any other municipal corporation in India, its annual budget exceeds that of some of the country's smaller states.[3][4] Established by the legislature of British India under the Bombay Municipal Corporation Act 1888, the BMC is responsible for the civic infrastructure and administration of the city and some suburbs.[5]

History

The Municipal administration in the erstwhile Bombay existed since 1805. During this period the civic administration was vested in a Court of Petty Sessions. Up to the end of 18th century the administration of Bombay was conducted by the President and Council directly. However, since the Municipal administration had been inefficient, multiple efforts were undertaken by the British administration. The first major change came through in the year 1865 with a Municipal Corporation being established as a Body Corporate and Sir Arthur Crawford was appointed as the first Municipal Commissioner.[6][7]

Thereafter in 1872, after enactment of the Bombay Act No. III of 1872, a regular Corporation was established consisting of 64 elected Corporators who were the rate (tax) payers with the right to vote being restricted to the tax payers only. Sir Pherozeshah Mehta was instrumental in the drafting of the 1872 Act which led to the establishment of the Corporation as seen today. Sir Pherozeshah served as a Municipal Commissioner in 1873 and served as Chairman in 1884–86, and President in 1905 and 1911.[8] Fondly called as the Father of Municipal Government in Bombay, a large statue of Sir Pherozeshah was erected in 1923 in his memory and respect and adorns the Municipal Corporation Building.

The British Administration the Bombay Municipal Corporation Act, 1888 which streamlined the operations of the Corporation by way of better administration and by providing proper responsibilities to its representatives. The Act, with some amendments continue to be in force till date.

Administration

The BMC is headed by an IAS officer who serves as Municipal Commissioner, wielding executive power. The Municipal Commissioner is one of the authorities under the Mumbai Municipal Corporation Act, 1888. The Municipal Commissioner is head of Executive Wing under section 54 of Mumbai Municipal Corporation Act, 1888. The Municipal Commissioner is appointed by Government of Maharashtra under section 54 of Mumbai Municipal Corporation Act, 1888. The Municipal Commissioner is responsible for developing & maintaining civic infrastructure of the city like water supply, roads, storm water, drainage and efficient delivery of various services to the citizens of Mumbai. The Municipal Commissioner deputes various departments to the Additional Municipal Commissioners, Deputy Municipal Commissioners, Assistant Commissioners and various heads of Department in discharge of his functions. The Municipal Commissioner is assisted by Additional Municipal Commissioners, Deputy Municipal Commissioners and Assistant Commissioners.

As of June 2008, all administrative business in the BMC was conducted in Marathi, a decision that sparked controversy,[9] following which the BMC eased its stance and began accepting forms in English.[10]

City officials
Mayor Ritu Tawde 7 February 2026
Deputy Mayor Sanjay Ghadi 7 February 2026
Municipal Commissioner Bhushan Gagrani[11] 21 March 2024
Administrator Bhushan Gagrani, IAS 21 March 2024

Legislature

In order to make the administration of the city convenient, it has been divided into seven zones. Further, these seven zones have 3 to 5 wards each. In total, Mumbai has been divided into 24 administrative wards that are ordered alphabetically from Ward A to Ward T. The 24 administrative wards are further divided into 227 civic electoral wards or constituencies. The smallest of the 24 administrative wards is the B-Ward with only 3 electoral wards while the P North-Ward is the largest with 16 electoral wards.

Every electoral ward is led by a Corporator. The Corporator is the in-charge of the electoral ward and is responsible towards its development in general.

As is the case with Legislative Bodies, the Elections for electing the Corporators is held every 5 years. The previous elections were held in 2026.[12] Harshad Karkar from Shiv-Sena was the youngest candidate at age 23 to win the Elections in 2017.

The Corporators among themselves are to elect a Mayor who is the First Citizen of Mumbai. Mayors have two distinct roles- the decorative role of representing and upholding the dignity of the city and the functional role of presiding over the deliberations of the Corporation. As the presiding authority at the Corporation Meetings, his/her role is confined to the four corners of the Corporation Hall. The decorative role, however, extends far beyond the city and the country to other parts of world. This is seen whenever a foreign dignitary or a V.V.I.P. visits the city and the State Government invites the Mayor to receive the honoured guest on behalf of the Citizens. Thus, when the Mayor receives or sees the guest off, he does it on behalf of all the citizens of Mumbai. Similarly, when the Mayor accords a civic reception or presents a civic address to a Monarch, or a President or a Prime Minister of any country, he does so in the name of the Mumbai Municipal Corporation and the citizens of Mumbai. In such situations, the Mayor is seen as the First Citizen. Mayor is also given a place of prominence at Civic, Government and other social functions. The term of the office of the Mayor is 2.5 years.

Current members

The 227 wards of the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation and their councillors are listed below in the serial wise order. The last elections were held on 15 January 2026 with their results being declared on 16 January 2026.[13]

Mayor: Ritu Tawde
Deputy Mayor: Sanjay Ghadi
Area[14] Ward No.[15] Councillor Party Remarks
R–North 1 Rekha Yadav Shiv Sena
2 Tejasvi Ghosalkar Bharatiya Janata Party
3 Prakash Darekar
4 Mangesh Pangare Shiv Sena
5 Sanjay Ghadi Deputy Mayor
6 Diksha Karkar
7 Ganesh Khankar Bharatiya Janata Party
8 Yogita Patil
R–Central 9 Shivanand Shetty
10 Jitendra Patel
11 Aditi Khursange Shiv Sena
12 Sarika Jhore Shiv Sena (UBT)
13 Rani Trivedi Bharatiya Janata Party
14 Seema Shinde
15 Jignasa Shah
16 Shweta Korgaonkar
17 Shilpa Sangore
18 Sandhya Doshi Shiv Sena
R–South 19 Dakshata Kavthankar Bharatiya Janata Party
20 Deepak Tawde
21 Leena Deherkar
22 Himanshu Parekh
23 Shiv Kumar Jha
24 Swati Jaiswal
25 Nisha Parulekar
26 Dharmendra Kale Shiv Sena (UBT)
27 Neelam Gurav Bharatiya Janata Party
28 Ajanta Yadav Indian National Congress
29 Sachin Patil Shiv Sena (UBT)
30 Dhaval Vora Bharatiya Janata Party
31 Manisha Yadav
P–North 32 Geeta Bhandari Shiv Sena (UBT)
33 Mohammad Moeen Siddique Indian National Congress
34 Hyder Aslam Shaikh
35 Yogesh Verma Bharatiya Janata Party
36 Siddharth Sharma
37 Yogita Prashant Shiv Sena (UBT)
38 Surekha Parab Maharashtra Navnirman Sena
39 Pushpa Kalambe Shiv Sena (UBT)
40 Tulsiram Shinde
41 Suhas Wadkar
42 Dhanashree Bharadkar Shiv Sena
43 Ajit Raorane Nationalist Congress Party – Sharadchandra Pawar
44 Sangeeta Sharma Bharatiya Janata Party
45 Sanjay Kamble
46 Yogita Koli
47 Tajinder Singh Tiwana
48 Rafiq Eliyas Shaikh Indian National Congress
49 Sangeeta Koli
P–South 50 Vikram Rajput Bharatiya Janata Party
51 Varsha Tembhavkar Shiv Sena
52 Preeti Satam Bharatiya Janata Party
53 Jitendra Valvi Shiv Sena (UBT)
54 Ankit Prabhu
55 Harsh Patel Bharatiya Janata Party
56 Lakshmi Bhatia Shiv Sena
57 Shrikala Pillay Bharatiya Janata Party
58 Sandeep Patel
K–West 59 Shailesh Phanse Shiv Sena (UBT)
60 Sayali Kulkarni Bharatiya Janata Party
61 Divya Avaneesh Singh Indian National Congress
62 Zeeshan Changez Multani Shiv Sena (UBT)
63 Rupesh Savarkar Bharatiya Janata Party
64 Saba Harun Khan Shiv Sena (UBT)
65 Vitthal Banderi Bharatiya Janata Party
66 Meher Mohsin Haider Indian National Congress
67 Deepak Kotekar Bharatiya Janata Party
68 Rohan Rathod
69 Sudha Singh
70 Aneesh Makwaneey
71 Sunita Mehta
K–East 72 Mamata Yadav
73 Lona Rawat Shiv Sena (UBT)
74 Vidya Arya Kangane Maharashtra Navnirman Sena
75 Pramod Sawant Shiv Sena (UBT)
76 Prakash Musale Bharatiya Janata Party
77 Shivani Parab Shiv Sena (UBT)
78 Nazia Safi Shiv Sena
79 Mansi Madhukar Shiv Sena (UBT)
80 Disha Yadav Bharatiya Janata Party
81 Kesharben Patel
82 Jagdeshwari Amin
83 Sonali Sabe Shiv Sena (UBT)
84 Anjali Samant Bharatiya Janata Party
85 Milind Shinde
86 Ritesh Rai Shiv Sena
H–East 87 Pooja Mahadeshwar Shiv Sena (UBT)
88 Sharvari Parab
89 Gitesh Raut
90 Tulip Miranda Indian National Congress
91 Sagun Naik Shiv Sena
92 Ibrahim Iqbal Qureshi Indian National Congress
93 Rohini Kamble Shiv Sena (UBT)
94 Pragya Bhutkar
95 Hari Shastri
96 Ayesha Khan Shams Nationalist Congress Party
H–West 97 Hetal Gala Bharatiya Janata Party
98 Alka Kerkar
99 Chintamani Nivate Shiv Sena (UBT)
100 Swapna Mhatre Bharatiya Janata Party
101 Karen Demello Indian National Congress
102 Raja Siraj Khan
T 103 Hetal Markvekar Bharatiya Janata Party
104 Prakash Gangadhar
105 Anita Vaiti
106 Prabhakar Shinde
107 Neil Somaiya
108 Deepika Ghag
S 109 Suresh Shinde Shiv Sena (UBT)
110 Asha Suresh Koparkar Indian National Congress
111 Deepak Sawant Shiv Sena (UBT)
112 Sakshi Dalvi Bharatiya Janata Party
113 Deepmala Baban Shiv Sena (UBT)
114 Rajul Patil
115 Jyoti Rajbhoj Maharashtra Navnirman Sena
116 Jagruti Patil Bharatiya Janata Party
117 Shweta Pawaskar Shiv Sena (UBT)
118 Sunita Jadhav
119 Rajesh Sonawane Shiv Sena
120 Vishwas Shinde Shiv Sena (UBT)
121 Priyadarshini Thackeray
122 Chandan Sharma Bharatiya Janata Party
N 123 Sunil More Shiv Sena (UBT)
124 Sakina Sheikh
125 Suresh Awale Shiv Sena
126 Archana Bhalerao Bharatiya Janata Party
127 Swaroopa Patil Shiv Sena (UBT)
128 Sai Shirke Maharashtra Navnirman Sena
129 Ashwini Mate Bharatiya Janata Party
130 Dharmesh Giri
131 Rakhi Jadhav
132 Ritu Tawde Mayor
133 Shrutika Kande Shiv Sena
M–East 134 Ateeq Ahmad Khan All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen
135 Navnath Ban Bharatiya Janata Party
136 Mohammad Jamir Qureshi All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen
137 Shameer Ramzan
138 Rohan Irfan Shaikh
139 Shabana Atif Shaikh
140 Vijay Ubale
141 Vitthal Lokre Shiv Sena (UBT)
142 Apeksha Khandekar Shiv Sena
143 Shabana Farooq Kazi All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen
144 Dinesh Bablu Panchal Bharatiya Janata Party
145 Khairnusa Akbar Hussain All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen
146 Samruddhi Kate Shiv Sena
147 Pragya Sadafule
148 Anjali Naik
M–West 149 Susham Sawant Bharatiya Janata Party
150 Vaishali Shedkar Indian National Congress
151 Kashish Fulwaria Bharatiya Janata Party
152 Asha Marathe
153 Meenakshi Patankar Shiv Sena (UBT)
154 Mahadev Shigwan Bharatiya Janata Party
155 Snehal Shivkar Shiv Sena (UBT)
L 156 Ashwini Matekar Shiv Sena
157 Sarita Mhaske Shiv Sena (UBT)
158 Chitra Sangle
159 Prakash More Bharatiya Janata Party
160 Kiran Landge Shiv Sena
161 Vijayendra Shinde
162 Amir Naseem Khan Indian National Congress
163 Shaila Lande Shiv Sena
164 Harish Bhandirge Bharatiya Janata Party
165 Mohammad Ashraf Azmi Indian National Congress
166 Meenal Sanjay Turde Shiv Sena
167 Saman Arshad Azmi Indian National Congress
168 Sayeeda Khan Nationalist Congress Party
169 Pravina Morajkar Shiv Sena (UBT)
170 Bushra Malik Nationalist Congress Party
171 Rani Yerunkar Shiv Sena (UBT)
F–North 172 Rajshree Shirodkar Bharatiya Janata Party
173 Shilpa Keluskar
174 Sakshi Kanojia
175 Mansi Satamkar Shiv Sena
176 Rekha Yadav Bharatiya Janata Party
177 Kalpesha Kothari
178 Amey Ghole Shiv Sena
179 Ayesha Bano Indian National Congress
180 Trushna Vishwasrao Shiv Sena
181 Pushpa Koli Shiv Sena (UBT)
G–North 182 Milind Vaidya
183 Asha Deepak Kale Indian National Congress
184 Sajida Babbu Khan
185 T. M. Jagadish Shiv Sena (UBT)
186 Archana Shinde
187 Joseph Koli
188 Bhaskar Shetty Shiv Sena
189 Harshala More Shiv Sena (UBT)
190 Sheetal Gambhir Desai Bharatiya Janata Party
191 Vishakha Raut Shiv Sena (UBT)
192 Yashwant Killedar Maharashtra Navnirman Sena
G–South 193 Hemangi Varlikar Shiv Sena (UBT)
194 Nishikant Shinde
195 Vijay Bhange
196 Padmaja Chemburkar
197 Vanita Narvankar Shiv Sena
198 Aboli Khade Shiv Sena (UBT)
199 Kishori Pednekar
F–South 200 Urmila Panchal
201 Iram Sajid Siddiqui Samajwadi Party
202 Shraddha Jadhav Shiv Sena (UBT)
203 Shraddha Pednekar
204 Kiran Tawde
205 Supriya Dalvi Maharashtra Navnirman Sena
206 Sachin Padwal Shiv Sena (UBT)
E 207 Rohidas Lokhande Bharatiya Janata Party
208 Ramakant Rahate Shiv Sena (UBT)
209 Yamini Jadhav Shiv Sena
210 Sonam Jamsutkar Shiv Sena (UBT)
211 Waqar Nisar Ahmed Indian National Congress
212 Abrahani Shehzad Samajwadi Party
213 Nasima Zayed Indian National Congress
D 214 Ajay Patil Bharatiya Janata Party
215 Santosh Dhole
216 Rajashree Bhatankar Indian National Congress
217 Gaurang Jhaveri Bharatiya Janata Party
218 Snehal Tendulkar
219 Sunny Sanap
C 220 Sampada Mayekar Shiv Sena (UBT)
221 Akash Purohit Bharatiya Janata Party
222 Rita Makwana
B 223 Dyanraj Nikam Indian National Congress
224 Rukhsana Noorul Amin
A 225 Harshita Narwekar Bharatiya Janata Party
226 Makarand Narwekar
227 Gauravi Narwekar

Finances and Revenue sources

BMC is one of the richest municipal corporations in Asia.[16] In ten years, the Corporation allocated ₹2.19 lakh crore for the city, higher than the 10-year budget of some Indian states.[17] The BMC Annual Budget of ₹52,619.07 crores for the year 2023-2024 was the first instance that the budget estimate for the BMC to cross ₹50,000 crores in its history.[18]

Controversies and criticism

The BMC has a history of corruption and incompetence, with several officials charged under Prevention of Corruption Act but never prosecuted.[19]

The BMC has been criticized for corruption and incompetence over filling potholes on several major roads, besides not being able to build pothole free roads.[20] Every year, shoddy work done by BMC has led to potholes appear and cause significant impact to traffic flow.[21] Despite requests by Mumbai Police to tackle the issue, the BMC has repeatedly ignored them, forcing officers to take matters into their own hands. The police officers have been involved in this have received praise, who themselves have criticized the BMC for their lacklustre attitudes.[22]

The BMC has been censured for not providing infrastructure for bicyclists, as well as demolishing existing tracks which were constructed "illegally".[23] Due to insufficient infrastructure, bicyclists face severe safety hazards, as several citizens utilize bicycles for short commutes.[24] Furthermore, the BMC has collaborated with Mumbai Police to collect fines from bicyclists if riders are found pedaling on certain prohibited roads and flyovers within the city limits, which is illegal as bicyclists cannot be penalized under the Motor Vehicles Act.[25]

Several officers of BMC have been involved in demanding bribes from the general public and have also been found to be drinking liquor on duty while misbehaving with the complainants and activists who come to get their issues resolved. Following several complaints, the anti-corruption bureau has been involved in trapping and booking several BMC officials for accepting bribes.[26] The BMC has also faced flak and ire from residents for not taking action against hawkers and illegal encroachments in lieu of bribes collected by middlemen who cut deals with BMC officials on the behalf of these entities, which impacts safety of pedestrians as they are forced to walk on roads.[27]

On 19 July 2017, Malishka Mendonsa, a popular radio jockey of Red FM, released a parody video on YouTube targeting BMC for incompetence in dealing potholed roads. In response to the video, the BMC and Shiv Sena slammed her and sent a notice for defamation with a penalty of Rs 10,000.[28] As a result of the notice, several political parties criticized the BMC and Shiv Sena for intolerance towards criticism, as 2 Shiv Sena corporators sent a notice of Rs. 500 cr (Rs. 5 billion) against the RJ and Red FM.[29] Further, BMC Officials conducted checks at her residence and offices in an attempt to intimidate her. Then mayor Kishori Pednekar also came in crosshairs with the RJ for unfairly targeting the BMC for potholed roads.[30] Malishka made another parody video against the BMC and released it on 17 July 2018, describing the incapability and pathetic conditions of Mumbai's infrastructure in the monsoons.[31]

The BMC has faced ire from citizens as well as media personnel for serving the political elite on several occasions, especially the ruling party Shiv Sena. Following actress Kangana Ranaut's criticism of Uddhav Thackeray and his Government for mishandling the death of Sushant Singh Rajput in September 2020, the BMC demolished a portion of her house on the orders of Shiv Sena leaders; following the demolishion, the Bombay High Court criticized the BMC and ruled in her favour, noting that BMC acted with malice and ordered the BMC to pay compensation to Ranaut.[32]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the BMC allegedly granted contracts for procuring medical kits to Sujit Patkar, a close aid of Shiv Sena leader Sanjay Raut, which led to investigation that uncovered a big scam.[33] Former mayor Kishori Pednekar was also found to be involved in the scam.[34]

The BMC has faced outrage and widespread condemnation for incompetence and negligence by the public and media during the reconstruction of Gokhale bridge. In February 2024, following completion of the construction, road users who started commuting on the bridge saw that there was a huge gap in linking the bridge to the Barfiwala Flyover - the previous bridge was linked to this flyover.[35] Following criticism and social media reels from the general citizens, the BMC issued a press statement and said that it never intended to connect the two flyovers in its first phase of reconstruction.[36]

On 13 May 2024, a large hoarding in Ghatkopar region collapsed on a fuel station, killing 17 and injuring 74. An investigation revealed that the hoarding was illegal, although it was approved by BMC engineers, which sparked accusations of corruption, bribery and incompetence.[37] A special investigation team was appointed in the aftermath, which detained and charged the owner of the hoarding Bhavesh Bhinde and the BMC officials who approved it.[38]

In April 2025, the BMC faced massive protests from the Jain community, after a 90 year old Digambar Jain temple was allegedly demolished, when prayers were going on.[39] The Bombay High Court intervened and put a stop order against further demolition, and the BMC transferred the ward officer for Vile-Parle, where the temple was located.[40] Allegations of bribery were stated after a restaurant near the temple wanted to expand but was not able to do so due to restrictions.[41]

Revenue

Revenue from taxes

Following is the Tax related revenue for the corporation.

  • Property tax.
  • Profession tax.
  • Entertainment tax.
  • Grants from Central and State Government like Goods and Services Tax.
  • Advertisement tax.

Revenue from non-tax sources

Following is the Non Tax related revenue for the corporation.

  • Water usage charges.
  • Fees from Documentation services.
  • Rent received from municipal property.
  • Funds from municipal bonds.

See also

References

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  2. ^ "Welcome to The Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai". Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation. Archived from the original on 24 February 2017. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  3. ^ "BMC to open green channel for octroi". Financialexpress.com. 3 September 2007. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
  4. ^ "Gold & beautiful, News - Cover Story". Mumbai Mirror. Retrieved 21 July 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  5. ^ "BMC-Act-1888.pdf" (PDF). Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  6. ^ admin (2 April 2020). "BrihanMumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC)". MeMumbai. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
  7. ^ "Municipal Corporation". gazetteers.maharashtra.gov.in. Retrieved 27 February 2024.
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  9. ^ "From today. MCGM will do business only in Marathi". The Times of India. 25 June 2008. Archived from the original on 11 August 2011. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
  10. ^ "BMC drops only marathi clause, to accept forms in english". Hindustan Times. 28 January 2012.
  11. ^ "Bhushan Gagrani appointed new BMC commissioner". Hindustan Times. 21 March 2024.
  12. ^ "Find out who is contesting from Ward No. 164 in the BMC elections". www.hindustantimes.com. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
  13. ^ "Maharashtra: BMC, 28 other municipal corporations to go for polls on January 15; result on January 16". India TV. Retrieved 15 December 2025.
  14. ^ "Wards of BMC". BMC Elections. Retrieved 11 January 2026.
  15. ^ "Wards of BMC". BMC Elections. Retrieved 14 December 2025.
  16. ^ Mishra, Sohit (21 February 2017). "BMC Elections 2017: Complete fact sheet of Asia's richest civic corporation". India.com. Retrieved 31 January 2018.
  17. ^ "In 10 years, just 18% of Rs2.19 lakh-crore BMC budget was spent on civic infra". Hindustan Times. 12 January 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
  18. ^ "BMC presents ₹52,620 cr budget for 23-34, no fresh tax levied for Mumbaikars". mint. 4 February 2023. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
  19. ^ "96 BMC staffers with criminal, corruption cases reinstated: RTI".
  20. ^ "Netizens Give Sholay Spin to Mumbai Potholes as Angry Residents Lash Out at BMC over Damaged Roads". 20 July 2023.
  21. ^ "Shoddy repair of pothole-riddled roads frustrates residents of Bandra, Khar". 20 July 2023.
  22. ^ "Mumbai: Kurla Traffic Police Fill Potholes On LBS Marg After Repeated BMC Requests Go Unanswered".
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  26. ^ "Bribes & premiums, BMC's cash cow, jack up home rates". The Times of India. 30 September 2023.
  27. ^ "Mumbai News: Ghatkopar Residents To Launch Signature Campaign Against BMC's Inaction Over Road Encroachments By Hawkers".
  28. ^ "RJ Malishka-BMC Controversy: Civic Body Slaps Fine Of Rs 10,000 On The Radio Jockey". 22 July 2017.
  29. ^ "Sena slams RJ for parody on BMC".
  30. ^ "RJ Faces BMC Music for parody on Bad Roads". The Times of India. 20 July 2017.
  31. ^ "RJ Malishka Takes a Dig at BMC Again in New Mumbai Rain Parody". 17 July 2018.
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  34. ^ "BMC Covid 'scam': EOW books former Mumbai mayor Kishori Pednekar". The Times of India. 5 August 2023.
  35. ^ ""Long Jump?" Meant To Be Linked, 2 Mumbai Flyovers Have A 6-Foot Gap".
  36. ^ "Barfiwala flyover-Gokhale bridge connection was meant for Phase 2'". Hindustan Times. 5 March 2024.
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  41. ^ "Vile parle jain mandir demolition: thousands of people join ahimsa rally, demand action against BMC officials".