Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Ensure voting rights for migrant workers

Indians today are more mobile than ever before in our history. Our ideas about citizenshi­p must follow

- INDRAJIT ROY ■ Indrajit Roy is lecturer, department of politics, University of York The views expressed are personal

As Indians gear up for elections in April, approximat­ely 60 million men and women, crisscross­ing the country as migrant workers, will be unable to cast their vote because their voting rights are restricted to their villages, where they have to be present to be able to vote. Given their need to earn, migrant workers are not always able to return to their homes during election time to cast their votes. In 2015, the Election Commission recommende­d the use of electronic ballots to enable non-resident Indians (NRIs) to vote on the day of the election, thereby dispensing with the need for them to be physically present. Thus, not only has the franchise been extended to the diaspora communitie­s, but provisions for their casting their vote electronic­ally have also been specified. Tragically, despite their being indispensa­ble to India’s economic growth, internal migrants continue to be excluded from these rights.

This problem has been reported for general elections as well as the Assembly elections in states such as Uttar Pradesh (UP) and Bihar. A study I conducted in rural Bihar during 2016 found that fewer than half of the 6,000-odd respondent­s reported being unable to return home to cast their vote during the Lok Sabha elections of 2014. An earlier study conducted by the NGO Ajeevika and their partners (Ajeevika Bureau, 2012) revealed that over 60% of migrant workers were unable to cast their vote in at least one election held during their adult life for the simple reason that they were away from home. Their electoral exclusion exacerbate­s the social exclusion of India’s migrant workers. Researcher­s concur that vulnerabil­ity and insecurity mark their lives during their stay in the host destinatio­ns. For instance, a study conducted by Professor Ravi Srivastava of Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru Univer- sity shows as many as 94% of such migrants have no formal labour contracts, indicating the precarious nature of their lives. The majority of migrant workers live in fenced-in and guarded worksites, with conditions similar to those of labour camps.

Let us take the example of Dinesh Rai, whose family cultivates a tiny plot of land in Bihar’s Sitamarhi district, while he ferries passengers on a cycle rickshaw in Delhi. He has been working in Delhi since 2004, beginning as a constructi­on worker, before taking up a job as a headloader, and finally driving cycle rickshaw he rents from an agency.

Rai travels between Bihar and Delhi twice each year, since his family live in the village. In his interview for our project, Rai compared his circumstan­ces in Delhi with that in Bihar. He praised the subsidised foodgrains provisione­d to low-income households under the Public Distributi­on System as saving the lives of millions in villages such as his. Consequent­ly, he laments the absence of such provisions for individual­s such as himself while they are on the move in search of dignified employment. Because the BPL card is issued to his household and is valid only during their stay in their village, Rai has no option but to rely on the market to purchase food supplies while he is in Delhi. Clearly, migrant workers’ inability to vote either in their villages of origin or the towns of their destinatio­n place them in a peculiarly vulnerable position.

The State in India is not unaware of the social exclusion to which the country’s internal migrants are subjected (Report of the Working Group on Migration 2017). Indeed, the report, commission­ed by the Indian government, recognises these exclusions as well and makes recommenda­tions for the social inclusion of migrant workers. While comprehens­ive and well-intentione­d, these recommenda­tions refrain from addressing the electoral exclusion that underpin the social exclusion to which migrants are subjected.

Indians today are more mobile than ever before in our history. Our ideas about citizenshi­p must follow. After all, migrant workers do not only construct buildings, fire bricks, sweep floors, clean trucks, sew clothes and deliver goods. Their movement makes the idea of India a concrete reality for the majority of her poor and impoverish­ed population­s. They build India from below. Politician­s, the legislatur­es and institutio­ns such as the Election Commission of India need to take cognisance of their electoral exclusion and ensure that migrant workers can exercise their franchise as citizens, irrespecti­ve of their physical location on election day. Their electoral exclusion ill behoves the world’s largest democracy.

THEIR ELECTORAL EXCLUSION EXACERBATE­S THE SOCIAL EXCLUSION OF INDIA’S MIGRANT WORKERS. RESEARCHER­S CONCUR THAT VULNERABIL­ITY AND INSECURITY MARK THEIR LIVES DURING THEIR STAY IN THE HOST DESTINATIO­NS

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India