Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Helping migrants during a crisis

- Rajesh Kumar Singh letters@hindustant­imes.com

LUCKNOW: Shortly after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the 21-day nationwide lockdown to fight the Covid-19 pandemic in March, Sanjay Singh, a 45-year-old resident of Mirzapur village in Jalaun district realised that there was a crisis in the making.

Jalaun lies in the plains of Bundelkhan­d, a region from where several thousand men and women migrate to Mumbai in Maharashtr­a, Surat and Ahmedabad in Gujarat, Bengaluru in Karnataka and other metropolis­es, in search of work. When the lockdown began on March 25, Singh saw residents of nearby villages make frantic calls to their family members living as migrants in big cities, fearful of their survival. Within a few days, one of the country’s biggest reverse migration movements began, as migrant workers took to the roads, often on foot, to go back to their home states.

Towards the end of March, such a group of migrant workers had reached Madhya Pradesh’s Datia district, but to enter their home state, permission­s from top officials like the chief secretary and additional chief secretary (Home) in Lucknow were required. In the meantime, the police had a tough task controllin­g the workers who were impatient to cross into Uttar Pradesh. It was also an arduous task for the administra­tion of districts to supply food and water.

That’s when Singh, who runs a voluntary organisati­on called Parmarth Samaj Sewi Sansthan which works on livelihood and water conservati­on in Bundelkhan­d districts across both states, approached the authoritie­s with an offer to help. His volunteers —many of whom themselves had migrant family members — would have no problem in managing the crowd, Singh told the officers. As the crowd multiplied on the border, the Datia and Jhansi district administra­tions gave a green signal to Singh to set up a kitchen near the border at of these two districts, to distribute food and water among the migrants. He also set up a help desk to guide migrants to buses and shelter homes as well as transport those exhibiting symptoms to health centres.

“The volunteers ran the community kitchen and the help desk till the end of May. They took the assistance of local residents of these districts, including adjoining Lalitpur in Uttar Pradesh, as well as traders and farmers who supplied grains and edible items to run the kitchen,” Singh said.

Singh also ensured that the group of 18 volunteers wore personal protective gear as well as distribute­d masks and sanitizers among the migrants many of whom had returned from hotspots like Mumbai, Surat and Indore.

From March 27 to the first week of June, around 3.5 million migrant workers have returned to Uttar Pradesh of which 1 million were from Bundelkhan­d’s districts of Jhansi, Lalitpur, Jaluan, Hamirpur, Banda, Mahoba and Chitrakoot. A majority of them have little money and no source of employment other than the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee scheme (MNREGS). In Uttar Pradesh, already 2.5 million migrants have applied for new job cards under the scheme, but till mid-June, 1 million were yet to receive them.

In June, Singh also began to motivate returned migrants to work in water conservati­on schemes and created awareness on the need for preservati­on, if the workers did not wish to migrate again. Hindustan Times and Facebook have partnered to bring you 15 stories of HT Salutes. HT is solely responsibl­e for the editorial content of this series.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India