Villagers shamed by Raje govt’s move to mark BPL families
THE MESSAGE ON THE WALL IS BELIEVED TO BE A STRATEGY TO MARK OUT HOMES RECEIVING THE GOVERNMENT’S FOOD HANDOUT
The yellow-and-red message in Hindi reads: “I am extremely poor and take rations under NFSA.”
The government’s food subsidy programme comes with an insult for hundreds of poor households in several villages of Rajasthan’s Dausa.
“I was so ashamed … that I refused to get it written. But the painter insisted and said I will not get the BPL benefits if I don’t get it painted on my house,” said Suresh Meena, a 40-year-old labourer in Sikrai tehsil’s Hingi village.
The mortified man got the humiliating line painted on the wall of his cowshed, not on the main wall of his home. His village has nearly 100 houses and more than 80% bear the sign.
The villagers don’t want to “advertise” their poverty, which they said is a wretched curse itself.
“The message was written on my wall but we removed it. It is very insulting,” said Janak Ram, a 28-year-old professional driver in Hingi.
The message on the wall is believed to be a strategy to mark out homes receiving the government’s food handout amid allegations of widespread corruption and pilferage in the programme.
The government provides cheap grain to 67% of its population of 1.3 billion under the national food security act (NFSA). India is home to a quarter of the world’s hungry poor, according to United Nations data, despite being one of the biggest food producers and experiencing years of rapid economic growth.
CONTINUED ON P 5