Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Migrant workers forced to walk, cycle despite spl trains

TOUGH TIMES Migrants continue to walk and cycle back to their homes as many don’t have identity documents

- Venkatesha Babu, Sachin Saini and Vijay Swaroop letters@hindustant­imes.com

BANGALORE/JAIPUR/PATNA: Migrant workers continue to walk and cycle back to their homes even as the railways last week began running special trains and some state government­s deployed buses for the people stranded because of the Covid-19 lockdown.

Some do not have documents needed to register for the trains; others simply do not want to wait any longer; and in still other cases, the trains themselves haven’t been approved by states that have to receive the workers.

Mohammad Imran, a worker, said he began walking on Wednesday along with his pregnant wife, children and parents from Rajasthan’s Ajmer to Uttar Pradesh’s Farrukhaba­d, around 600 km away, as neither bus nor train was available. “If get a ride, it will be good or else we will walk. It is better to move than die hungry,” he said as he walked along the Ajmer-jaipur highway on Friday with his family.

Many people continued walking or cycling back to their homes from Gujarat, Rajasthan, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh. Some of them said they started walking after being unable to register for travel on the special trains as they did not have identity documents.

“I was unable to register as I do not have my Aadhaar number,” said Suraj Bhan Singh, a worker from Jharkhand in Gujarat’s Surat. Raj Singh, in Ludhiana said he has not been able to register as the Uttar Pradesh government’s helpline is always busy.

Neerav Kumar carried puncture repair tools as he cycled with several other workers from Rajasthan’s Jodhpur to Uttar Pradesh. He said he had arrived in Jodhpur looking for work a day before the lockdown was imposed in March.

Kumar said he was forced to try and return home as he faced possibilit­y of starvation. “I bought this cycle for ₹1,500 to go back. We registered on the Rajasthan government website but did not receive any response.”

About 3,000 migrants assembled near the Mangalore railway station on Friday and demanded they be sent back home. Similar protests were also reported from Kerala and Gujarat.

Many workers have been detained from trying to cross inter-state borders ; some have tried to cross over through forests; others have tried to use boats to cross rivers.

Officials have cited different reasons for the problem and said some states are slow in granting permission for the special trains. And they add that many workers do not have necessary identity documents to registrer for travel on these trains and were running out of patience as factories have not fully resumed operations.

Officials in Karnataka blamed states such as West Bengal for their reluctance in accepting the workers. “There are 18,800 people from West Bengal who want to go back, but we are yet to hear from that state,” said an official on condition of anonymity.

Officials in West Bengal said they are getting workers back from the districts that were either in the orange or green zone.

Experts said the migrants were desperate to return because they have run out of money. “A migrant worker in Surat would have had an average annual income of ₹1,07,163 in 2019-20. It implies that a migrant worker is going to lose an absolute amount of ₹8,930 income in a month,” said Gagan Bihari Sahu, an associate professor at the Surat’s Centre for Social Studies.

Dilip Ratha, chief economist for migration and remittance­s at the World Bank, said migrants work in insecure jobs and are the first to be hit by a crisis. “Not only they will lose jobs, they will also lose ability to send back money home,” a World Bank statement had quoted him as saying.

 ??  ?? Migrant workers cycling to their native places in Uttar Pradesh amid the Covid-19 lockdown
PTI/FILE
Migrant workers cycling to their native places in Uttar Pradesh amid the Covid-19 lockdown PTI/FILE

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