Drenched in the stench of rotting garbage, every lane in the slums surrounding the Deonar dump is overflowing with waste.
At the entrance point of the Deonar garbage dump, trash is intertwined with lush greenery that takes over in the monsoons, as a result of all the biodegradable waste.
Jamal is a former ragpicker who was forced to give up the work he has been doing for eight years due to the heightened security at the dump.
Open sewers like this one abound in this area and often function as moats between the residents' homes and the garbage dump, thus prompting many to build makeshift bridges from wooden planks to get across easily.
Mannya dives into the sewage gutters almost every day to scrounge for plastic recyclables that he can sell off to earn a quick buck. He makes as little as Rs 100 a day.
Ragpickers in the area have been involved in this profession for decades, with all of them learning by watching their neighbours and parents do the dirty work.
The local dealer shows us the weed supplied in this area, which is notorious for being adulterated with toxic substances like rat poison and shoe polish
Many children in this area are often unable to pay their school fees and are forced to drop out, as a result of which many of them remain uneducated and end up getting involved with the local mafia.
Although residents even have Aadhar identity cards issued by the government that prove they are living here legally, they are now being told that their metal scrap-shanties are illegal encroachments.
A large open field that surrounds the dumping ground is not only the local public toilet, but also a spot for the ragpickers to sort through the waste they have snuck out from the dump.