Updated On: 03 September, 2025 10:50 AM IST | Mumbai | The Editorial
This edit is focussed on not who has left or who has not, but what has been left behind. By the time you read this, you will know what exactly has been the fallout of the Manoj Jarange and Maratha agitation, after the Bombay High Court order asking the leader and his protesters to leave.

Manoj Jarange
By the time you read this, you will know what exactly has been the fallout of the Manoj Jarange and Maratha agitation, after the Bombay High Court order asking the leader and his protesters to leave.
This edit is focussed on not who has left or who has not, but what has been left behind. After days of mayhem, the streets and protest site are filthy. Sanitation workers have been pressed into service; there is much to do in terms of cleanliness. On Monday afternoon, one witnessed the area near Bombay Gymkhana Club full of banana peels. Pedestrians were in danger of breaking a limb, as the intermittent rain, compounded by the discarded fruit waste, had made the ground slippery.
While that may not be practical, one wishes the high court order had included clearing the streets, but before doing so, clean up the site and streets, too. This principle must apply to all and in every walk of life. Inculcate this habit from childhood, where young children are asked to pick up and pack up games and toys they have played with. Youngsters are taught to pick up the plates they have eaten on. Picnickers are told and do pick up the trash they have generated after the revelry.