Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

States told to stop, shelter migrants CENTRE STEPS IN

Interstate borders to be sealed, migrant workers walking home to be quarantine­d for 14 days and provided food

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: India on Sunday took urgent measures to halt the march of hundreds of thousands of migrant workers across states in an exodus prompted by a 21-day national lockdown to control the spread of the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19), with the government ordering the closure of borders and announcing steps to ensure food, shelter and wages to informal workers who form the backbone of the economy.

Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Haryana launched coordinate­d efforts to control swelling crowds of migrant workers retreating from the National Capital Region (NCR), arranging about 2,500 buses to take people off the streets and ferry them to their hometowns. While officials worked through Saturday night to transport stranded workers from Anand Vihar in the Capital to bordering areas, by Sunday morning, the operation shifted to Lal Kuan in Ghaziabad. From Lal Kuan, long-range buses took people to their villages in several districts of Uttar Pradesh.

Since Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the lockdown beginning March 25, highways across the national capital and other metropolis­es have teemed with people walking hundreds of kilometres with their belongings. While stranded migrants cited the shortage of money and food as reasons for leaving big cities, health experts warned that an exodus could run contrary to the purpose of the lockdown — breaking the chain of infections.

On Sunday, the Centre asked state government­s and Union Territorie­s to “effectivel­y seal” state and district borders to stop the movement of the migrant workers. Those who have already reached their destinatio­ns will be

put in 14-day quarantine­s for violating the lockdown to make sure they haven’t contracted the infection. In an order, the Union home ministry said: “Movement of a large number of migrants have taken place in some parts of the country so as to reach their home towns. This is a violation of the lockdown measures on maintainin­g social distance.”

It said that to effectivel­y implement the lockdown “and to mitigate the economic hardship of the migrant workers”, district magistrate­s and police officers were being directed to take a host of measures. The five measures are: temporary shelters and provision of food for the poor, including stranded migrants; 14-day quarantine of those who have already moved; uninterrup­ted wages and exemption from paying rent for a month.

“If any landlord is forcing labourers and students to vacate their premises, they will be liable to action,” the government said.

Many of India’s estimated 100 million migrant workers have walked along arterial roads in the NCR, tried to hitch rides and gathered in thousands at bus terminals to leave for their towns and villages since Tuesday midnight. On Sunday, thousands gathered at the Anand Vihar bus terminal, images of which were widely shared on social media to portray their plight amid the unpreceden­ted lockdown. The crowds thinned as about 500 buses ferried them in an emergency move. However, many still waited to be picked up, sleeping on pavements and surviving on food packets provided by the government and passersby.

Many have walked for days to reach their villages in UP, with the government having completely shut down trains, interstate buses and Metro services. The government­s of Delhi and UP and Haryana arranged buses in concerted efforts to bring the workers back to their villages and control the swelling crowd.

Jagtap Singh, who worked at a factory in Shahdara, said: “We have been told that UP buses are waiting at Lal Kuan to take us to the interiors of the state. I have to go Etawah.” He spent Saturday night shuttling between the Anand Vihar and Kaushambi bus terminals but failed to board a bus due to the massive crowd.

At a news briefing, home ministry joint secretary Punya Salila Srivastava said: “We have asked the states to make arrangemen­ts for shelters so that the migrant workers who have violated the lockdown and travelled could be put in quarantine­d for 14 days at their destinatio­ns. Health workers are being prepared for this.”

The government said DMs and police officers should be made personally responsibl­e for the implementa­tion of the directions.

In a video conference with chief secretarie­s and state police chiefs, cabinet secretary Rajiv Gauba and Union home secretary Ajay Bhalla asked them to ensure there was no movement across cities or on highways.

In a column published in The Indian Express on Sunday, Nobel Prize winners Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo said that more aid for the poor was needed because of the situation arising from the lockdown. “Without that, the demand crisis will snowball into an economic avalanche, and people will have no choice but to defy orders,” they wrote.

 ?? REUTERS ?? ■
Her young son in tow, a migrant worker walks in hope of catching a bus to return to their village, in Ghaziabad on Sunday.
REUTERS ■ Her young son in tow, a migrant worker walks in hope of catching a bus to return to their village, in Ghaziabad on Sunday.

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