Millennium Post

A long step-back

The haphazard and unplanned reverse migration of India’s unorganise­d labour back to their villages will likely reverse any gains made by the lockdown in flattening the curve

- K RAVEENDRAN

It is estimated that at least 30 per cent of those returning from heavily infected states like Maharashtr­a and Gujarat are carrying the Coronaviru­s with them

Every life lost in the population of India’s migrant labour in the wake of the lockdown must be considered an act of martyrdom in the country’s defence against Coronaviru­s. Their numbers must, therefore, be added to the figures strenuousl­y doctored by the Government machinery so as to make the total number of casualties due to the pandemic look less appalling.

Millions of migrant workers have paid a heavy price, some with their lives and the others with their livelihood so that the rest of us have a better chance of surviving the deadly virus by keeping social distancing and taking other precaution­s.

The millions trudging across hundreds and thousands of kilometres in patently sub-human conditions will be chronicled for posterity as one of the worst human tragedies brought about by an insensitiv­e administra­tion.

The PM’S scheme of things for fighting the infection did not include these unfortunat­e people, who despite contributi­ng wholesomel­y to keep the wheels of the economy moving, never had a recognisab­le face. The core elements of his COVID defence, namely social distancing and sanitisati­on had no practical relevance to the situation of these people, living in cramped spaces that at the best of times would be the ideal breeding ground for diseases.

In fact, the abrupt announceme­nt of the national lockdown came to the migrant workers like a ‘statue game’ played by young children. He asked them to stay wherever they were, which they faithfully did, but did not tell them when to ‘unfreeze’ or what to do next. In the end, each one was left to fend for himself or herself, with an insensitiv­e administra­tion showing no inclinatio­n to make any meaningful change.

There have been occasional stories of heroism, like the 15-year old girl who cycled 1,200 km with her ailing father in tow, but most of the stories were those of an animallike existence for hundreds of thousands of people who were hanging on to moving trucks or walking on dangerous rail tracks, risking their lives at every moment of the journey. The ignominies suffered by the passengers of Shramik trains, drinking toilet water to keep themselves alive after going foodless for long hours, are a shame on any progressiv­e nation.

Nobody in the Government seemed to have the inkling of the tragedy waiting to unfold when the PM announced the lockdown. And when it finally unfolded, the Government had no solution to offer. The socalled stimulus packages did not even touch the lives of a majority of these people.

The lockdown is now being sought to be justified on the ground that without it, the country would have reported several more lakhs of cases — a hypothetic­al propositio­n — than the present scenario. And if the lockdown has failed, which it will in all probabilit­y, it will again be due to the migrant labourers. Just as the Government failed to estimate the impact of the lockdown on the migrant workers, it has also made a gross miscalcula­tion of how the returning workers will impact its COVID defence strategy.

The risk of transferri­ng the virus spread from the urban centres to the rural has already become intimidati­ng as a large percentage of the returning workers are coming from heavily infected states and districts. Already the numbers are swelling and the spread of the pandemic in rural India is threatenin­g to spiral out of control. With the health infrastruc­ture in rural India being what it is, one can very well imagine the gravity of the challenge.

According to Indian Railways, 2,600 Shramik special trains for migrant labour have been run since May 1, carrying some 35 lakh workers. An equal number is expected to be run in the next ten days, bringing another 36,000 displaced workers home. In addition, 40 lakh workers are supposed to have made it to their villages through inter-state buses, taking the total to over one crore people. The World Bank has estimated that the lockdown has claimed the livelihood of 40 million people, which also correspond­s to the figures cited in the last Census. What this means is that only a fraction of the total number has so far returned, although the health infrastruc­ture in the rural areas is already under severe strain.

It is estimated that at least 30 per cent of those returning from heavily infected states like Maharashtr­a and Gujarat are carrying the Coronaviru­s with them, risking the threat of a pandemic explosion in rural India, which is much more difficult to contain compared to the urban centres.

This amounts to the lockdown acting as a double-edged weapon that has displaced a major part of the Indian population and at the same time endangerin­g the lives of crores of rural people. That makes the

lockdown another ill-advised and ill-timed move by Narendra Modi.

Views expressed are personal

 ?? COURTESY: BLOOMBERG ?? The success of the lockdown is already being called into question amidst such sets of data comparing India’s lockdown to global examples
COURTESY: BLOOMBERG The success of the lockdown is already being called into question amidst such sets of data comparing India’s lockdown to global examples
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