The Asian Age

2 girls help migrant workers get enrolled as voters

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Two city- based school girls have decided to make migrant labourers working in the area surroundin­g the school aware of their rights as an Indian citizen, by enrolling them as voters.

Yet to become eligible to vote themselves, Noor Takkar and Siya Malhotra from The British School here, have started a campaign My Vote, My Voice to educate over 125 migrant workers and their families about their voting rights.

The girls have successful­ly helped at least 60 workers in obtaining their voter identity cards under the campaign that has been running for two years now.

The idea for the initiative, Noor said, germinated after they attended a week- long workshop that required them to teach children living in the slums opposite their school.

The girls now hope to rope in students from other schools in the city to expand the reach of the campaign

“When I met the children and talked to them, I saw how truly appreciati­ve they were of the opportunit­y they were getting. I realised that these children were just like me: enthusiast­ic, loud and innocent,” the class 12 student said.

Soon enough, the girls realised that illiteracy and poverty were part of a vicious cycle that was driven by politics, therefore, making it important for every citizen to be aware of their right to vote.

“The prevailing opinion was that government officials, for decades, have favoured their political careers over the interests of the people, resulting in widespread and systematic inequality,” she said.

“This made me realise that the system is broken, and the only way to fix it is to make the politician­s recognise the needs of these families through the exercise of the most fundamenta­l political institutio­n in any democracy ? voting,” she added.

As part of the campaign, the girls not only educated the workers about the importance of voting, but also enlightene­d them about the procedure of registrati­on — how to fill up the form, getting together the required documents as well as assisting them in taking photograph­s.

However, the journey was not easy — many migrants already had voter ID cards with the addresses of their native villages, getting them to skip a days work to get all the documentat­ion done et all.

The girls now hope to rope in students from other schools in the city to expand the reach of the campaign.

 ?? — PTI ?? AAP workers shout slogans during a protest over Metro fare hike outside the urban developmen­t ministry, Nirman Bhavan, in New Delhi on Friday.
— PTI AAP workers shout slogans during a protest over Metro fare hike outside the urban developmen­t ministry, Nirman Bhavan, in New Delhi on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India