Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Flag units race against time for I-Day orders

- Manoj Sharma manoj. sharma@ hindstanti­mes. com

NEW DELHI: Abdul Gaffar Ansari’s phone has been ringing endlessly for days. He looks harried and his voice is hoarse, as he staves off order after order. Ansari runs one of Delhi’s oldest flag- making units, but even his 68-year-old business is struggling to keep up with the incomparab­le demand for the Tricolour in the run-up to Independen­ce Day this year.

He has just turned down an order for nine million flags, he says.

“Usually, in the build-up to August 15, I make around 5,000 flags a day. But this year, we’re making over 100,000 a day. And even then, the phone just doesn’t stop ringing,” says Ansari, who runs Bharat Handloom Cloth House in Delhi’s Sadar Bazar.

“We have been making flags since 1954, but have never seen such a maddening demand for the Tricolour,” says the 71-yearold.

A week after Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged citizens to hoist the Tricolour at their homes from August 13 to 15 as part of the central government’s Har Ghar Tiranga campaign, flag makers and traders across the country, have been scrambling to meet the ceaseless demand for flags in time for Independen­ce Day.

The Union government wants at least 200 million households to hoist or display the national flag as part of the drive to commemorat­e 75 years of independen­ce, senior culture ministry officials have said.

Manufactur­ers in Delhi, Mathura, Hyderabad, and Surat, which is home to some of the country’s biggest textile printing mills, are working overnight, but many say their efforts are proving inadequate, with flag orders piling by the day.

Abdul Gaffar Ansari’s phone has been ringing endlessly for days now. Harried and his voice hoarse, he staves off order after order. The owner of one of Delhi’s oldest flag- making units, Ansari has a battle-hardened business but since plans were announced for a campaign to encourage every household in India to put up the Tricolour this Independen­ce Day, the 71- year- old is struggling to meet rocketing demand.

“Usually, in the build-up to August 15, I make around 5,000 national flags a day. But this year, I’m making over 100,000 every day. And even after that, the phone just doesn’t stop ringing,” says Ansari, who runs Bharat Handloom Cloth House in Delhi’s Sadar Bazar.

Among the recent orders he turned down was one for nine million flags.

“We have been making flags since 1954, but have never seen such a maddening demand for the Tricolour,” he says, sitting in his office. The business is now 68-years-old.

A week after Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged Indians to take part in the Har Ghar Tiranga campaign between August 13 and 15, flag makers and traders across the country have been scrambling to meet the ceaseless demand.

The Union government wants at least 200 million households to hoist or display the national flag as part of the drive to commemorat­e 75 years of independen­ce, senior culture ministry officials have said.

Manufactur­ers in Delhi, Mathura, Hyderabad, and Surat, which is home to some of India’s biggest textile printing mills, say they are now working overnight but are still unable to meet the demand.

Mukesh Pal, who runs Galaxy Digital Print, a facility in west Delhi’s Mayapuri, has diverted his firm’s resources to printing national flags, and put work on his other products — T-shirts, caps, and bags — on the back-burner for now.

“I’m printing over 17,000 flags a day now, as against 1,000 this time last year,” says Pal.

The galloping demand has also managed to get people several more temporary jobs in the textile space than are usually up for grabs.

Demand drives up temporary jobs

Ansari gets his printed fabric from mills in Gujarat and sources out cutting and stitching work to households in parts of east and north-east Delhi like Janta Colony, Shiv Vihar, Nand Nagri, Sonia Vihar, and Seelampur, where flag-making is a cottage industry.

“Earlier I employed about 40 people on a contract basis in these areas, but over 400 people are making flags for us. In all, at least 100,000 people are engaged in the flag- making process in these areas this year, up from around 30,000 usually,” says Ansari.

Zahoor Ahmad, who works in a flag-stitching unit in Sadar Bazar, says, “Earlier I earned ₹800 a day, but these days I am getting four hours of extra work and earning ₹1,200 a day. I used to work from 9am to 6pm, but now I go on till midnight.”

Some of the biggest traders in Sadar Bazar, who sold mainly rakhis between July and August have switched to selling national flags to cash in on the demand.

“A couple of weeks before Raksha Bandhan [which is to be celebrated on August 11 this year], rakhis accounted for 85% of our total business, but today comprise only 15% percent. I am selling 200,000 national flags per day, several times more than I usually sold before Independen­ce Day,” says Anil Gupta, sitting inside his shop, which is packed to the rafters with large rolls of Tricolours.

“There was not such a high demand for national flags even in 1997, when India celebrated 50 years of Independen­ce. It was because major celebratio­ns happened at the government level, Har Ghar Tiranga campaign has turned it into a people’s event,” adds Gupta.

A similar everyday hustle for units in Surat

Flag manufactur­ers in Surat, a major textile hub in the country with about 375 textile and printing mills — say they are trying their best, but it may not be enough.

Manoj Goyal runs one of Surat’s biggest flag manufactur­ing firms, which supplies to wholesale markets across the country, including Delhi’s

Sadar Bazar. His manufactur­ing facility has been operating non-stop, pushing out 20,000 flags a day.

“I have employed over 200 people, double the usual number, who are working in three shifts,” says Goyal, “The 30x20 inch polyester flag meant to fly in houses is the most popular.”

The Centre on December 30 last year changed the Flag Code of India 2002, which governs the use, display and hoisting of the national flag in the country, to allow machine-made polyester flags to be used for the Tricolour, a change that traders said has helped ease some of the constraint­s on the production process.

But, some groups are more optimistic about the lofty targets for the programme.

Jitendra P Vakharia, president of the South Gujarat Textile Processors Associatio­n, says the body has promised the Union textile ministry it will deliver 100 million flags for the drive.

“We are almost about to achieve the numbers. About 15 textile printers in Surat are making these flags. Most mills here print saris and have never produced flags on such a large scale. But we are trying our best to ensure that the tricolour campaign is a great success.”

 ?? AMAL KS/HT ?? A man sews a flag at a handloom house in Sadar Bazar.
AMAL KS/HT A man sews a flag at a handloom house in Sadar Bazar.
 ?? AMAL KS/HT PHOTO ?? Workers sewing Tricolours at Sadar Bazar’s Bharat Handloom Cloth House, one of Delhi’s oldest flagmaking units.
AMAL KS/HT PHOTO Workers sewing Tricolours at Sadar Bazar’s Bharat Handloom Cloth House, one of Delhi’s oldest flagmaking units.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India